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Skeena Mountains - Last Frontier Heliskiing, Canada - BC

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6 Day Forecast
(free)
top: 2599m
mid: 1479m
bot: 359m
2 Day Detail
(subscribers)
top: 2599m
mid: 1479m
bot: 359m
9 Day Forecast
(subscribers)
top: 2599m
mid: 1479m
bot: 359m
Piste Map Weather Maps Snowfinder
Printable Forecast
6 Day Weather Forecast for 1479 m altitude, issued (local time): 10 pm 16 May 2008
  Days 0-3 Skeena Mountains - Last Frontier Heliskiing Weather Summary: Light rain (total 6.0mm) at first, then becoming colder with a dusting of snow on Sat night. Freeze-thaw conditions (max 8°C on Mon afternoon, min -3°C on Sun night). Wind will be generally light. Days 4-6 Skeena Mountains - Last Frontier Heliskiing Weather Summary: Mild with light rain (total 9.0mm) on Tue afternoon Becoming colder with a light covering of snow, mostly falling on Tue night . Freeze-thaw conditions (max 9°C on Tue afternoon, min -1°C on Mon night). Wind will be generally light.
Fri
16
night
Sat
17
morn-
ing
Sat
17
after-
noon
Sat
17
night
Sun
18
morn-
ing
Sun
18
after-
noon
Sun
18
night
Mon
19
morn-
ing
Mon
19
after-
noon
Mon
19
night
Tue
20
morn-
ing
Tue
20
after-
noon
Tue
20
night
Wed
21
morn-
ing
Wed
21
after-
noon
Wed
21
night
Thu
22
morn-
ing
Thu
22
after-
noon
 
Wind (km/h)
Summary some clouds cloudy light rain light snow light snow light snow some clouds some clouds some clouds some clouds some clouds light rain light snow light snow light snow light snow light snow some clouds
Snow cm - - - 1 - - - - - - - - 1 1 1 3 - -
Rain mm - - 2 4 - - - - - - - 3 5 - 1 - - -
Max °C 3 4 3 1 0 1 0 5 8 7 8 9 6 1 2 1 0 4
Min °C 1 2 3 -1 -1 1 -3 0 7 -1 3 8 2 1 2 -1 -1 4
WChill °C -4 -2 -1 -5 -5 -3 -5 -3 6 -4 2 6 -2 -3 -2 -5 -4 2
Freezing level (m) 2750 2650 2400 1650 1350 1550 1350 2000 2250 2050 2200 2350 2000 1750 1750 1500 1500 2000
Sunrise - 5:16 - - 5:15 - - 5:13 - - 5:11 - - 5:09 - - 5:07 -
Sunset - - 21:54 - - 21:55 - - 21:58 - - 22:00 - - 22:01 - - 22:04

The above table gives the weather forecast for Skeena Mountains - Last Frontier Heliskiing at the specific elevation of 1479m. Our sophisticated weather models allow us to provide snow forecasts for the top, middle and bottom stations of Skeena Mountains - Last Frontier Heliskiing. To access the weather forecasts for the other elevations, use the tab navigation above the table. For a wider view of the weather, check out the Weather Map of Canada.

NOTE ABOUT FREEZING LEVELS AND TEMPERATURES
The freezing level that we forecast Skeena Mountains - Last Frontier Heliskiing is the  free air freezing level. (More specifically, it is the uppermost free air freezing level). This means that all of the air above this elevation is below freezing however it does not necessarily imply that all of the air below it is above freezing.  We provide this because it best describes the level where falling snow first starts to turn to rain. On average, snowflakes only stay frozen for about 100 metres (300 feet) below the free air freezing level. That's because air temperatures usually increase steadily as you descend - but not always.  For example, a temperature inversion describes a pool of cold air near the ground with a layer of warmer air above it. This is a common occurrence in winter when the wind is light. Such pools of dense cold air can vary from a few metres to several kilometres deep and can persist from hours to several weeks. In an inversion, it can be simultaneously below freezing in a mountain valley, and also at a nearby summit, yet above freezing at some elevation in between. Most visitors to the Alps are very familiar with this. Such conditions can allow snow to fall much more than the usual 100 metres below the top freezing level, even reaching the valley, just as long as snow did not pass through enough warm air to melt. Otherwise, freezing rain or re-frozen soft hail (there is even a German word for it - graupel) reaches the valley instead. Our forecasts allow for these possibilities which is why you may see forecasts of snowfall and frost at elevations far below the free-air freezing level, or valley temperatures that are lower than summit temperatures. You may even see forecasts of rain to fall even though it is just below freezing at the surface - that happens if our model predicts that there is a deep warm layer just above. None of these are as contradictory as they may seem at first.

All of our temperature forecasts for Skeena Mountains - Last Frontier Heliskiing are for the ground, not the air. These can be very different to free-air temperatures, especially at night. This can lead to what looks like a contradiction. Because the ground is such a good radiator of heat (especially on clear nights when there is a snow cover and the wind is light) surface temperatures often fall more than far below the free air temperatures - sometimes by more than 10 degrees. On such occasions, the snowpack freezes at elevations that are far below the free air freezing level. For example, in the European Alps, snow tends to freeze in valleys on still clear and still nights  even if the free air freezing level is above 3000m simply because snow is so efficient radiating its heat away. In reality there are two freezing levels; one just above the snow surface and another at 3000m with a layer of warmer temperatures in between where the snow may not freeze at all. In summary, the reason we provide surface temperatures isbecause these determine the condition of the snowpack.


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