ChrisC
Well-known member
Watch for storms and 100 cm bases.....
Not an optimistic forecast for SA:
Not an optimistic forecast for SA:
That's sobering. Is that an anomaly or true for South America in general?AFAIK Portillo has not had a season since 2009 that exceeded its 1971-2007 average.
Those seasonal forecasts can be done as accurately by monkeys throwing darts, especially when there is no El Nino or La Nina.
Regardless of the forecasts, do not commit $$$ until adequate snow is on the ground. AFAIK Portillo has not had a season since 2009 that exceeded its 1971-2007 average.
Regardless of the forecasts, do not commit $$$ until adequate snow is on the ground. AFAIK Portillo has not had a season since 2009 that exceeded its 1971-2007 average.
I believe the climate models forecast drying out in some places at those latitudes. Portillo, despite its altitude, is an outlier in latitude at 32.8. Compare to lowest latitude ski areas in North America, Ski Apache NM at 33.4 and the rarely open Mt. Lemmon AZ at 32.4. Valle Nevado is 33.4. Las Lenas latitude is 35.1, similar to Arizona Snowbowl at 35.3.But where did 100" disappear to? Global Warming is changing weather patterns?
Latitude explains a lot of this. Santiago is the same latitude 34 as L.A. and SoCal snow volatility is almost as high as Portillo's. Portillo gets more snow with altitude range 8,300 - 10,800 so minimal rain vs. SoCal ski elevation range 6,500 - 8,800.Same in California's Sierra, but most mountains receive more snow than the Andes, and Tony calculates less volatility.
OpenSnow shows daily snowfall calendars for 2024-25 for ski areas all over the Alps. I'll bet 95+% of these are from forecast models, not from resort reported snowfall.'This Season Snowfall number should not be quoted by resorts or the media or used for official climate statistics. This number is calculated from resort reported snowfall (where available) and OpenSnow estimated snowfall, and may be adjusted to match official data. While we believe that this number reasonably approximates the seasonal snowfall, in most cases OpenSnow does not verify this data.
month | Oct. | Nov. | Dec. | Jan. | Feb. | Mar. | Apr. | |
Big Sky patrol 2024-2025 snowfall | 15" | 58" | 49" | 55" | 70" | 53" | 35" | 335" total |
Big Sky OpenSnow snowfall | 15" | 48" | 71" | 98" | 74" | 81" | 61" | 448" total |
OpenSnow shows daily snowfall calendars for 2024-25 for ski areas all over the Alps. I'll bet 95+% of these are from forecast models, not from resort reported snowfall.
You mean 100% (42 forecast is more than 100% more than the 19" received)?As one can see, OpenSnow overestimates, this time by almost 50%.
Computers have always been great at GIGO! Yet another reason true AI is a ways off. It'll speed a lot of things up for now (fewer workers needed, but not absolute replacement of humans). But basically everything has to be checked over by humans for all the errors AI generates.The computer weather models seem very prone to overstatement in the Chile/Argentina ski forecasts.
In-season I use a few OpenSnow season-to-dates for areas that don't show that info on their own websites. I had to stop doing that for Big Sky when I noticed OpenSnow was claiming as much snow there as at Targhee.