ChrisC
Well-known member
I use the trip reports more as an "evergreen" resource to identify new (to me) places to go, where they don't need to be recent. As noted above, up-to-date conditions is one of the areas where Alpinfans is definitely the better ski forum. It's German-language so of course you'll see those regions more often. As far as France, someone is posting about his current road trip to follow up the one he did a year ago.
This dynamic plays out on the Austrian Ski Reporting site Bergfex as well.
Similar to OpenSnow, it appears that ski resorts submit reports for publication on Bergfex. Again, the German-speaking Alps all submit timely reports for their country-specific snow conditions page. The French resorts always lag, especially for new snow. Bases seem to get reported accurately, but never 24-hour snowfalls.
I'm not going to cross-examine him. The culture at the German ski forums is decidedly not to publicly discuss the planning of destination trips (and certainly not to second-guess them afterward!) as is done here.
A lot of us would get moderator-removed from these sites, and we would have to start Alpin-American.com to continue with commentary.
I politely asked him why he chose that route and his reply is toward the bottom of page 2 -- confirming that the itinerary was more or less set in stone.
I am a little surprised that a skier with such extensive travel and prior visits to the USA/Canada did not notice that the American Southwest (SoCal/AZ/NM/SW CO) is generally a poor choice for December & early January skiing. Most of the time, these resorts are <50% operational over the holidays - especially in New Mexico, AZ, NV, and natural snow SoCal (non-Big Bear). SW Colorado can be OK most years.
To me, this trip seemed doomed from inception. New Mexico has not really had a decent early season in many, many years.
Even Tahoe is iffy until its first big storm, which can happen anytime from early December to late January - or not at all some winters.
A lot of Americans who ski in Europe can pick up on the following after a few visits:
- The Dolomites typically have poor snowfall/off-piste,
- The Southern Alps are always iffy, and
- Expert terrain at Zermatt/Saas Fee takes a while, and
- Eastern Austrian resorts are low and snowmaking dependent
- Low elevation resorts <1500m base/ <2000m summit should be avoided in Spring/March-April.
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about the Midwest itinerary.