2022-23 Ski Season Progress Report as of January 1, 2023

Late October 2022 saw widespread moderate snowfall through much of the West. Some of this snowpack persisted in Utah and the Tetons as the first third of November was very snowy there as well as California. It was then mostly dry to Thanksgiving, so only Utah and the Tetons include October snowfall in the tables below. The earlier storms opened the majority of terrain at Grand Targhee, Mammoth and all 4 of Utah's Cottonwood Canyon areas on 4 foot bases. Widespread snow over most of the West through mid-December opened much more terrain. While most regions saw only modest snow the week before Christmas, many areas in the Sierra, Utah and northern Rockies were already set for the holidays on 4-6+ foot bases.

Intense atmospheric rivers hit the West Coast over the holidays with 4-6 feet of snow but also with lower elevation rain. These storms pushed into inland regions as well, particularly Utah. There are temporary closures not noted below digging out from these storms.

California: It snowed up to a foot during the first week of November, then 2+ feet at Tahoe and 4 feet at Mammoth Nov. 7-9. It snowed 3-4 feet Dec. 1-4 and another 3-4 feet Dec. 10-11. Base depths of 5-7+ feet were the deepest for mid-December since 2004. Two storms during Christmas Week dumped 3 feet plus considerable rain at low elevation and up to 6 feet above 9,000 feet, bringing average base depths up to 8 feet. Arizona got 4 feet of snow while Southern California ski areas had mostly rain. See Current California Ski Conditions for more details on Southern California and Mammoth.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Palisades 8,000

231

184%

91%

Alpine Meadows

167

153%

98%

Northstar (mid-estimate)

159

182%

97%

Mt. Rose

215

231%

100%

Heavenly

173

148%

97%

Kirkwood

199

140%

100%

Mammoth

209

192%

100%

Southern Cal

20

68%

0-79%

Arizona Snowbowl

63

89%

69%

Pacific Northwest: There were three storms in late October but the last one was all rain. Early November storms started as rain but ended as snow. The Whistler alpine cams showed a considerable base Nov. 10, but opened 9% at Thanksgiving with no more new snow. After Thanksgiving it snowed 4 feet in Washington and 3 feet in Oregon with another 2-3 feet during the first half of December, yielding base depths of 5 feet at Mt. Baker (95% open) and 3-4 feet elsewhere. After another foot of new snow, Christmas weekend was ugly with freezing rain and some temporary closures. 2 feet of snow after Christmas restored surfaces, bring base depths to 8 feet at Mt. Baker and 5 feet elsewhere.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

126

77%

92%

Stevens Pass

153

89%

100%

Crystal Mt.

158

105%

86%

Mt. Hood

189

115%

91%

Mt. Bachelor

152

107%

80%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: Late October and early November snowfall was above average but it was mostly dry for the next 3 weeks. From Thanksgiving through Christmas 4+ feet of snow fell in the Okanagan and Kootenay regions, but only half as much around Banff, which has low tide conditions. 1.5 - 3 feet fell during the holiday week. Okanagan and Kootenay base depths are 4-5 feet. Silver Star is 98% open and Sun Peaks 91%.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Big White

128

111%

97%

Lake Louise

54.5

79%

59%

Sunshine

100

104%

74%

Revelstoke

119

81%

100%

Kicking Horse

69

88%

87%

Red Mt.

107

111%

100%

Fernie

160

119%

89%

Castle Mt.

125

120%

99%

U. S. Northern Rockies: Late October/early November snowfall was 4-6 feet in the Tetons and 2-3 feet elsewhere. There was 2-3 feet after Thanksgiving, another 2-3 feet during the first half of December and a foot the week before Christmas over most of the region. Jackson opened its tram Dec. 3, Big Sky is 93% open. Christmas base depths were 5 feet in the Tetons, 3-4 feet elsewhere, and it snowed another 2+ feet over the holidays at many areas.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Grand Targhee

200

122%

100%

Jackson Hole

175

131%

95%

Whitefish

114

97%

100%

Bridger

86

86%

100%

Schweitzer

148

144%

100%

Lookout Pass

178

110%

100%

Brundage

135

126%

100%

Sun Valley

102

146%

89%

Utah: Late October/early November snowfall of 8 feet in the Cottonwoods and 4-5 feet elsewhere kicked off an excellent early season. From Thanksgiving to mid-December it snowed 7-9 feet in the Cottonwoods and 4-5 feet elsewhere. Christmas base depths were 6-7 feet in the Cottonwoods, and 4-5 feet elsewhere. During the holidays it has snowed 4+ feet in the Cottonwoods and 3 feet elsewhere, with at another foot likely as the storm is still ongoing. Alta snowfall through December is second all time to 1983-84.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

290

173%

100%

Snowbird SNOTEL

270

179%

93%

Brighton/Solitude

246

162%

95%

Park City (mid estimate)

163

171%

93%

Snowbasin

150

146%

94%

Brian Head

97

99%

100%

Northern and Central Colorado: Snowmaking openings were A-Basin Oct. 23, Keystone Oct. 28 and Winter Park Oct. 31. Early November snowfall averaged 1.5 feet, with about 2 feet over the rest of the month. During the first half of December it has snowed 5 feet at Steamboat, 3+ feet at Vail and Winter Park and 2+ feet elsewhere. Christmas base depths were 3-4 feet at the former 3 areas, which were closest to full operation for the holidays. Less than a foot fell during the week before Christmas, but an average 2 feet fell during Christmas Week with the ongoing storm expected to drop another foot.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

A-Basin

92

103%

56%

Beaver Creek

118

107%

83%

Breckenridge

104

97%

75%

Copper Mt.

97

102%

77%

Keystone

93

115%

68%

Loveland

98

89%

39%

Steamboat

175

140%

100%

Vail

129

107%

92%

Winter Park

131

110%

83%

Southern and Western Colorado: Early November snowfall was almost 3 feet at Wolf Creek and about half that elsewhere. 1-2 feet fell over the rest of the month. First half of December snow was 2-3 feet and just a few inches the week before Christmas. Wolf Creek's Christmas base was 40-45 inches, but most areas had bases not much over 2 feet. 2+ feet of snow has fallen during the holidays at most areas with another foot expected. Aside from Aspen/Snowmass and Wolf Creek, advanced terrain still needs more snow to open.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

104

129%

90%

Gothic Snow Lab

87.5

78%

N/A

Crested Butte

78

96%

59%

Monarch

88

91%

88%

Telluride

74

84%

56%

Purgatory

75

90%

93%

Wolf Creek

117

95%

100%

Taos

52

59%

34%

Northeast: Warm weather and rain prevented any areas from opening for the first half of November. Through mid-December there was intermittent cold weather for snowmaking but storms were nearly all rain. 2-3 feet of snow fell Dec. 16-18. Rain on Dec. 23 closed some recently opened trails, but the storm ended with enough snow for some areas to remain over half open. But more rain after Christmas kept many trail counts well below half. Percents open: Okemo 56%, Hunter 61%, Sunday River 42%, Sugarloaf 36%, Tremblant 51%.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid estimate)

84

74%

22%

Stowe

54

60%

26%

Sugarbush

56

65%

43%

Killington

55

70%

41%

Stratton

43

70%

43%

Whiteface

47

86%

25%

Cannon

19

38%

28%

Le Massif

74

91%

32%

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