2011-12 Ski Season Progress Report as of March 31, 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 were in the worst shape in January since at least 1980-81. Only the Pacific Northwest and western Canada had normal or better conditions and most of the snow through the first half of January was in those same regions.

The weather pattern finally changed in mid-January. Major storms hit the Pacific Northwest but then moved into the Northern Rockies and eventually Utah. A second system brought the Sierra its first snow in 2 months, but in most places was only enough to get about half of terrain open. In late January the storm track moved to the north. The first half of February was drier than normal except for the Southwest. Colorado received snow in its usual moderate amounts since mid-January, so more terrain opened each week and most areas finally approached full operation by President's weekend. The second half of February had at least average snowfall in all regions and much more than that in the northern regions. 2001-12 is no longer likely to rank with the worst overall seasons of 1976-77, 1980-81, 1991-92 and 1986-87. March produced diverging extremes of conditions. Snowfall was massive the entire month in the Pacifc Northwest and western Canada. Meanwhile Colorado had a record dry March and northeast skiing was nearly wiped out by record heat.

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 remained dry and a 2+ week period around the holidays was also too warm to make snow. The Sierra finally got about 4 feet of snow 3 weeks into January, but at Tahoe that was followed by rain and warm weather so less than half of terrain was open with mediocre surface conditions at the end of January. Somewhat more terrain opened in mid-February with a foot of snow and improved surfaces, but by the last weekend in February Tahoe had been through a melt freeze and its snowfall had fallen behind the record low season of 1976-77. Mammoth escaped the rain and the melt freeze and preserved winter surfaces with its higher altitude. At the end of February Tahoe was greatly improved with 3-4 feet of snow but Mammoth got only about a third as much. Then most Sierra terrain went to spring conditions during 2 warm weeks. Mid-March brought the season's largest storm of 4-7 feet, at last opening most expert terrain. There has been 1-3 feet more in late March. 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 SoCal and Arizona were warm and mostly dry from Christmas through January. Arizona had 2-3 feet of February snow. 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

301

75%

76%

Northstar

212

77%

93%

Mt. Rose

195

63%

100%

Heavenly

226

73%

96%

Kirkwood

232

53%

100%

Mammoth

188.5

59%

100%

Southern Cal

95

80%

0-97%

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. In early January there were 3 feet at Whistler, 2 feet in Washington and less than a foot in Oregon. Snow in the second half of January was spectacular, with 9-10 feet in Washington and Oregon and 5 feet at Whistler, bringing base depths to 6-10+ feet. The first half of February had about 1 1/2 feet of snow but the second half had at least 5 feet throughout the region, topped by 8 feet at Stevens Pass. March has been even more stormy, with 11-15 feet of snow over the entire region.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

491

129%

100%

Mt. Baker

738

129%

100%

Crystal Mt.

536

150%

100%

Stevens Pass

543

128%

100%

Mt. Bachelor

454

135%

100%

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 was 1-2 feet near the U.S. border but 2-3 feet farther north Big White is 99% open and Silver Star and Sun Peaks 100% on 4-6 foot bases. Last half of January snow was 9 feet at Fernie and 3-5 feet elsewhere. The first half of February was mostly dry, with less than a foot of snow but the second half was excellent, with snowfall ranging from 2 feet at Lake Louise to 5 feet at Fernie and Whitewater. March has been outstanding throughout the region with 6-9 feet of new snow. Lake Louise and Sunshine surpassed their previous season snowfall records by the end of March. Revelstoke and Kicking Horse snow totals are likely inflated by including October, but both were 50+% open by early December.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Lake Louise

254

177%

99%

Sunshine

371

178%

100%

Revelstoke

431

137%

100%

Kicking Horse

375

166%

100%

Whitewater

438

126%

100%

Red Mt.

250

100%

100%

Fernie

432

132%

100%

Castle Mt.

248

103%

100%

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 were 4 feet in the Tetons and at Schweitzer but no more than 3 feet elsewhere, far below average. The mid-January storm brought 3-4 feet to Whitefish, Idaho and the Tetons, finally putting those areas in good shape, with another 2-3 feet later in the month. Second half of January snowfall elsewhere in Montana was less than half a much as in Idaho and Wyoming. First half of February snowfall was about a foot in Montana and Wyoming but less in Idaho. The second half or February was outstanding, averaging 5 feet at many areas and topped by 7 feet at Targhee. First half of March snowfall was 3-4 feet, maintaining excellent conditions. Late March snowfall was about 4 feet near Canada but lesser amounts farther south with spring conditions emerging between storms.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Grand Targhee

390

92%

100%

Jackson Hole

295

86%

100%

Whitefish

299

104%

100%

Bridger Bowl

232

87%

100%

Schweitzer

367

149%

100%

Sun Valley

193

108%

100%

Brundage

249

88%

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. There was 5 feet of snow in the Cottonwood areas in the second half of January and 4 feet in the rest of the Wasatch, resulting in close to full operation on 6 foot bases in the Cottonwood areas and 4 foot bases elsewhere. Early February Wasatch snowfall was below average at less than 2 feet but Brian Head had nearly 4 feet. Late February snow was 5 feet in the Cottonwood areas and 2-3 feet elsewhere. The first half of March was mostly warm and most terrain went to spring conditions. The mid-March storm dumped 3-4 feet but spring conditions returned within a week.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

327

72%

100%

Snowbird

316

80%

100%

Brighton/Solitude

280

65%

100%

Park City group

208

79%

84%

Snowbasin

192

72%

99%

Brian Head

230

80%

100%

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. 4-5 feet fell over the course of January and about 2 feet in the first half of February, so new terrain opened gradually and most areas finally approached full operation by President's weekend. The northern storm track in late February slammed Steamboat with almost 6 feet of snow, with other areas in the region getting 2-3 feet. March was the driest in the history of the state, so with low base depths from the slow early season quite a bit of terrain has closed by the end of March, almost unheard of in this region.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Beaver Creek

198

68%

66%

Breckenridge

219

85%

81%

Copper Mt.

164

67%

80%

Keystone

120

60%

53%

Loveland

175

61%

60%

Steamboat

224

68%

81%

Vail

213

67%

48%

Winter Park

173.5

56%

77%

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 (100% by early February) 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. Eyewitness reports from Snowmass over Christmas were very rocky. Nearly the entire region was dry for 3 weeks after Christmas but there was 3+ feet of snow in the second half of January. The Southwest areas have had 3-4 feet of snow in February to get most terrain open on 4-5 foot bases. Farther north it was only 2 feet. Second half of February snowfall was 2+ feet at most areas but 4 feet at Wolf Creek. Crested Butte opened about half of the North Face at President's weekend. March has been mostly warm and dry, resulting in spring conditions and some terrain closures but not nearly as many as at the Front Range areas.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

171

78%

78%

Gothic Snow Lab

199

63%

N/A

Durango

209

88%

94%

Telluride

209

87%

95%

Wolf Creek

368

109%

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 rivaled 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 in mid-January with 1-3 feet of new snow, but most areas still remained short of full operation at the end of January. There was minimal progress in early February with less than a foot of new snow, but late February brought the best conditions of the season with 2-4 feet of snow. Early March had 1-2 feet of snow, but record mid-March heat into the 80's almost wiped out eastern skiing, with the majority of areas closing by March 24. Percents open: Okemo closed, Stratton closed, Hunter closed, Sunday River 44%, Sugarloaf 12%, Tremblant 31%, Ste. Anne 49%. 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)

221

72%

22%

Stowe (Mansfield Stake)

116

57%

22%

Sugarbush

161

66%

3%

Killington

131

58%

4%

Whiteface

129

80%

Closed

Cannon Mt.

125

85%

Closed

Le Massif

182

86%

36%

Directory of Ski Report Links

All content herein copyright © 1996-2012 Bestsnow.net
All Rights Reserved.
No copies or reproductions may be made in whole or in part without express permission by Tony Crocker.
Prices for commercial users will be determined based upon intended use and distribution.