2007-08 Ski Season Progress Report as of January 29, 2008

There was some snow in the Northwest and some of the Rockies in early to mid-October. However, the next month was exceptionally dry, so most western areas were well behind schedule in opening terrain and building a natural snow base. High snowfall areas like Alta, Kirkwood and Steamboat did not open for Thanksgiving, and most western U.S. areas that were open only had snowmaking runs and less than 10% of terrain. Therefore I will attempt wherever possible to exclude October from season totals in the tables below. Whistler was the conspicuous exception, opening 1,200 acres November 16 after a substantial dump, and 5,000 acres for Thanksgiving. Elsewhere in the West skiing remained limited through the first weekend of December despite some unusual storms.

Substantial snow during the first half of December was concentrated in the Southwest and the Northeast. Since mid-December Utah, the Northwest and most of the northern Rockies had multiple storms, completely recovered from the slow start and had above average holiday conditions. The Sierra was the only western region still lagging at New Year's.

The Sierra caught up spectacularly with a huge dump in early January. The first half of January had nearly continuous snowfall in the Northwest, Northern Rockies, Utah and some parts of Colorado. So after the very slow start to the season most western areas are now well above average. Mid-January snow was concentrated mainly in the Northern Rockies and Utah. Late in the month snow has been widespread, but heaviest in California.

I am now including season snowfall from some areas italicized from SnoCountry.

California:Mammoth opened a very sketchy snowmaking ribbon Nov. 9 and added a couple more runs at Thanksgiving. A few Tahoe areas also opened for Thanksgiving. Late November was good for snowmaking, but no one in the Sierra was more than 10% open Dec. 1 on natural snow of only 2-8 inches. About 2 feet of snow Dec. 6-7 opened about 20% of terrain at areas like Northstar, Sierra-at-Tahoe and Sugar Bowl. The Sierra had 3+ feet of snow Dec. 18-20, and some areas were 70-90% open on 3-4 foot bases. This all changed with the major storm of 5-9 feet Jan. 3-8. The Southwest storms allowed Arizona Snowbowl to open most runs Dec. 13. Southern California and Arizona got 2-3 feet of snow in early January, and the Sierra and Southern California both got 3-6 feet last week. All areas are in full operation with Sierra base depths of 6-11 feet. 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

261

118%

100%

Kirkwood

284

122%

100%

Mammoth

215

119%

100%

Northstar

128

87%

100%

Mt. Rose

172

96%

100%

Southern Cal

90

172%

100%

Arizona Snowbowl

150

134%

100%

Pacific Northwest: Whistler had 4 feet of snow to open on November 16. It remains an excellent bet for early season skiing in North America this year. Some storms reached Washington and Oregon in late November, but starting with a high rain/snow line. The big early December storm started snow but ended with heavy rain and left Whistler with a hardpack base. Mt. Bachelor's Summit received enough snow to open December 10. Skiing was more restricted in Washington due to lower elevation and more rain in early December. Up to 2 feet of snow resurfaced Whistler and opened most terrain there by Dec. 15. In the second half of December there was 5-9 feet new snow, so all Northwest areas were in good shape for the holidays on 6-10 foot bases. The first half of January was continuously stormy, dumping 7-9 feet of snow throughout the region. In the second half of January there has been about a foot of snow at Whistler and 2 feet in Washington/Oregon.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

260

114%

100%

Crystal

281

134%

100%

Stevens Pass

288

108%

100%

Mt. Bachelor

296.5

147%

100%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.:Snowmaking at Lake Louise opened one trail Nov. 9, but November skiing was very limited. After 2+ feet new snow Sunshine opened some of Goat's Eye Dec. 7. Early snowfall was also above average at Kicking Horse, which opened a week early on Dec. 8. Elsewhere the season started slower. The Okanagan areas had below average snow and Big White was less than half open until after Christmas, now 74%. Red/Fernie received too much rain in early December, but were in great shape by Christmas with 4-6 feet new snow from Northwest storms during the second half of December. The first half of January Northwest storm track dropped 4-5 feet at Red and Fernie and an average of 2 feet elsewhere in western Canada. Later in January Fernie has had 3 feet, with 1-2 feet elsewhere as frigid Arctic air settles into much of the region .

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Lake Louise

84

90%

88%

Sunshine

148

112%

94%

Kicking Horse

168

113%

100%

Fernie

251

114%

100%

Red Mt.

170

107%

100%

Sun Peaks

1136

124%

100%

U. S. Northern Rockies: Grand Targhee was 75% open by November 30, maintaining its perfect early season track record. Jackson got some of this snow, but locals reported a low mid-December natural snow base below mid-mountain. 5 feet of snow at Jackson later in December opened most terrain for Christmas. Big Sky was 50+% open on its easier lower mountain since Dec 8, increasing to 85% at Christmas. Bridger Bowl got 32 inches in late November, opened most runs on schedule December 7, and had 7 feet over the next month. Schweitzer got 4 feet of snow in early December before it turned to rain. It and Big Mountain got most runs open by Dec. 21 and had 5-6 feet of late December snow from the Northwest storms. These areas had 4-5 feet of snow in the first half of January, with 6 feet in the Tetons and 2-3 feet at Sun Valley, Big Sky and Bridger. Snow continued strong with 4-5 feet at most areas over the past 2 weeks. Sun Valley got 3 feet from the recent storm tracking NE from the Sierra

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Big Mountain

247

137%

100%

Bridger Bowl

230

151%

100%

Grand Targhee

291

112%

100%

Jackson Hole

258

120%

100%

Schweitzer

210

139%

100%

Sun Valley

154

144%

95%

Utah: The Cottonwood Canyons had up to 4 feet of snow in mid-October, bringing out substantial numbers of backcountry skiers Oct. 21. But November was the driest since 1976, exceeding that drought year only in the final week. 1+ foot of snow at the start of December and up to 3 feet Dec. 6-8 got Utah's season off the ground. At mid-December only Alta approached full operation. Then the Cottonwood areas got another 3 feet and most runs there were open by Dec. 21. Additional storms finally opened most runs at Snowbasin and the Park City areas by Christmas. Total December snowfall of 8 feet at Park City and 12 feet in the Cottonwood Canyons made the November drought a distant memory. The bounty has continued with 6-7 feet of snow in the first half of January and 3-4 feet the rest of the month.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

311

119%

100%

Snowbird

257

114%

100%

Brighton/Solitude

264

129%

100%

Park City group

197

132%

98%

Snowbasin

233

140%

100%

Brian Head

166

106%

100%

Northern and Central Colorado: Loveland received 22 inches snow in October and had 105 acres open by Nov. 4. November snowfall was less than half normal throughout the region and record low along the Continental Divide. But 4-5 feet of denser than normal snow fell during the first half of December. Therefore, normal percentages of terrain were open for the holidays even though many snow totals were still below average. Steamboat's snow was lagging past mid-December, but not after 6 feet new during the holidays. By year end snow totals were noticeably below average only at the Continental Divide, where A-Basin was less than half open until mid-January, now 80%. 1-2 feet of snow fell in early January. Mid-January storms dumped 7.5 feet at Steamboat, 4-5 feet at Vail, Beaver Creek and Winter Park and average 2 feet elsewhere, with slightly less along the still lagging Continental Divide. Late January snow was a typical 1 to 1.5 feet through out the region.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Beaver Creek

202

119%

100%

Breckenridge

148

103%

100%

Copper Mt.

146

111%

100%

Keystone

117

119%

100%

Loveland

130

81%

85%

Steamboat

266

128%

100%

Vail

206

111%

100%

Winter Park

169.5

91%

93%

Southern and Western Colorado: The Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, located at Gothic 9,400 feet between Crested Butte and Aspen, had 34 inches of October snow, but a 30+ year record low of 14 inches in November. Telluride did not open for Thanksgiving, and even Wolf Creek was less than 10% open. But this region had an outstanding first half of December, with 5-6 feet of high density snow at most areas, and 13 feet at Wolf Creek. Much more terrain was open than normal for the holidays on 4-5 foot bases, and even most of Crested Butte's North Face was open, rare by Christmas. Taos opened Dec. 14 with far more than average base depths and open runs and was 90+% open by Christmas. Second half December snow ranged from 3+ feet at Aspen, which roughly tied 1983 for its snowiest December, to 2 feet in southern Colorado. Nearly all western Colorado areas got 4-5 feet during the first half of January and should be in great shape for the rest of the season with historically excellent snow preservation. The late January California storms continued into this region with an average of 2 feet but 4 feet at Wolf Creek.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen

206

184%

99%

Crested Butte

192

168%

94%

Gothic

224.5

140%

N/A

Durango

211

177%

99%

Telluride

201

170%

100%

Wolf Creek

338

196%

100%

Taos

163

125%

100%

Northeast: Sunday River made enough snow for a "marketing opening" on Halloween. A few areas opened for the weekend of Nov. 10-11, and many more for the next weekend, assisted by over a foot of new snow at many areas. For Thanksgiving trail counts increased from the 10% to 20% range, though surfaces were less than ideal due to midweek rain. November had overall average conditions by historical standards though much better than the past few years. Upper New England and Quebec had 5-8 feet of snow the first 3 weeks of December with outstanding conditions. Unfortunately surfaces were degraded by rain just before Christmas, though with the ample base depths there was only a moderate drop in open trails. 2 feet of snow over the holiday period restored excellent conditions for New Year's week. The second week of January brought a major thaw with some rain, so trail counts dropped at many areas. Over the past 2 weeks there has been 2+ feet of snow in Northern Vermont areas, again restoring power/packed powder conditions. Farther south there is more hardpack with just a few inches new natural snow. Rain and degraded surfaces are predicted for early February for most of New England, with Quebec more likely to stay below freezing. Percents open: Okemo 91%, Stratton 98%, Hunter 76%, Sunday River 95%, Tremblant 96%, St. Anne 95%. 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 (avg.)

243

132%

100%

Smuggler's Notch

189

112%

82%

Stowe (Mansfield Stake)

142

115%

100%

Sugarbush

148

107%

100%

Killington

137

103%

62%

Cannon Mt.

133

167%

82%

Sugarloaf

119

124%

84%

Other season snow totals: Tremblant 122, Mt. St. Anne 156, Okemo 77, Stratton 98.

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