Whiteface looking good in this report.
Yes I can attest to this. I arrived on Dec 20, at that time I think they had 46 runs and no natural snow terrain due to rain the day before. Terrain progressively opened each day, including all natural snow terrain, and by Dec 23, they had more than 90 runs open. Forecast for tomorrow looks iffy. If they can avoid rain, they should be 100% open shortly.I just posted a new progress report last night. Trail counts overall are up a little bit from last week. Tremblant is up a lot, from 25%to 80%.
A forecast for Tug Hill slednecks but @Harvey's favorite McCauley (near Old Forge) will do well too:
The Catskills are significant mountains by Northeast standards, topping out at 3,500 feet.
I could've sworn that we discussed this recently but I can't find the post. As I recall, the consensus of local bean counters was that despite the distance from Lake Ontario; yes, Plattekill gets LE to an extent.I think Platekill is too far from Lake Ontario, and receives orographic lift snowfall on the backside of Nor-Easters when winds shift to Northwestlies.
I could've sworn that we discussed this recently but I can't find the post. As I recall, the consensus of local bean counters was that despite the distance from Lake Ontario; yes, Plattekill gets LE to an extent.

No argument with any of this. Weather generally comes from the west. Plattekill is the first place in/near the Catskills that will get hit and should get more than places farther east. Most mountain ranges in North America work this way: Sierra, Wasatch, Tetons, etc.I've arrived at Plattekill at the start of a big snowstorm after skiing at Windham. By morning it was even clearer that it's in a different weather zone than Windham and Hunter. Had someone tell me once that Plattekill isn't in the Catskills but in another geological area.
I grew up in a suburb of Syracuse, delivering newspapers in the dark at 5 am in chest-deep drifts and then going home and shoveling them. That's snow-belt street cred.I am being lectured by a bunch of NYC Metro Suburbanites about NY snow belts.

And the data does not support Platekill being a Lake Effect area. The real data from NY Ski Blog indicate 114 inches of annual snowfall, very similar to other Catskill resorts. Nothing special, very average.
Harvey's patience threshold has been breached.It's spelled Plattekill. How many times have you skied there? Why do you care about this so much? (...) Also your spotting for "Platekill" is 20 miles WNW of Plattekill.
Snowed all day in the cats tooI was channeling admin.
Here's the NY Radar now.
View attachment 48955
I believe that there was some kind of disturbance that passed through last night. Maybe @jasoncapecod can confirm.
Today, with a 20% chance of snow here, at our place near Gore, we got at least another two inches. (I was in the woods all day and it was glorious.)
Gore doesn't actually get that much lake effect.
After years of watching both mountains, and skiing them too, I see much more lake effect at Plattekill.
Here's Saturdays forecast. Snow across NY, and the whole great lakes region, heaviest in "lake effect" areas. Not a low in sight.
View attachment 48956
Any weather disturbance will get enhanced when it hits the Catskills due to orographic uplift, and Plattekill will get the most because it's on the western leading edge, no different than we see in western mountains.Snowed all day in the cats too
It was warm air advection before the arctic front
Sometimes, just the opposite, Tony. People who might otherwise be driving up from NYC or the NYC suburbs to ski for the weekend will stay home when they see the predictions that driving back home on Sunday, in the height of the storm, will be terrible and Monday may not be much better. Plus, it is supposed to be brutally cold on Saturday with wind chills 20 to 30 (F) below zero. Not a good day to be on the slopes. Typically, ski areas in the northeast HATE forecasts like this one.That NY radar pic looks like classic lake effect; downwind east of Lake Erie and Ontario, not SE towards the Catskills. Can the wind blow NW to SE over the lakes? I'm sure it can, but the fetch over water is shorter and ensuing distance over land to the Catskills is much farther than to Tug Hill. And I'm reasonably sure that the pattern shown in that radar pic is far more frequent.
Any weather disturbance will get enhanced when it hits the Catskills due to orographic uplift, and Plattekill will get the most because it's on the western leading edge, no different than we see in western mountains.
Is a storm as hyped as this one going to generate massive crowds and traffic to the ski areas this weekend?
Brutal cold this satudayThat NY radar pic looks like classic lake effect; downwind east of Lake Erie and Ontario, not SE towards the Catskills. Can the wind blow NW to SE over the lakes? I'm sure it can, but the fetch over water is shorter and ensuing distance over land to the Catskills is much farther than to Tug Hill. And I'm reasonably sure that the pattern shown in that radar pic is far more frequent.
Any weather disturbance will get enhanced when it hits the Catskills due to orographic uplift, and Plattekill will get the most because it's on the western leading edge, no different than we see in western mountains.
Is a storm as hyped as this one going to generate massive crowds and traffic to the ski areas this weekend?
Sometimes, just the opposite, Tony. People who might otherwise be driving up from NYC or the NYC suburbs to ski for the weekend will stay home when they see the predictions that driving back home on Sunday, in the height of the storm, will be terrible and Monday may not be much better. Plus, it is supposed to be brutally cold on Saturday with wind chills 20 to 30 (F) below zero. Not a good day to be on the slopes. Typically, ski areas in the northeast HATE forecasts like this one.