<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>
<ObsCollection xmlns="http://caaml.org/Schemas/V5.0/Profiles/BulletinEAWS" xmlns:gml="http://www.opengis.net/gml" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xml:lang="en" xsi:schemaLocation="http://caaml.org/Schemas/V5.0/Profiles/BulletinEAWS http://caaml.org/Schemas/V5.0/Profiles/BulletinEAWS/CAAMLv5_BulletinEAWS.xsd">
  <metaDataProperty>
    <MetaData>
      <dateTimeReport>2026-04-10T15:26:20Z</dateTimeReport>
      <srcRef>
        <Operation>
          <name>Avalanche Service Vorarlberg</name>
        </Operation>
      </srcRef>
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  </metaDataProperty>
  <observations>
    <Bulletin gml:id="63958620-9d72-40a3-9356-e7af78595f58" xml:lang="en">
      <metaDataProperty>
        <MetaData>
          <dateTimeReport>2026-04-10T15:00:00Z</dateTimeReport>
          <srcRef>
            <Operation>
              <name>Avalanche Service Vorarlberg</name>
            </Operation>
          </srcRef>
        </MetaData>
      </metaDataProperty>
      <validTime>
        <TimePeriod>
          <beginPosition>2026-04-10T15:00:00Z</beginPosition>
          <endPosition>2026-04-11T10:00:00Z</endPosition>
        </TimePeriod>
      </validTime>
      <srcRef>
        <Operation>
          <name>Avalanche.report</name>
        </Operation>
      </srcRef>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-05-01"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-05-02"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-06"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-03-02"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-02"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-03-01"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-04"/>
      <bulletinResultsOf>
        <BulletinMeasurements>
          <dangerRatings>
            <DangerRating>
              <validElevation xlink:href="ElevationRange_2400Hi"/>
              <mainValue>2</mainValue>
            </DangerRating>
            <DangerRating>
              <validElevation xlink:href="ElevationRange_2400Lw"/>
              <mainValue>2</mainValue>
            </DangerRating>
          </dangerRatings>
          <avProblems>
            <AvProblem>
              <type>wet snow</type>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_nw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_e"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_se"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_s"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_sw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_w"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_ne"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_n"/>
              <validElevation xlink:href="ElevationRange_2400Lw"/>
            </AvProblem>
            <AvProblem>
              <type>old snow</type>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_nw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_e"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_w"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_ne"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_n"/>
              <validElevation xlink:href="ElevationRange_2400Hi"/>
            </AvProblem>
          </avProblems>
          <tendency>
            <type>steady</type>
            <validTime>
              <TimePeriod>
                <beginPosition>2026-04-11T15:00:00Z</beginPosition>
                <endPosition>2026-04-12T15:00:00Z</endPosition>
              </TimePeriod>
            </validTime>
          </tendency>
          <wxSynopsisComment>Cloud cover in the latter part of the night will gradually withdraw, sunny weather will return, including a rise in temperatures. Convective cloud build-up in the afternoon will be minor. Towards evening, high-altitude clouds will move in. Temperature at 2000m: -1 to +8 degrees; at 3000m: -4 to 0 degrees. Light to moderate winds at high altitudes, in high alpine regions brisk westerly winds are anticipated.</wxSynopsisComment>
          <avActivityHighlights>Heightened wet-snow danger from early morning, at high altitudes old snow and small drifts</avActivityHighlights>
          <avActivityComment>Danger of wet-snow avalanches is heightened even as of early morning, particularly on very steep north-facing slopes at 1800-2200m. As a result of daytime warming and solar radiation, avalanche danger quickly increases, in all aspects below 2400m, on on very steep sunny slopes up to high altitudes. Naturally triggered avalanches can be expected, avalanches can also be triggered by persons and grow to large size, also sweep along great amounts of wet snow in their plummet path and then extend to very long runout zones. In high alpine regions, small ridgeline snowdrift accumulations are still prone to triggering. In addition, winter sports enthusiasts can in places on high-altitude shady slopes trigger near-surface weak layers. Such danger zones are impossible to recognize. Atop the hardened snowpack surface, there is danger of being forced to take a fall on steep slopes.</avActivityComment>
          <snowpackStructureComment>Following reduced outgoing radiation and mild temperatures, the snowpack is hardly freezing at night. At altitudes of 1800-2200m the snowpack, even on north-facing slopes, is thoroughly wet and ground-level layers of rotten snow are prone to triggering already in early morning. In high-altitude, steep and shady terrain, there are unfavorable intermediate layers in the uppermost metre of the snowpack which in places are prone to triggering. A thick mid-section of compact layers blankets the deep hoar and faceted crystals at the base of the snowpack.</snowpackStructureComment>
          <tendencyComment>As a result of light foehn conditions and instable air, little change is anticipated.</tendencyComment>
          <generalHeadlineComment>Reduced nocturnal outgoing radiation and sunny weather are generating wet snow</generalHeadlineComment>
        </BulletinMeasurements>
      </bulletinResultsOf>
    </Bulletin>
    <Bulletin gml:id="63958620-9d72-40a3-9356-e7af78595f58_PM" xml:lang="en">
      <metaDataProperty>
        <MetaData>
          <dateTimeReport>2026-04-10T15:00:00Z</dateTimeReport>
          <srcRef>
            <Operation>
              <name>Avalanche Service Vorarlberg</name>
            </Operation>
          </srcRef>
        </MetaData>
      </metaDataProperty>
      <validTime>
        <TimePeriod>
          <beginPosition>2026-04-11T10:00:00Z</beginPosition>
          <endPosition>2026-04-11T15:00:00Z</endPosition>
        </TimePeriod>
      </validTime>
      <srcRef>
        <Operation>
          <name>Avalanche.report</name>
        </Operation>
      </srcRef>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-05-01"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-05-02"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-06"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-03-02"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-02"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-03-01"/>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-04"/>
      <bulletinResultsOf>
        <BulletinMeasurements>
          <dangerRatings>
            <DangerRating>
              <validElevation xlink:href="ElevationRange_2800Hi"/>
              <mainValue>2</mainValue>
            </DangerRating>
            <DangerRating>
              <validElevation xlink:href="ElevationRange_2800Lw"/>
              <mainValue>3</mainValue>
            </DangerRating>
          </dangerRatings>
          <avProblems>
            <AvProblem>
              <type>wet snow</type>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_nw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_e"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_se"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_sw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_s"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_w"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_ne"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_n"/>
              <validElevation xlink:href="ElevationRange_2800Lw"/>
            </AvProblem>
            <AvProblem>
              <type>old snow</type>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_nw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_e"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_w"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_ne"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_n"/>
              <validElevation xlink:href="ElevationRange_2400Hi"/>
            </AvProblem>
          </avProblems>
          <tendency>
            <type>steady</type>
            <validTime>
              <TimePeriod>
                <beginPosition>2026-04-11T15:00:00Z</beginPosition>
                <endPosition>2026-04-12T15:00:00Z</endPosition>
              </TimePeriod>
            </validTime>
          </tendency>
          <wxSynopsisComment>Cloud cover in the latter part of the night will gradually withdraw, sunny weather will return, including a rise in temperatures. Convective cloud build-up in the afternoon will be minor. Towards evening, high-altitude clouds will move in. Temperature at 2000m: -1 to +8 degrees; at 3000m: -4 to 0 degrees. Light to moderate winds at high altitudes, in high alpine regions brisk westerly winds are anticipated.</wxSynopsisComment>
          <avActivityHighlights>Heightened wet-snow danger from early morning, at high altitudes old snow and small drifts</avActivityHighlights>
          <avActivityComment>Danger of wet-snow avalanches is heightened even as of early morning, particularly on very steep north-facing slopes at 1800-2200m. As a result of daytime warming and solar radiation, avalanche danger quickly increases, in all aspects below 2400m, on on very steep sunny slopes up to high altitudes. Naturally triggered avalanches can be expected, avalanches can also be triggered by persons and grow to large size, also sweep along great amounts of wet snow in their plummet path and then extend to very long runout zones. In high alpine regions, small ridgeline snowdrift accumulations are still prone to triggering. In addition, winter sports enthusiasts can in places on high-altitude shady slopes trigger near-surface weak layers. Such danger zones are impossible to recognize. Atop the hardened snowpack surface, there is danger of being forced to take a fall on steep slopes.</avActivityComment>
          <snowpackStructureComment>Following reduced outgoing radiation and mild temperatures, the snowpack is hardly freezing at night. At altitudes of 1800-2200m the snowpack, even on north-facing slopes, is thoroughly wet and ground-level layers of rotten snow are prone to triggering already in early morning. In high-altitude, steep and shady terrain, there are unfavorable intermediate layers in the uppermost metre of the snowpack which in places are prone to triggering. A thick mid-section of compact layers blankets the deep hoar and faceted crystals at the base of the snowpack.</snowpackStructureComment>
          <tendencyComment>As a result of light foehn conditions and instable air, little change is anticipated.</tendencyComment>
          <generalHeadlineComment>Reduced nocturnal outgoing radiation and sunny weather are generating wet snow</generalHeadlineComment>
        </BulletinMeasurements>
      </bulletinResultsOf>
    </Bulletin>
    <Bulletin gml:id="2eae2193-9ad9-4f06-9fc4-cd815ab9b7b5" xml:lang="en">
      <metaDataProperty>
        <MetaData>
          <dateTimeReport>2026-04-10T15:00:00Z</dateTimeReport>
          <srcRef>
            <Operation>
              <name>Avalanche Service Vorarlberg</name>
            </Operation>
          </srcRef>
        </MetaData>
      </metaDataProperty>
      <validTime>
        <TimePeriod>
          <beginPosition>2026-04-10T15:00:00Z</beginPosition>
          <endPosition>2026-04-11T15:00:00Z</endPosition>
        </TimePeriod>
      </validTime>
      <srcRef>
        <Operation>
          <name>Avalanche.report</name>
        </Operation>
      </srcRef>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-01"/>
      <bulletinResultsOf>
        <BulletinMeasurements>
          <dangerRatings>
            <DangerRating>
              <mainValue>2</mainValue>
            </DangerRating>
          </dangerRatings>
          <avProblems>
            <AvProblem>
              <type>wet snow</type>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_nw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_s"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_sw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_w"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_n"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_se"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_ne"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_e"/>
            </AvProblem>
          </avProblems>
          <tendency>
            <type>steady</type>
            <validTime>
              <TimePeriod>
                <beginPosition>2026-04-11T15:00:00Z</beginPosition>
                <endPosition>2026-04-12T15:00:00Z</endPosition>
              </TimePeriod>
            </validTime>
          </tendency>
          <wxSynopsisComment>Cloud cover in the latter part of the night will gradually withdraw, sunny weather will return, including rising temperatures. Convective cloud build-up in the afternoon will be minor. Towards evening, high-altitude clouds will move in. Temperature at 2000m: -1 to +8 degrees; at 3000m: -4 to 0 degrees. Light to moderate winds at high altitudes, in high alpine regions blowing at brisk strength from the west.</wxSynopsisComment>
          <avActivityHighlights>Rainfall will increase danger of wet-snow avalanches</avActivityHighlights>
          <avActivityComment>Following the rainfall yesterday and a night of partially cloudy skies, the snowpack can hardly freeze. The danger of wet-snow avalanches is heightened already in early morning and rises further due to daytime warming and solar radiation within the specified danger level over the course of the morning. Naturally triggered avalanches can be expected, most remain medium-sized. On steep, smooth-ground slopes with lots of snow which have not yet discharged, glide-snow avalanches can trigger in all aspects.</avActivityComment>
          <snowpackStructureComment>Due to reduced nocturnal longwave outgoing radiation and ongoing mild temperatures, the snowpack does not freeze at night. At all altitudes the snowpack is thoroughly wet.</snowpackStructureComment>
          <tendencyComment>As a result of light foehn conditions and instable air, little change is anticipated. The slopes will continue to become bare of snow.</tendencyComment>
          <generalHeadlineComment>Reduced nocturnal outgoing radiation and sunny weather are generating wet snow</generalHeadlineComment>
        </BulletinMeasurements>
      </bulletinResultsOf>
    </Bulletin>
    <Bulletin gml:id="cc57ea4b-0a58-417d-9274-dc7f9ec6798d" xml:lang="en">
      <metaDataProperty>
        <MetaData>
          <dateTimeReport>2026-04-10T15:00:00Z</dateTimeReport>
          <srcRef>
            <Operation>
              <name>Avalanche Service Vorarlberg</name>
            </Operation>
          </srcRef>
        </MetaData>
      </metaDataProperty>
      <validTime>
        <TimePeriod>
          <beginPosition>2026-04-10T15:00:00Z</beginPosition>
          <endPosition>2026-04-11T15:00:00Z</endPosition>
        </TimePeriod>
      </validTime>
      <srcRef>
        <Operation>
          <name>Avalanche.report</name>
        </Operation>
      </srcRef>
      <locRef xlink:href="AT-08-07"/>
      <bulletinResultsOf>
        <BulletinMeasurements>
          <dangerRatings>
            <DangerRating>
              <mainValue>1</mainValue>
            </DangerRating>
          </dangerRatings>
          <avProblems>
            <AvProblem>
              <type>wet snow</type>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_nw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_s"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_sw"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_n"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_se"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_w"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_ne"/>
              <validAspect xlink:href="AspectRange_e"/>
            </AvProblem>
          </avProblems>
          <tendency>
            <type>decreasing</type>
            <validTime>
              <TimePeriod>
                <beginPosition>2026-04-11T15:00:00Z</beginPosition>
                <endPosition>2026-04-12T15:00:00Z</endPosition>
              </TimePeriod>
            </validTime>
          </tendency>
          <wxSynopsisComment>Following a night of partly cloudy skies, a compact cloud cover will soon spread out and by midday, rainfall and wind will set in from the north. Starting in late afternoon, only isolated showers are expected. Temperature at 2000m: 3 degrees; at 3000m: -3 degrees. Moderate to strong-velocity westerly-to-northwesterly winds at high altitudes, in high alpine regions storm-strength gusts are anticipated.</wxSynopsisComment>
          <avActivityHighlights>Small wet-snow slides possible</avActivityHighlights>
          <avActivityComment>Due to solar radiation, wet loose-snow avalanches can trigger naturally, particularly on extremely steep slopes. Avalanches will be mostly small-sized.</avActivityComment>
          <snowpackStructureComment>South-facing slopes are frequently bare of snow. Where there’s a snowpack on the ground, it’s thoroughly wet.</snowpackStructureComment>
          <tendencyComment>The slopes will continue to become bare of snow.</tendencyComment>
          <generalHeadlineComment>Reduced nocturnal outgoing radiation and sunny weather are generating wet snow</generalHeadlineComment>
        </BulletinMeasurements>
      </bulletinResultsOf>
    </Bulletin>
  </observations>
</ObsCollection>
