Watching this thread and the forecast closely. We are going to hopefully head to Europe the last week of February. No flights or lodging booked. The plan is to make a decision a few days prior. If there is no cool down and no new snow between now and then we will probably give up on any hope of off piste and head to the Dolomites for some cruising wine and pasta. If the Dolomites aren’t looking too great either we will probably just head west and go to Snowbird or something. We decided to stay flexible this year and assume we will pay 2x in airfare but seems like a worthy splurge. We are based in NYC.
@Tony Crocker or @Weathertoski, can you advise?Does anyone have any reliable websites for snowfall info in the Dolomites?
Does anyone have any reliable websites for snowfall info in the Dolomites? We are still holding out hope that a trip the week of the 25th will work out. All of the forecasts prior to this past weekend referred to the "south" getting significant snow. While Ive been able to cobble together from trip reports on different forums that Aosta area did very well, info on the dolomites is tough to come by. No idea how much snow they received and if conditions have markedly improved. We intend on flying into Milan and making a game time decision about where to base
 
					
				 
					
				 
					
				OpenSnow has Snow Report pages for individual resorts including a snowfall history calendar. These exist for Euro reports, but with an "estimated" caveat. That means they are not based upon numbers submitted daily by the resorts but by weather modeling. Canazei, near the southwest edge of the Sella Ronda, is showing 78 inches season-to-date including 27 in January and 7 so far in February. While the Dolomites have by consensus the most comprehensive snowmaking in the world, that does not mean they are immune from the effects of melt/freeze. With an OK but not great altitude range (typically between 5,000-8,000 feet) and exposures all over the map, I'd expect a lot of spring conditions given the past month's weather.Significant snow is not expected until the weekend of 23-25 February at the earliest though.
Italy's crowds are mostly weekend oriented, though the Dolomites get a lot of Germans. The current Mardi Gras week is the busiest vacation week for the Germans. That Feb. 23-25 weekend is the end of British holidays.I have no experience there but wonder about school holiday crowds during the last week of February.
Given how the season seems to be going, off piste nearly anywhere in Europe seems like a shaky proposition. So if we can experience 95% of the usual Dolomite experience, which was most likely always only going to be cruising/eating/drinking anyways, it seems like a good use of our time. If the next 10 days produced a ton of snow elsewhere and off piste became feasible in Aosta or Monte Rosa or St Moritz or Engelberg etc we'd consider doing that too.
 
					
				If we cant find good visibility that week though anywhere we will just have to stick to usa. If it snows a lot early in the period and then clears quickly we could be very lucky and either have a great trip, on piste,off piste, either is great for us.



 You would need an 'epic' storm cycle to have multiple-day visibility restrictions in the Dolomites due to snow.  Maybe a little wind - but not pure snowfall.  Besides, the Dolomites have many tree-lined runs, so it's a bit like skiing in the USA during storms (like Sun Valley with its open bowls, big groomers, and advanced snowmaking).
    You would need an 'epic' storm cycle to have multiple-day visibility restrictions in the Dolomites due to snow.  Maybe a little wind - but not pure snowfall.  Besides, the Dolomites have many tree-lined runs, so it's a bit like skiing in the USA during storms (like Sun Valley with its open bowls, big groomers, and advanced snowmaking).  My experience is that fellow travelers may or may not be aware of his name or website; however, when you mention his moniker, "King Of All Skiing Spreadsheets," the recognition level increases dramatically!he knows of the Bestsnow.net website. You’re famous Tony.
Friday at Saalbach with pix of south-facing valley runs:I would not want to be in Saalbach under current conditions.
Yes. Doing tourist things. Highlight being the Australian WW1 Western Front Memorial at Villers-Brettoneux.I assume sbooker and Kylie have been enjoying non-skiing activities during the peak school holiday week. I would not want to be in Saalbach under current conditions. I should check in with Jimmy Petterson about that.
Yes. A couple of times. We’ve been to Arlington too. They’re all good but the Western Front area has extra since due to the incredible loss of life in the area and on that particular spot.Presumably sbooker and family have been to the excellent War Museum outside Canberra.
Before leaving to study in Nice in 1986, I remember being advised to sew a maple-leaf flag on my backpack as anti-American sentiment was especially strong back then due to Reagan. Really annoyed me that we were expected to walk around in Canadian drag considering how many of my generation's grandfathers (WWII) and great-grandfathers (WWI) died over there. Rant over.the incredible loss of life