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Mountain Safety Collective Australia
  • Home
  • Backcountry Reports
  • Avalanche Training Centres
  • Guides & Courses
  • Blog
  • Merchandise
  • Supporters
  • Members
  • About MSC
  • Contact
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Date / Region: 00/00/2020 VICCentral
Advisory Confidence: STRONG / MODERATE / LOW


Alpine Conditions

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Sub-Alpine Conditions

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Mountain environments can be categorised as above or below the tree line, thus Alpine and Subalpine respectively. Find out more about how these types of terrain can create or mitigate backcountry hazards here.

Mountain environments can be categorised as above or below the tree line, thus Alpine and Subalpine respectively. Find out more about how these types of terrain can create or mitigate backcountry hazards here.

Travel & Terrain advice:
This is just mock text: Be aware of navigational issues with low visibility, particularly in the alpine. Avalanche hazard – storm slab/wind slab  - on lee slopes in alpine (SE aspect), avoid convexities and slopes over 25 degrees. Below treeline be aware of obstacles due to shallow snowpack. PH

Regional Community Observations:
Reports of fallen timber and bark debris at lower elevations on access routes significantly increasing travel times. 


We need your eyes too. If you’ve been touring in the Alpine National Park we’d love to know what you have seen. Every little bit helps.

Submit a spot observation

Observations Summary

 
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Snow Surface Conditions Summary

30cm of new snow overnight in alpine areas, with a dusting below treeline. Snow quality and cover good above treeline, but early season shallow snowpack with obstacles below treeline.

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Alpine depth: 110cm
Snow condition: Packed pow, high density.
Sub-Alpine depth: 80cm
Snow condition: Wet, high density. 

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Alpine depth: 110cm
Snow condition: Packed pow, high density.
Sub-Alpine depth: 80cm
Snow condition: Wet / heavy, high density.


Primary Hazard

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Secondary Hazard

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Weather Summary

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