I was running out of Red Ink X-ing
I was running out of Red Ink X-ing
No snowmaking system in Utah or Colorado has accomplished all that much this particular year. But it was and is extremely forecastable that that section of new terrain was both 100% snowmaking dependant and that that area/altitude has warm temps in the early season on a regular basis. Not a good combination which is why that expansion has been so widely panned as stupid.It's almost MLK Weekend, and Deer Valley's snowmaking system has not really accomplished much.
Made it to LL today and it was definitely the right choice. Woke up crazy early and made the not fun drive over Rogers pass. LL had 14 inches in the last 24 hrs of winter snow. I think west bowl was closed yesterday as it was skiing deep and didnt track out. I was finding untracked up until 1pm. Temps are certainly warm as the car said +2C in the parking lot at the end the day. Normally this time of year temps at LL are -20. Now I am concerned about my Mustang Trip on Friday. However I just spoke to them. Apparently at Mustang lodge level they had all snow, although, heavy wet snow. It supposed to cool off some later in the week. I am not sure if the snow will recrystalize or if it will form a crust. Lets hope I am not skiing a breakable crust for 3 days.Good call. This storm is so warm it is forecast even to rain halfway up Panorama and Kicking Horse. Those areas got lots of December snow when it was raining more west of Rogers Pass.
Overnight there was some frozen precip in Revelstoke at 600m. Top of Rogers pass at about 1200 m had slush on the road. I dont think rain snow line was this high.Did some lower altitude Cat operations and lower Heli-Ski terrain get impacted by this warm-up?
A 2700 rain/snowline in British Columbia in mid-January??!!
Revelstoke Snow Report from January 13th:
Deer Valley has lots of "Snowmaking in Progress" icons all over its Live Map. However, webcams do not show much snowmaking, maybe still too warm.
The lodge is at 5,700 and alpine terrain goes up to 8,000. You are in the situation that occurred during much of 2014-15. If the weather is clear enough to ski the alpine as I did in 2015, you will be OK. Many 2015 tours that were confined by weather/visibility below tree line sucked though.Apparently at Mustang lodge level they had all snow, although, heavy wet snow.
Utah is the warmest ski region of the Rockies, and the Wasatch Back is obviously warmer than the higher Cottonwood Canyons.Deer Valley has lots of "Snowmaking in Progress" icons all over its Live Map. However, webcams do not show much snowmaking, maybe still too warm.
None new at Brundage (Snowave?):Early in the day, groomers are smooth, then they soften up towards the afternoon. On my laps, I stuck to the groomed terrain as the off piste is somewhat unpredictable.
Sounds good in April; in January I'm a bit suspicious, especially that far north. I have seen rain induced corn (at Baldy) but it's rare.Snow conditions are staying consistent and super enjoyable. Groomers will be firm and fast early, then soften up as the sun works its magic, creating that sweet spot of edgeable, forgiving snow that makes carving feel effortless.
Castle got 4 inches but Alberta OpenSnow says all rain there the last two days while Louise and Sunshine got dumped on again.Temperatures are still hovering around the 0° mark, meaning the snow may initially feel a little hard packed in the morning. As this freeze-thaw cycle continues, we remind you to ski and ride responsibly.
I've skied Castle enough to know that "spring-like conditions" in January are not due to sun and warmth.Spring-like conditions should be expected again today, starting off on the firmer end of things and softening a bit as the day goes on. This may only stand to be true on the lower mountain today, however, as we're expecting slightly cooler temps today.
on Monday.rain likely reaching the summit by the end of the day
Hood Meadows like Crystal has a bit more candor.We had another day of high pressure with warm temperatures. Sunny aspects were soft while shaded terrain is holding making it very firm and fast.
Bachelor had no new snow but may have been far enough south to escape the rain. But a 30 inch base in mid-January is outlier low tide there. In 53 years Bachelor's average Dec. 31 base is 75 inches with only 3 seasons under 30.The groomers have stiffened back up this morning into a hardpack / frozen granular base, but expect them to quickly transition back to a soft pack later this morning and afternoon. Off piste is skier-packed powder and hardpack with moguls in some areas and will also quickly soften up under warm and mild skies.
Sort of like A-Basin opening Pali this week too.Northwest is now open for the season. Early season conditions will be present, and there will be no groomed runs off of Northwest. West Bowls will remain closed, awaiting more snow. It is recommended that only advanced skiers/riders enter this terrain. Please stick to open/named runs, expect marked and unmarked obstacles, and ski or ride with caution.
Not really at the mountain, maybe some light stuff in the base area. Conditions, though, are hard and fast. Yesterday, things were starting to soften in the sun around 10:45. Today was a mere 4° colder and aside from the chair 2 area, pretty much nothing was softening until maybe after I left at 1. Tomorrow will be colder, but I'm hoping that improves the grooming results. My first 30 years were spent skiing hard pack, so conditions are fine from my perspective, but the slopes are empty.Any rain at Whitefish early this week
It's rare but it can get warm enough in January for the west and east exposures at Targhee/Jackson to be affected. Notes from 1/25/2006:Even Jackson Hole & Targhee look suspect: Targhee's snow base has declined by more than 12" in the last week, and Fred's Mountain 10k summit report indicated above freezing temps on January 13/14th.
Sunny all day. Groomers excellent, also N facing off Sitting Bull. Long SW fall lines crusted over after 1/24 softening.....4 runs new Sacajawea, saw cat skiers. Nearly all cruisers due to legs & SW crust.
The Vail article refers to SWE this year now being less than at the same time in 2012, 2013 and 2018.Colorado's record-setting year continues for all the wrong reasons. And does anyone in the Rockies really remember, or were alive & skiing CO during winter 1976-77? This is once-in-a-generation event, winter!
Vail likely not to open its Back Bowls until February?!