ChrisC
Well-known member
I have given up on OpenSnow for anything resembling accuracy for Europe, South America, New Zealand, etc. Basically, it gives a rough estimate of whether it will snow.
Most of the time, the following is incorrect:
What pisses me off is that they often have the 'real' data fed to them via APIs, likely as a subscriber. OpenSnow has the actual data for most major European weather sites. For example, Gornergrat is a great representative site for ski conditions at Zermatt; this data is reported to OpenSnow. However, they never take a 24-hour new-snow reading or a current snow-base reading. WTH? Zermatt is just one example; there are many ski resorts that they neglect.
The only value of OpenSnow is when one of the Experts interprets snow and weather data from multiple sources and provides a written forecast.
Today's Example: New York State from the late January winter storm for Monday, 1/26/2026 (last 5 days - basically just Jan 25 & 26th snow totals).
Interesting, Mount Peter and Thunder Ridge are reporting big snowfall! Suprised Plattekill did not receive more than its neighbors.
However, when you look at the actual snow report from these ski areas nothing Open Snow reports is accurate:
Mt. Peter - 18"
Thunder Ridge - 16"
Plattekill - 29-34"
So almost all of the highest snowfall areas in the Northeast are inaccurate and over-reporting. And it's not just a transcription or double-entry error.
I used to think there were reporting issues more internationally. However, unless you are a Vail or Alterra resort, the data will most likely be incorrect, sometimes considerably so. Therefore, I would not rely solely on OpenSnow for Snow Report Display functionality. Seems so basic, especially for $50/yr.
This is so bothersome to me because a lot of my career has been making sure SaaS tech companies have accurate, real-time data. I was always looking at various sites and databases to make sure all data was accurate and correct - it was not my job (more NetOps, QA, Account Mgt, etc) - but if you are financing $100 millioins to billions, you could not lose interest calculations/revenue for incorrect data synchronization. So I do not have much patience for a chronic issue.
I generally like NOAA better in the USA.
Most of the time, the following is incorrect:
- Snowfall Estimates - to be expected
- Last 24 Hour Snowfall - no actual resort snowfall from websites is reported, with the exception of advertisers Vail and Alterra
- Historical Snowfall - this data is either 25-50% of actual, or sometimes 300% of actual. I wonder how often it is within one standard deviation?
What pisses me off is that they often have the 'real' data fed to them via APIs, likely as a subscriber. OpenSnow has the actual data for most major European weather sites. For example, Gornergrat is a great representative site for ski conditions at Zermatt; this data is reported to OpenSnow. However, they never take a 24-hour new-snow reading or a current snow-base reading. WTH? Zermatt is just one example; there are many ski resorts that they neglect.
The only value of OpenSnow is when one of the Experts interprets snow and weather data from multiple sources and provides a written forecast.
Today's Example: New York State from the late January winter storm for Monday, 1/26/2026 (last 5 days - basically just Jan 25 & 26th snow totals).
Interesting, Mount Peter and Thunder Ridge are reporting big snowfall! Suprised Plattekill did not receive more than its neighbors.
However, when you look at the actual snow report from these ski areas nothing Open Snow reports is accurate:
Mt. Peter - 18"
Thunder Ridge - 16"
Plattekill - 29-34"
So almost all of the highest snowfall areas in the Northeast are inaccurate and over-reporting. And it's not just a transcription or double-entry error.
I used to think there were reporting issues more internationally. However, unless you are a Vail or Alterra resort, the data will most likely be incorrect, sometimes considerably so. Therefore, I would not rely solely on OpenSnow for Snow Report Display functionality. Seems so basic, especially for $50/yr.
This is so bothersome to me because a lot of my career has been making sure SaaS tech companies have accurate, real-time data. I was always looking at various sites and databases to make sure all data was accurate and correct - it was not my job (more NetOps, QA, Account Mgt, etc) - but if you are financing $100 millioins to billions, you could not lose interest calculations/revenue for incorrect data synchronization. So I do not have much patience for a chronic issue.
I generally like NOAA better in the USA.
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