Whistler Inbounds and Out of Bounds Conditions 2025/26

Assume British Columbia would be decent far into the spring/early summer.

I have snow camped in July at 5,000 ft near Stevens Pass. Likely not as good as Cascade Range volcanoes.
 
I assume takeahike46er knows a few monthly ski streakers.

I actually don’t. 😆 I have an acquaintance who skis through the summer months, but I don’t know if he has a streak going. If I lived in Squamish or Pemberton, I’m sure I would know more than a few.

Assume British Columbia would be decent far into the spring/early summer.

There’s certainly no shortage of snow! However, since the mountains in the southwest BC are relatively low in elevation, the snowpack often becomes isothermal sometime in May due to a lack of a nighttime freeze.

The volcanoes are much more attractive by comparison with their colder nighttime temps at elevation and easy access.
 
It was a beautiful weekend for spring skiing in Whistler. The dry, sunny weather that has characterized much of April continues.

Nighttime temperatures returned to more seasonal values this week, even though the days remained warm. As a result, we didn’t bother starting our day until 11:00 AM, which was just as the mountain began to soften.

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Great views of Disease Ridge and the Overlord Glacier from Panorama

We spent much of the day following the sun, lapping 7th Heaven until other parts of the mountain softened. Cloud 9 and Lakeside were excellent, offering perfect corn thanks to their nearly due-south exposure.

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Excellent conditions in Lakeside

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Sluiceway looking towards a closed Whistler

In the afternoon, we headed over to the Crystal Chair, dropping into the Horstman zone to get there. As expected, high north-facing terrain remained crunchy and firm. The laps on Crystal were lovely; however, the corn was starting to over-ripen, particularly further down the mountain. Still, Ridge Runner laps are always a blast.

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At least the Horstman zone was pretty to look at

We finished the day on the Glacier Chair, doing laps on the southern exposures where the corn was perfect. Local favorites like Don’t Stop and Smoked Salmon were excellent, but they likely won’t last much longer.

Only Blackcomb Mountain remains open from here on out, with 8 lifts currently spinning. Showcase is done for the season to prepare for its replacement. The lower mountain ski-outs are also done for the season. While there is still plenty of snow in the alpine, some key connectors are starting to melt out from the consistent sun. Hopefully, mountain operations can continue to move snow and hit their targeted closing date three weeks from now.

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Southern exposures in the Glacier zone were where it was at
 
My opinion is that for late spring skiing Whistler would be better than Blackcomb due to higher proportion of north exposure. I realize it didn't work that way in the above TR, and my perspective from Mammoth at 13 degrees lower latitude may be different. North facing steeps tend to remain winter snow into early April at Mammoth in the absence of an abnormal heat wave like this year. If you get an abnormal event like that, that terrain will remain hardpack through the time that it would usually remain winter snow. But by late April, I'd say a normal sunny spring day would soften all exposures eventually, and you can stay in the corn by following those exposures through the day.

I've never skied Whistler later than early April, and both of those trips were still in mostly winter mode in the alpine. I've generally been suspicious of how later spring at Whistler might compare to Mammoth because of the much cloudier Northwest climate. @takeahike46er is free to correct any of my above impressions based upon his extensive local experience.
 
My opinion is that for late spring skiing Whistler would be better than Blackcomb due to higher proportion of north exposure.

You would think, but it’s not that simple. Whistler stayed open later for the 24/25 season due to the Jersey Cream replacement. Personally, I didn’t find it to be a better setup overall.

For one, there’s quite a bit more flats on that side used to get from A to B. With the slow spring snow, that can be a pain to move around.

Second, downloading is a pain on that side. Creekside is fine, but once that melts out, you’re left with the fossil that is the Whistler Village Gondola. It has had some reliability issues and its capacity is a fraction of the Blackcomb Gondola.

Finally, spring weather in the region can vary widely from year-to-year, and having a greater variety of aspects to ski (like Blackcomb) is advantageous here IMO. 7th Heaven in particular is a great option for spring days when north-facing terrain never softens and Whistler has no equivalent. Whistler does have some E and SE-facing terrain (eg. Sun Bowl, Harvey’s), but I find those aspects get cooked too quickly, leaving a big gap until the northern slopes ripen. On Blackcomb, you can work from S, to SW, to W, all the way to North as the day progresses.
 
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