Which is a better ski area? Squaw Valley or Jackson Hole Mountain Resort? Show your love! Vote at http://bit.ly/VEEhYJ and share this so your friends can vote too!
The latter 2 areas (and we should also include Crested Butte) are severely flawed for consistent steep skiing due to averaging less than 300 inches of very low water content snow. This means that the "yellow/orange" terrain is often not skiable until February and it's extremely rare to get deep enough powder on that terrain not to be hitting bottom. That's why many people like having those ridges at Taos, top of Gold Hill (Highlands Bowl is in the same category) require hiking, so the powder can accumulate over several typical small storms and not be skied down to the base after each one. Silverton falls in the same category for enforced skier density, and as before I think Silverton is more properly compared to snowcat skiing due to very low skier density, required guiding, price and much lower than typical lift served vertical per day.TRam":39mlomox said:For the expert skier I still rank both behind: Alta, Snowbird, Silverton, Telluride, and depending on snow year Taos.
Recall how elevation and aspect affect snow quality.kingslug":opaanriv said:Although..just checked the stats and Jackson and Alta are tied..exactly at 197 inches for the season so far..hmmmmm
The apples-to-apples comparison for Jackson is the mid-mountain total of 154 inches shown in smaller print here: http://www.jacksonhole.com/weather-snow-report.html .kingslug":2ewsepsh said:Although..just checked the stats and Jackson and Alta are tied..exactly at 197 inches for the season so far..hmmmmm
Does anyplace, really? Jackson/Targhee's snow is of similar water content to Alta/Bird, so in terms of powder days the quality is similar with frequency about equal at Targhee and about 3/4 as often at Jackson. As noted by MarcC Targhee is moderately worse in snow preservation and Jackson severely deficient relative to AltaBird. It the ~80% of the time when there is NOT fresh powder that you would MUCH rather be at Alta/Bird than Jackson.kingslug":2ewsepsh said:I've been to both a few times and neither compares to Alta/Bird for snow quality.
There are a lot of lifts and most of the terrain is quite open to view. One should pay very careful attention to the "guinea pigs" (or as Craig Morris at Fernie calls them "sacrificial lambs") skiing the slopes within view as you're riding the lifts. There are places where you might need local guidance, but for a huge mountain with a lot of steeps I think Squaw is easier than most to figure out.kingslug":2ewsepsh said:Squaw is huge though but I didn't like their trail system..or lack of one more like it. They only mapped lifts so it was hard to figure out where you where..usually standing next to a small cliff sign.
I can't think of any ski area that's a fun place to be when completely frozen, so local diversions are essential. In that regard it would appear that the Tahoe areas are preferable to some others.kingslug":dkamqo2e said:Squaw is not a fun place to be when its completely frozen...
Within Tahoe Kirkwood, Mt. Rose and the upper tier at Heavenly are all above 8,000 feet and relatively unlikely to see rain or midwinter melt/freezes. Squaw is probably the worst option under refrozen conditions.MarcC":2d65emq9 said:In that regard it would appear that the Tahoe areas are preferable to some others
But here in the east...we make it .."fun"...over there it was downright frightening, they groom some steep ass stuff. There was a run off the K-22 chair that I didn't get to but watched a few go down it..steepest groomed thing I have ever seen...and yes there is a lot to do around the area...Marc_C":2edgzbzg said:I can't think of any ski area that's a fun place to be when completely frozen, so local diversions are essential. In that regard it would appear that the Tahoe areas are preferable to some others.kingslug":2edgzbzg said:Squaw is not a fun place to be when its completely frozen...
I sure remember drinking a hell of a lot on incredibly crappy days in my 20 year northeast ski career........kingslug":4kif5h3q said:But here in the east...we make it .."fun"...
Tony Crocker":3jm14zy0 said:the upper tier at Heavenly are all above 8,000 feet and relatively unlikely to see rain or midwinter melt/freezes.
Again, Tony is overly in love with averages, which don't tell the whole story.EMSC":2qq8va6p said:Tony Crocker":2qq8va6p said:the upper tier at Heavenly are all above 8,000 feet and relatively unlikely to see rain or midwinter melt/freezes.
Key word being relatively... I've been at Heavenly for a top to bottom soaking and it's aftermath. A little too much pineapple in the pineapple express that storm.
](*,) ](*,) ](*,) Is there another source of snow data who even looks at deviations??? Percent of days, weeks with fresh powder, etc??? How often do I refer to Sierra weather volatility vs. other North American snow regions???MarcC":1n59lgsq said:Again, Tony is overly in love with averages, which don't tell the whole story.
Something I'm trying to avoid...getting harder to keep the pounds off...I think its safe to say I've skied in every kind of crap weather there is here..but I am getting more selective..you guys have spoiled me...and since I now spend half my season in the west, I'm no longer really an Eastern skier..more like a hybrid.. :-DMarc_C":15og1n0h said:I sure remember drinking a hell of a lot on incredibly crappy days in my 20 year northeast ski career........kingslug":15og1n0h said:But here in the east...we make it .."fun"...