2009-10 Ski Season Progress Report as of January 13, 2010

October was colder and snowier than average, so a few areas opened earlier than normal. In November the big news was the record breaking snow at Whistler. In the Pacific Northwest and much of western Canada November snowfall was far above normal and many areas opened a lot of terrain early. In early December there was a moderate storm in California and the Southwest followed by a substantial dump in the Sierra and Utah. In mid-December the storm track returned to the Northwest and Canada. There were only scattered snow showers arouind Christmas, so holiday skiing was excellent in the the Northwest and Canada, but the worst in over a decade in Front Range Colorado and Jackson Hole. Over New Year's the Northwest/Canada storm track resumed but also brought some relief to the Northern Rockies. The past week has been dry over most of the West, and the western season overall is possibly the worst so far since 1992. Fortunately a major shift in weather to a stormy pattern is predicted for next week.

California: The Sierra had a major mid-October storm but with average snow level of 10,000 feet. Mammoth opened Oct. 16-18, then closed in warm weather until a snowmaking reopening of about 5% of terrain on Nov. 7. Boreal, Mt. High and Bear Mt. also opened limited snowmaking runs in early November. But the Sierra had only 2 feet of snow in November, half of on the last weekend, so no one was more than 5% open for Thanksgiving. The Sierra got 2-3 feet of snow around Dec. 7 and another 3-5 feet a week later. With 1-2 feet in late December most areas were 75-90+% open for the holidays, with only the most expert terrain such as Heavenly's Mott Canyon and Squaw's Silverado needing more snow to open. Base depths are 5-6 feet on the Sierra Crest but a below average 3-4 feet farther east. Over New Year's there was 1+ foot snow in North Tahoe but just a few inches farther south. After a dry week+ there was 1+ feet of snow yesterday in the Sierra. Base depths are below average but that could change with next week's predicted storms. 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

169

98%

90%

Heavenly

129

91%

85%

Northstar

125

108%

99%

Kirkwood

172

94%

100%

Mammoth

178

125%

100%

Southern Cal

27

72%

10-100%

Arizona Snowbowl

110

127%

100%

Pacific Northwest: This region has the best snow odds in early season, but the start to this season was truly spectacular. Whistler shattered its November snow record with 218 inches and was half open for Thanksgiving, including steep tarrain like some of the Spanky's Ladder runs. Mt. Baker and Whistler had 6 foot bases and other Northwest areas about 4 feet at Thanksgiving. Early December had little snow, so some surfaces were variable after low elevation rain Thanksgiving week. With 3-5 feet of mid-December snow holiday base depths were 5-8 feet. Conditions were excellent through New Year's with 2+ feet of snow. Last weekend it rained to at least 5,000 feet so low elevation conditions are now variable.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

313

167%

100%

Stevens Pass

184

86%

100%

Crystal Mt.

216

129%

100%

Mt. Hood Meadows

178

91%

100%

Mt. Bachelor

199

120%

100%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: Western Canada also got off to a fast start. Sunshine's 107 inches broke its November record. Sun Peaks was 95% open before Christmas and Big White 81%. Whitewater, Revelstoke and Fernie opened the last weekend of November on 4 foot bases. As in the Northwest, not much new snow the first week of December but 1+ foot at the Banff areas and 3-4 feet in most of interior B.C later in the month. Holiday base depths were 4-5 feet and there was 1-2+ feet of snow over New Year's. Since then the Banff area has been dry while some of the Northwest rain affected lower elevations near the US border with about a foot of snow farther north.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Lake Louise

95

124%

91%

Sunshine

141

130%

93%

Revelstoke

185

100%

92%

Kicking Horse

124

101%

93%

Whitewater

198

111%

100%

Fernie

170

95%

100%

Castle Mt.

117

87%

90%

U. S. Northern Rockies: Early snow totals were variable, as the big November storms tracked more heavily into into Canada. Big Sky and Bridger were the only areas above average in open runs by mid-December. Schweitzer and Whitefish got 2+ feet mid-December to reach close to normal Christmas conditions. Jackson was less than half open and had its worst Christmas conditions since 1997-98. With 2-3 feet of New Year's snow at most areas only Jackson and Sun Valley remained in limited operation. No new snow in this region in the past week.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Bridger

119

97%

100%

Grand Targhee

155

76%

100%

Jackson Hole

113

66%

71%

Schweitzer

110

91%

100%

Whitefish

119

81%

100%

Sun Valley

76

89%

75%

Utah: The Cottonwood Canyons had about 40 inches of October snow, but less than 2 feet in November. The first lift served skiing was on snowmaking at Solitude Nov. 7 and Brighton Nov. 14. Skiing was very restricted into early December. The first Southwest storm dumped 30 inches on Brian Head but only a few inches in the Wasatch. The mid-December storm was nearly 4 feet in the Cottonwood areas and 2-3 feet elsewhere. Cottonwood areas were 90+% open on 4-foot bases for the holidays with about a foot new snow. The Cottonwood and Ogden areas got 1+ foot over New Year's but more snow is still needed to open some advanced terrain at the Park City areas. A few inches are expected from today's storm coming from the Sierra and likely more next week.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

113

53%

100%

Snowbird

106

58%

94%

Brighton/Solitude

114

56%

92%

Park City

51

42%

88%

Snowbasin

66

49%

73%

Brian Head

101

80%

100%

Northern and Central Colorado: Loveland opened its first snowmaking run Oct. 6. At Thanksgiving Loveland was 11% open and Breckenridge 14%, with everyone else under 10% open. By mid-December even the snowfall leaders were only 1/3 to 1/2 open compared to about 90% in a normal year. Snowfall from November 1 up to Christmas was about half of normal. Holiday skiing was the most limited since 1998-99 on base depths averaging less than 3 feet. Snowfall leader Steamboat was only 56% open as late as Dec. 24 but had 4 feet of snow over the next 2 weeks. Vail and Winter Park were less than half open until they got 20 inches around New Year's. With just a few inches last week advanced skiers should still avoid the lower snowfall areas in this region until coverage improves further. A-Basin is only 33% open.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Breckenridge

69

60%

81%

Copper Mt.

71

66%

79%

Keystone

53

68%

78%

Loveland

60.5

46%

54%

Steamboat

118

70%

99%

Vail

100

66%

95%

Winter Park

105

69%

83%

Southern and Western Colorado: Wolf Creek opened Oct. 31 and has been in full operation after 30 inches mid-November. The Gothic Snow Lab between Aspen and Crested Butte had 42.5 inches of October snow, 30 in November and 73 in December. Most areas had 4-5 feet in December and 8+ feet at Wolf Creek. With base depths of 3+ feet this was an average Christmas at most areas with some but not all advanced runs open. With just a few inches in the last 2 weeks Crested Butte's North Face and a few other expert sectors still need more snow to open. Next week's storms are expected to bring relief to this region.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

80

87%

94%

Crested Butte

80

87%

44%

Gothic Snow Lab

108

84%

N/A

Durango

87

88%

96%

Telluride

112

118%

93%

Wolf Creek

189

136%

100%

Taos

105

98%

78%

Northeast: Cold October weather allowed Sunday River to open on snowmaking Oct. 14. Killington opened Oct. 31. The East had an exceptionally warm November, too warm to make snow most of the time even in Quebec. Sunday River and Mont St. Sauveur were the only areas open at Thanksgiving, about 3% each. The first major storm of the season of 1-2 feet hit at the end of November with another 2-3 feet in the first half of December. The big mid-December East Coast storm missed the ski areas, but trail counts rose with cold weather. It rained 2 days over Christmas weekend over the entire Northeast except for the Quebec City areas which got 3 feet of snow. By the first week of January most areas reached close to full operation due to sustained cold and at least a foot of snow, led by Killington, Cannon and Sugarloaf with 30+ inches. Last week only northern Vermont got as much as a foot of snow but temperatures remaqined cold. 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. Percents open: Sunday River 89%, Okemo 96%, Stratton 100%, Hunter 85%, Ste. Anne 97%, Tremblant 88%

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid)

111

74%

927%

Mansfield Stake

86

85%

92%

Smuggler's Notch

126

91%

99%

Sugarbush

76

67%

99%

Killington

103

99%

95%

Cannon Mt.

89

136%

97%

Sugarloaf

76

97%

86%

Whiteface

73

104%

86%

Le Massif

105

110%

96%

Other season snow totals: Okemo 55, Stratton 72, Ste. Anne 74, Tremblant 41

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