I'm having a bit of a problem understanding the reluctance to open. New England sits in the IDENTICAL postion that Southern California was a year ago this week. The storm of ~2 feet fell on Tuesday and Wednesday Oct. 26-27. Mt. High West and Bear Mt. opened Oct. 28, Baldy Oct. 29 and Snow Summit Oct. 30. All of these had to round up "lift operators, ticket checkers, parking lot attendants, grooming crew, snowmaking crew, sled dogs, lift ticket sellers, cooks, cashiers, bartenders, dishwashers, janitorial staff..."
I skied Snow Summit's opening day Oct. 30
http://www.firsttracksonline.com/boards ... .php?t=124 and no, they weren't fully staffed. But they managed to run 4 lifts and 70% of terrain, their snowmaking was on until it got too warm around 11AM, and as you can see from the pics the skiing was pretty good.
I'm sure all 4 of these areas knew their odds of keeping terrain open that early weren't good, yet they still offered 30-70% on Halloween weekend. Nov. 7 they were only 15-25% open, Nov. 14 10%, and by Nov. 20 3 of the areas were closed and Bear Mt. had only one run open.
So your eastern ski areas are PUSSIES and and not as hard core as you might like to think if they don't even try to open on what you have now. And their odds of having some cold weather in November to stay open on snowmaking are a lot better than in SoCal.