2019-20 Ski Season Progress Report as of January 20, 2020

October 2019 was exceptionally cold in the Northern Rockies of both US and Canada. There were several small storms in northern regions and particularly in Colorado. The first half of November was bone dry in the western US with no area receiving more than 3 inches snow and most getting zero. Threfore most October snow melted out and is not included in the table of snow totals below. During the third week of November a moderate 1-2 foot storm came mostly through the Southwest while a few inches fell in some northern regions. During Thanksgiving week a strong storm dumped 2-4 feet in California and 4-6 feet in Utah. During the first week of December California got another 3-4 feet and much of western Canada 2 feet with other regions averaging no more than a foot. There was scattered snow over most of the West during the second week of December with the most falling (2-3 feet) in Utah and Colorado. The Pacific Northwest and western Canada were the focus of storms during the third week of December, but the Northwest and much of the US northern Rockies were still seriously deficient in snow for the holidays. California and Utah's Cottonwood Canyons had the most snow at Christmas. The Southwest and some of western Canada had strong storms over the holidays while other regions had lesser amounts.

In early January the storm track shifted north, dumping in the Northwest, Northern Rockies and western Canada. Mid-January continued this pattern, dumping heavily over the northern regions and as far south as Oregon and Utah.

California: Mt. Rose opened its beginner lift weekends starting Oct. 25 and Mammoth opened Nov. 9. The first natural Sierra snow Nov. 20 was only 2-6 inches but 2-3 feet fell over Thanksgiving with another 2-3 feet later that weekend. 3-4 feet during the first week of December brought Mammoth to full operation with the most open terrain in North America, while low elevations at Tahoe saw rain. After about 2 feet in mid-December, most terrain at Tahoe was open for Christmas with base depths of 4-6 feet. Late November snowfall was 3-4 feet in Southern California (soon degraded by rain) and 6 feet in Arizona, in full operation by early December. The post-Christmas storm dumped up to 3 feet in Southern California and Arizona but mostly missed the Sierra. Light rain degraded surfaces below 8,000 feet at New Year's but a few inches of snow fell later north of Tahoe. One mid-January storm ranged from 2+ feet at some Tahoe areas to 9 inches at Mammoth. 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

190

90%

80%

Alpine Meadows

146

96%

99%

Mt. Rose

132

89%

100%

Northstar (mid estimate)

137

101%

91%

Heavenly

172

103%

95%

Kirkwood

180

91%

100%

Mammoth

136.5

89%

99%

Southern Cal

97

217%

40-92%

Arizona Snowbowl

138

135%

82%

Pacific Northwest: In October Hood Meadows had 31 inches snow and Mt. Bachelor had 13 inches but the base melted out by mid-November. Late November snow averaged 2 feet in Oregon declining to less than a foot farther north. This was the driest November on record at Whistler and in Seattle. Despite 2 feet in the first half of December and 3 feet before Christmas, this region was still far behind schedule, with Whistler having record low ~30% open terrain over the holidays. Mt. Baker opened Dec. 14 and Stevens Pass Dec. 21. More Northwest terrain opened during the second half of December, but the holidays were low tide with base depths averaging 3 feet. In early January it snowed 5-6 feet at Whistler and in Washington and 3-4 feet in Oregon. After avalanche control Whistler reached full operation January 16. It snowed another 4-5 feet over the entire region in mid-January.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

191

89%

93%

Crystal Mt.

191

94%

100%

Stevens Pass

222

90%

100%

Mt. Hood

172

78%

69%

Mt. Bachelor

176

94%

100%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: October snowfall was widespread in this region but November snowfall was significant only well north of the US border. Lake Louise opened a week early on November 1, and had the most terrain open in North America in November. Most areas have received 2-3 feet in the first half of December and 3 feet the week before Christmas. Overall base depths were 4-5 feet and most terrain was open for the holidays. Silver Star and Sun Peaks reached 90+% open by Christmas. The Okanagan areas got 2+ feet of snow during the holiday week with lesser amounts farther south and east. The early January Northwest storms dumped 3-4 feet at many of these areas. Mid-January snowfall ranged from a foot at the Banff areas to 4 feet at Fernie and Whitewater.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Big White

172

115%

100%

Lake Louise

143

164%

93%

Sunshine

179

146%

100%

Revelstoke

227

116%

100%

Kicking Horse

153

114%

100%

Whitewater

242

126%

100%

Red Mt.

97

73%

100%

Fernie

211

115%

90%

Castle Mt.

163

120%

99%

U. S. Northern Rockies: Grand Targhee had 40 inches October snowfall but postponed opening to November 29 due to the dry month. Late November snow was about 2 feet in Wyoming and Sun Valley but less than a foot elsewhere. First half of December snow was 3 feet in the Tetons and 2 feet farther north. About a foot fell during each of the last two weeks of December. Holiday base depths were 4 feet in the Tetons but only 3 feet farther north. The early January Northwest storms were 5 feet in the Tetons and 3 feet farther north. Mid-January snowfall averaged 2-3 feet. Big Sky is 85% open.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Grand Targhee

193

85%

100%

Jackson Hole

175

94%

88%

Whitefish

164

101%

95%

Bridger

128

93%

100%

Schweitzer

155

112%

100%

Brundage

114

78%

100%

Sun Valley

77

78%

81%

Utah: The October cold reached as far south as Utah, setting records near the end of the month. The Snowbird SNOTEL's 40 inches of October snowfall shrunk to a 9 inch base before a few inches fell during the third week of November. The Thanksgiving week storm dumped 4-6 feet, bringing early season base depths to 3-5 feet. More terrain opened in early December once snow was stabilized plus up to a foot of new snow. 3 feet of snow the second week of December opened most terrain in the Cottonwoods on a 5-6 foot base. About two feet fell during the second half of December in the Wasatch but nearly twice as much in the south at Brian Head. Early January storms totalled 3-4 feet in the Cottonwoods and 2 feet elsewhere. Mid-January storms totalled 5 feet in the Cottonwoods and 3-4 feet elsewhere.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

270

120%

100%

Snowbird SNOTEL

246

122%

100%

Brighton/Solitude

227

109%

100%

Park City (mid estimate)

149

114%

92%

Snowbasin

173

125%

100%

Brian Head

152

117%

100%

Northern and Central Colorado: Early openings on snowmaking were A-Basin Oct. 11, Keystone Oct. 12 and Loveland Oct. 25. Most of the 3+ feet of October snow was lost during the dry first half of November so open terrain from Thanksgiving into early December was well below average on base depths averaging a bit under 2 feet after average snowfall during the second half of November and less than a foot during early December. Three feet of snow fell Dec. 12-14. Only a foot fell during the second half of December but 3 foot base depths and open terrain were average over the holidays. Early January storms were about 3 feet at Steamboat and averaged half as much elsewhere. Mid-January snowfall was 1-2 feet. A-Basin is 90% open.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Beaver Creek

108

73%

100%

Breckenridge

121

79%

92%

Copper Mt.

72.5

57%

92%

Keystone

91

84%

96%

Loveland

113

78%

71%

Steamboat

132.5

79%

100%

Vail

113

70%

99%

Winter Park

127

80%

95%

Southern and Western Colorado: The Rocky Mountain Biological Lab at Gothic (between Crested Butte and Aspen) had 20 inches October snowfall but lost its base during the dry first half of November. Wolf Creek had 22 inches October snowfall and Monarch 38 inches, so both opened by Nov. 1. The Southwest was the region most favored during the third week of November plus about 3 feet of snow during the ensuing two weeks. A mid-December storm averaged 2 feet at most areas but 4 feet at Monarch. Base depths were 3-4 feet at most areas and 5 feet at Wolf Creek and Monarch after up to one foot of snow the week before Christmas. The Southwest storm after Christmas dumped 4 feet at Wolf Creek and about 2 feet at other southern areas. In early January it only snowed a few inches in the Southwest but about a foot farther north. Mid-Janaury snowfall was 3 feet at Wolf Creek and 1-2 feet elsewhere. Part of Crested Butte's North face opened January 15 and Taos' Kachina Peak lift opened January 18.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

138

128%

99%

Gothic Snow Lab

86

56%

N/A

Crested Butte

98

93%

83%

Monarch

173

142%

100%

Telluride

139

127%

89%

Purgatory

124

111%

100%

Wolf Creek

210

128%

100%

Taos

118

104%

99%

Northeast: The first openings were Killington Nov. 3, Mt. St. Sauveur Nov. 8 and Sunday River Nov. 9. Early November weather was favorably cold but there was mixed precipitation late in the month. Terrain expanded some in early December with 1.5 feet of new snow. Rain on Dec. 14 depressed trail counts. There was some recovery before Christmas, but a tough holiday week with some freezing rain. Conditions in early January improved with 1-2 feet of new snow, but it rained the second weekend. Conditions improved with up to 2+ feet of snow over MLK weekend. Percents open: Hunter 66%, Okemo 71%, Sunday River 91% and Sugarloaf 59%, Tremblant 86%, St. Anne 100%.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid estimate)

143

93%

99%

Smuggler's Notch

123

82%

67%

Stowe

119

83%

90%

Sugarbush

84

68%

99%

Killington

116

105%

66%

Stratton

66

76%

83%

Whiteface

90

105%

64%

Cannon

92

130%

67%

Le Massif

101

92%

89%

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