2011-12 Ski Season Progress Report as of January 15, 2012

Late October 2011 will be remembered for its snowfall in the eastern metro areas, which also opened a few eastern ski areas. Aside from Wolf Creek, no western areas had a meaningful snowpack at the end of October to get a jump on the upcoming season. I was out of the country the entire month of November and unable to follow progress in snowfall or ski area openings during that time. November snowfall reflected a classic La Nina pattern with an outstanding start in the Pacific Northwest and much of western Canada, drier in regions farther south.

December was bone dry over nearly the entire West until Christmas. Some snow got through to the Southwest in December, bringing most areas there close to average but only Wolf Creek far above average. During Christmas week the Northwest and Northern Rockies of both U.S. and Canada got 3 feet of snow, but it remained dry farther south. With warm weather and Christmas crowds degrading the mostly manmade snowpack, California, Utah and I-70 Colorado are in the worst shape in January since at least 1980-81. Only the Pacific Northwest and western Canada have normal or better conditions and most of the snow through the first half of January has been in those same regions. Conditions in California and I-70 Colorado are so bad that vacationers scheduled for the rest of January should bail out and go somewhere else, even at the cost of cancellation penalties. In 15 years of writing these reports this is the first time I have made such a drastic recommendation. A major change in the prolonged drought pattern is predicted to start next week, but even if that occurs there will be snow stability issues affecting how soon terrain can be opened. If the storms are big enough reasonable conditions could be possible for February.

California: There was an 18+ inch storm during the first week of October but it all melted up to at least 10,000 feet by the end of the month. Mammoth had about half normal snowfall in November and Tahoe was even drier. There was no snow in December, so this was the worst Christmas at Mammoth since 1999-2000 and the worst at Tahoe since 1976-77 with very limited skiing only on manmade snow. The first half of January has remained dry and a 2+ week period around the holidays was also too warm to make snow. A major storm is possible in about a week, but there is still uncertainty regarding its precise track and what the rain/snow line will be. Advance commitments should be avoided until after seeing the results of that storm. Southwest storms opened most of Arizona Snowbowl by mid-December and snowmaking terrain in Southern California opened in the same timeframe with cold temperatures. However both SoCal and Arizona have been warm and dry since Christmas. See Current California Ski Conditions for more details on Southern California and Mammoth.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Squaw 8,000

18

10%

2%

Northstar

22

18%

7%

Mt. Rose

24

17%

18%

Kirkwood

35

18%

8%

Mammoth

32

22%

14%

Southern Cal

32

78%

0-97%

Arizona Snowbowl

91

96%

65%

Pacific Northwest: The entire region had an excellent start in November. Mt. Bachelor had a solid base that could open most of the mountain, but did not get that last dump to open Summit and Northwest until Christmas week. Mt. Baker has been 100% open and Mt. Hood 80% since early December. There was no snow in the region in December before Christmas, but with 3 feet over the holidays base depths reached 4-5 feet with excellent conditions. So far in January there have been 3 feet at Whistler, 2 feet in Washington and less than a foot in Oregon, but storms are expected all next week.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

215

108%

100%

Crystal Mt.

181

98%

96%

Stevens Pass

177

81%

100%

Mt. Bachelor

95

54%

70%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: November snowfall was high through most of the region. Modest snowfalls in December before Christmas averaged less than a foot near the U.S. border and 1-2 feet farther north. But 2-3 feet of snow during Christmas week throughout the region bought base depths up to 3-5 feet with excellent conditions. First half of January January snowfall has been 1-2 feet near the U.S. border but 2-3 feet farther north Big White is 85% open and Silver Star and Sun Peaks 100%. Revelstoke and Kicking Horse snow totals are likely inflated by including October, but both were 50+% open in early December.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Lake Louise

120

150%

93%

Sunshine

173

154%

93%

Revelstoke

215

127%

100%

Kicking Horse

194

152%

89%

Whitewater

153

85%

94%

Red Mt.

80

62%

100%

Fernie

129

76%

89%

Castle Mt.

96

77%

90%

U. S. Northern Rockies: Snowfall in November was close to average at areas reporting. Jackson opened a bit early with more terrain than normal available but added little during dry spell before Christmas. Schweitzer got off to a good start with the Northwest influence, and along with consistent Grand Targhee was the only area in full operation by Christmas. Big Sky was 61% open for Christmas (95% now) but the rest of the region's ski areas were less than half open, and Brundage and Bogus Basin not open at all. Conditions improved during Christmas week with up to 2 feet of snow at most areas, allowing Jackson's tram and Brundage to open Dec. 30. After less than a foot of snow in the first half of January base depths are 4 feet in the Tetons and at Schweitzer but no more than 3 feet elsewhere, well below average. However, significant snow is expected next week in much of the region.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Grand Targhee

147

69%

100%

Jackson Hole

105

60%

85%

Whitefish

75

50%

98%

Bridger Bowl

75

58%

85%

Schweitzer

115

90%

100%

Sun Valley

59

64%

88%

Brundage

58

40%

100%

Utah: Utah's November was close to average but there were less than 2 feet of snow in the Wasatch in December. Brian Head had 3+ feet in December from Southwest storms. The Cottonwood areas were 2/3 to 3/4 open for the holidays on 3 foot bases. Other Wasatch areas were less than half open on 2 foot bases, mostly on snowmaking. With warm weather during Christmas week New Year's conditions were the worst since 1980-81. Outside the Cottonwood Canyons much advanced terrain will not likely be open until mid-February. The first week of January there were several inches new snow which improved surfaces but were not enough to open more terrain. Significant snow is expected next week

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

107

48%

73%

Snowbird

107

57%

50%

Brighton/Solitude

94

44%

64%

Park City group

65

50%

47%

Snowbasin

71

55%

40%

Brian Head

91

68%

65%

Northern and Central Colorado: This region had a very bad start. Loveland had 46 inches in October but only 36 inches in November and 20 in December. It is possible that some other area snow totals may include October snow that probably did not last. Historically most of these areas are at least half open by mid-December but were only quarter open this year. Going into New Year's many areas were still only 1/3 open. This holiday season was the worst since 1980-81, with crowds bringing up the rocks on the limited terrain in warm weather. With base depths still around 2 feet much advanced terrain will not likely be open until late February. Just 1-2 feet has fallen during the first half of January, only modest amounts of new terrain have opened and many areas remain well under half open. Advance commitments should be avoided before March as snow tends to accumulate gradually in this region.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Beaver Creek

87

60%

65%

Breckenridge

90

71%

53%

Copper Mt.

64

53%

38%

Keystone

54

54%

33%

Loveland

68

49%

22%

Steamboat

79

48%

69%

Vail

95

60%

30%

Winter Park

73.5

48%

62%

Southern and Western Colorado: The Gothic Snow Lab between Crested Butte and Aspen (snowier climate than either) had 22 inches in October, 39 in November and only 14 in December. In the Southwest December snowfall snowfall was average or better, so Taos was 76% open at Christmas (83% now) on a 4 foot base vs. 41% open on average. Wolf Creek's 87 inches of December snow was nearly twice as much as any other U.S. area. Nearly the entire region has been dry since Christmas with no new snow expected soon. So at the Colorado areas with base depths of 3 feet (all but Wolf Creek) it may be a few weeks before more expert terrain is opened. Eyewitness reports from Snowmass over Christmas were very rocky. I would not expect Crested Butte's North Face to be open before March.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

62

61%

72%

Gothic Snow Lab

64

43%

N/A

Durango

75

69%

95%

Telluride

69

62%

58%

Wolf Creek

201

130%

100%

Northeast: The late October storm dropped 15 inches at Killington, which opened Oct. 30. Sunday River, Mt. Snow and Plattekill also opened on a limited basis. The natural snow was much less than in October 2005, so operations were more limited and any natural base soon disappeared. November and early December were very poor with low snowfall and very limited operations. This Christmas in the Northeast rivals 2006-07 as the worst since 2001-02. Christmas week and early January had mixed precipitation, but with more snow than rain. Most places had only half as much terrain open as usual at New Year's. Trail counts rose considerably last week with 1-2 feet of new snow. Percents open: Okemo 73%, Stratton 72%, Hunter 75%, Sunday River 55%, Sugarloaf 44%, Tremblant 99%, Ste. Anne 100%. I strongly recommend checking First Tracks Online Ski Magazine No-Bull Ski Reports for up to date information in this region, where both weather and surface conditions can change so rapidly.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid)

94

67%

78%

Stowe (Mansfield Stake)

56

54%

98%

Sugarbush

73

63%

100%

Killington

75

81%

64%

Whiteface

48

59%

65%

Cannon Mt.

49

75%

65%

Le Massif

56

53%

87%

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