Western North America Conditions 2025/26

The snow dried out overnight. Collins side was crunchy but everything else was good.
Catherines was very good
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I don’t have much experience with rained on snow (that i know of). You’re suggesting snow can be rained on and then dried out to become less dense again? Wind performs this drying out process?
I’m assuming light powder snow can never be transformed back to its lovely original texture once it has been rained on?
 
I don’t have much experience with rained on snow (that i know of). You’re suggesting snow can be rained on and then dried out to become less dense again? Wind performs this drying out process?
I’m assuming light powder snow can never be transformed back to its lovely original texture once it has been rained on?
It can definitely dry out but never goes back to fluffy.
 
Wind performs this drying out process?
Sublimation: when snow evaporates without going through the liquid stage. Low humidity is essential and a light breeze might help. Stronger winds would likely stiffen the rain crust. I saw this at Island Lake in 2003. There was a low elevation rain crust that was about 100 feet lower overnight between one day and the next.
 
Its the big difference between the east and west.
After a rain or super wet snowfall in the east..
You can see your self the next day..looking down.
Not always, but it really depends on the timing of when they run the groomers over the snow. When they groom the wet and let it setup overnight, it can be awful. If it dries out before grooming, then it can be much better.
 
This photo is Upper Hunziker. Snow was still quite nice this afternoon. There are a few exposed rocks on the backside of some bumps. More towards the middle than on the sides. It's been my favorite run this week. Did Lower Hunziker quite a few times since that doesn't require any uphill effort to get into.
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I took several of the Ski Divas here for Women's Ski Week to Upper Hunziker right after lunch today. I checked it out in the morning. Still good cold snow. My ski buddies, Bill and Jason, went along too. We've been skiing TSV since 2017.

The women were all first timers to Taos. They are in different lesson groups, but all had been taken to Lower Hunziker already. What you can't see from the Lower Hunziker entrance is the second part of the upper section, which is noticeably steeper.


So it appears that Taos is still doing the "open to hikers" first before they open the lift, or is it because the base is so low they don't want that many people up there?

When I was there in spring 2019 (after a nice dump + a solid base) I was infuriated that they let hikers go track it up before opening the lift for everyone else. It was my last day, and they never opened it. I complained to the front office, and got an main explanation from someone that it was a situation where when they built the lift, the hikers wanted to still have first dibs before everyone else, so they agreed to open it for a day for hikers, then the next day or so after for the lift. I was still pissed off.... why bother putting a lift in there (that probably only operates a few weeks a year, on avg) if you're not going to operate it and let people hike up for turns.
 
Article from the Washington Post: the places that have gotten the most (and least) snow this winter

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Snowfall so far this winter compared to the 2008 to 2025 average:


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This dumb Aussie had no idea that Louisiana or Florida ever got snow. Thanks for sharing.
Dont go planning winter sports in those areas. There are 2 outliers ski areas, on opposite side of the country, in the very south of the USA. Cloudmont in Alabama and Mt Lemon near Tucson, Arizona. Certainly interesting areas to read about in areas not typically associated with snow.
 
I skied Sol/Bright today, 27 Feb 2026. Started at Solitude, UT and used the connector trail and mostly stuck to groomers. Brighton's trails had softer and better snow, but lots of skier/boarder traffic. Soli was pretty firm in many places except Sunshine Bowl. My first visit to Brighton this season. It was mobbed compared to Soli. Probably the longest mid-day, weekday lines I've seen this season, particularly for a non-powder day. Not terrible though, maybe 10 min max. The parking lot was packed and full of picnickers and grills. Looked like the best of times :-) Anecdotally, I'm hearing that Brighton has decent visit numbers this season compared to many other Utah ski areas, maybe marginally better conditions too? I can only guess that their clientele of youth/boarder crowd, families, night skiers are continuing to stay active even in a low tide season?

Avi debris under Soli Summit chair; where the guy in blue is it might have been 4-5 feet deep, significant!

27 feb 2026 avi debris summit chair soli.jpg


Not sure, but believe the near cliffs in this photo are where a little girl perished in an avalanche last week. Sad, but you can see how close it is to inbounds terrain
avi tragedy terrain brighton 27 feb 2026.jpg


Crest lift line
crest lift line brighton 27 feb 2026.jpg


Soli Eagle chair empty in early afternoon.
eagle chair 145pm soli 27 feb 2026.jpg
 
Given the wind was picking up today, not likely that the Kachina lift will open this week. May not be enough cover on the areas that most people ski after riding the lift.
The Kachina lift opened Feb. 26 per skitaos Instagram, very surprising with the modest 35 inch base.

On a related subject, the North Face of Crested Butte remains closed.
 
Maybe the Spring Breakers are starting to arrive in the Wasatch? Or the locals are starting to burn up their Ikon days, thinking it's now or never??
 
So it appears that Taos is still doing the "open to hikers" first before they open the lift, or is it because the base is so low they don't want that many people up there?

When I was there in spring 2019 (after a nice dump + a solid base) I was infuriated that they let hikers go track it up before opening the lift for everyone else. It was my last day, and they never opened it. I complained to the front office, and got an main explanation from someone that it was a situation where when they built the lift, the hikers wanted to still have first dibs before everyone else, so they agreed to open it for a day for hikers, then the next day or so after for the lift. I was still pissed off.... why bother putting a lift in there (that probably only operates a few weeks a year, on avg) if you're not going to operate it and let people hike up for turns.
Yep, the process for opening Kachina Peak is based on opening it first for hiking only. That way, the snow is settled in by people who know what they are doing. There have been a few steep areas around the mountain that TSV ski patrol "skier packed" the old fashioned way after the latest snow storm, one ski length at a time.

Many of the Ski Week instructors don't take their students up the Kachina lift the first day it opens. Even when there is plenty of snow up there.

It wasn't that long ago that there were two fatalities because of an avalanche in one of the Chutes (between 2 and 3?). I was there a few days later. Shook everyone up for a while before they groomed out the slide path, which came down onto the groomed area near the top of Lift 4.
 
The Kachina lift opened Feb. 26 per skitaos Instagram, very surprising with the modest 35 inch base.
I have friends who skied it that day. A few for the first time. They went with people who could guide them into the areas with minimal exposed rock. All said the snow was good.

That day I and Olesya were having a great time skiing Wolf Creek. No worry about exposed rocks. Spring skiing conditions, so it was more fun after lunch was more areas had softened snow. Still cold snow in certain places off the ridge.
 
Wolf Creek was very busy Feb. 19-21 during the big snowstorm that dropped about 50 inches. Started getting busy yesterday. Quite few people from AZ. This is a holiday weekend for some schools in nearby counties in Colorado. So Super Saver season passes are blacked out this weekend.

There seemed to be quite a few people arriving this morning that have never skied Wolf Creek before. They didn't have any idea how much less day tickets were but were happy to find out at the ticket window. Ski school will be pretty busy with adult beginners.
 
Wolf Creek's "locals" season is over. March is a complete mess almost the whole month due to all the various spring breaks across the south/lower midwest. With some of the deepest snow in CO, that will likely only be amplified. The latest storm/s however, have probably helped some still go to places like Breck/Crested Butte, etc.
 
Yep, the process for opening Kachina Peak is based on opening it first for hiking only. That way, the snow is settled in by people who know what they are doing. There have been a few steep areas around the mountain that TSV ski patrol "skier packed" the old fashioned way after the latest snow storm, one ski length at a time.

Many of the Ski Week instructors don't take their students up the Kachina lift the first day it opens. Even when there is plenty of snow up there.

It wasn't that long ago that there were two fatalities because of an avalanche in one of the Chutes (between 2 and 3?). I was there a few days later. Shook everyone up for a while before they groomed out the slide path, which came down onto the groomed area near the top of Lift 4.

I think I remember that being part of the 'excuse' given as well.

I know Kachina is unique, but I still think it's a very odd to spend the capital on putting a lift up there if one of the announced goals is: "Taos Ski Valley has also committed to preserving a majority of the hiking terrain that is currently available". ( part of the Taos press release I found ). I know it ( installing the lift) was quite controversial to the hike/ski community, and it appears that's part of the reason as well.

If I had been aware of this protocol, it would have been easier to swallow, esepcially on a powder day (and yes, they had some hikers going up that day, but it was minimal). But as an uninformed guest... paying for a lift ticket to see a lift not operate, while seeing ski patrol and hikers getting turns in there was frustrating to say the least. I was not alone that day in frustration as quite a few people kept trying to line up at the lift that was running all day (with only ski patrol using it) and were told not yet, maybe later... or tomorrow.
 
Was up at Snowbird for a while today, 28 Feb 2026. Pretty significant slide (I'm sure triggered by ski patrol for mitigation) could be seen in Little Cloud Bowl, avalanche path in center:
avi debris from afar 28 feb 2026.jpg


Close up:
avi debris mark malu 28 feb 2026 snowbird.jpg


Some of these chunks were human-size:
more avi debris 28 feb 2026.jpg
 
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