2014-15 Ski Season Progress Report as of March 15, 2015

In most ski regions this was a warmer and drier than normal October and early November. However, there was substantial snowfall in the northern and central Rockies in the rest of November to put the season on a normal track in many regions. Open terrain for Thanksgiving was mostly on snowmaking but with some natural base at many areas. The first half of December was mostly dry in the Rockies, leaving most areas below average as of mid-December. The weekend before Christmas there was a strong storm of unusually dense snow in parts of Utah and much of Colorado just in time for the holiday season. Snowfall during the holiday season was heaviest in Utah and the US Northern Rockies.

There were storms during the first week of January in western Canada and the US Northern Rockies, and during the second week in Utah and southern Colorado. Otherwise January 2015 was one of the overall driest western winter months on record, with no areas getting normal snow for the month and many getting less than half of normal. The first half of February was even worse, with the Rockies being as dry as January with warmer temperatures. The only major storm was a Pineapple Express along the West Coast that damaged as many areas with rain as it helped with snow.

Most western regions continued much drier than average for the past month, with the conspicuous exception of the Southwest, which got 2-3 feet the third weekend of February and another 3-4 feet in late February/early March. The West is now on track to match its second worst snow season of 1980-81, with a few areas threatening the record lows of 1976-77. With little new snow over the past month and frequent thaw/freezes, skiing off groomed runs is unpleasant at many areas even if terrain is reported open. Many of the perennial spring ski leaders are likely to close prematurely this season.

California: The first Sierra winter storm hit November 1-2. Tahoe ski areas got 3-8 inches. The storm track was centered farther south so Mammoth got 12 inches. Unfortunately the next week was record warm, and the next storm missed Mammoth and was mostly rain at Tahoe. There were three December storms before Christmas in the 1-2 foot range plus a couple smaller events. Snowfall was concentrated near the Sierra Crest west of Lake Tahoe, with much lesser amounts at the resorts near and east of the lake, as noted in the table s below. Advanced terrain was still limited, as base depths were no more than 3 feet at high elevation and in many cases less than 2 feet lower down. Squaw has had less than 1/3 as much snow at its 6,200 foot base as higher up. There was up to a foot of light snow during the holidays, but January was record dry, just a few inches near the end of the month. The early February Pineapple storm had high and fluctating snow levels in the Sierra. Upper elevations now have about 4 feet of coverage while lower elevations had mostly rain. Mt. Rose was the one big winner with 30-44 inches and is the Sierra area closest to full operation. Warm weather over President's weekend degraded much of the snow. The first Southwest storm dropped up to a foot at Mammoth but missed Tahoe. The end of month storm ranged from 6-18 inches, but there has been no more than a foot the first half of March. Coverage below 8,000 feet has been marginal with repeated long warm spells between the meager snowfalls. Most Sierra resorts should be avoided unless there is substantially more snow. Even Mammoth may not get past April this season. See Current California Ski Conditions for more details on Southern California and Mammoth.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alpine Meadows

118.5

41%

44%

Squaw 8,000

170

48%

32%

Northstar

75

31%

55%

Mt. Rose

150

56%

90%

Sierra-at-Tahoe

96.5

30%

50%

Heavenly

73

23%

42%

Kirkwood

151

40%

90%

Mammoth

94

34%

71%

Southern Cal

46

45%

0-60%

Pacific Northwest: The entire season has been characterized by storms with a high rain/snow line. Thus the Whistler alpine has a manageable 57-inch base but ungroomed surfaces are difficult and much of the lower mountain has melted out. Mt. Bachelor's Summit opened Dec. 13 and has a 6-7 foot base, but the pre-Christmas storm iced the Summit lift and closed it for the next 3 weeks. The 20 inches in early February resurfaced upper terrain and has given Bachelor the best conditions in a mostly miserable region. Other Northwest areas had excessive early season rain and only opened just before Christmas on a limited basis with base depths less than 3 feet. Conditions improved with 2+ feet of snow during the holidays and early January, but late January rain closed some terrain and the February Pineapple (rain to 5,500 feet at Whistler and 6,500 farther south) closed even more. The entire region has had warm weather, more rain and less than a foot of snow in the past month. Mt. Baker closed March 11, and most other Northwest areas remain in limited operation and should be avoided until there is a substantial dump of snow. Later spring skiing will likely be limited to Timberline, Bachelor's Summit and perhaps the Whistler alpine.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

193

56%

79%

Crystal Mt.

178

54%

20%

Stevens Pass

154

40%

Closed

Mt. Bachelor

163

53%

54%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: There was quite a bit of terrain open in this region from early snow in November. The Okanagan areas had the most snow in December. Early January snowfall was 1-2 feet with the Okanagan areas again getting the most. Base depths were 5 feet at Revelstoke and Whitewater and 3-4 feet elsewhere. Lower areas near the US border had some of the rain from the early season Northwest storms but had over a foot of snow during the holidays. The late January and early February rain to 5,500 feet and ensuing warmup affected most of interior B.C. The Kootenay areas near the US border were most damaged by the rain. Banff/Lake Louise received all snow from these storms and now have the best conditions in the region. There has been no more than a foot of snow in the past month in the entire region so melt/freeze conditions prevail on sun exposed slopes, and ungroomed skiing in rain-affected areas is not recommended.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Big White

182

80%

90%

Lake Louise

128

96%

98%

Sunshine

160

84%

100%

Revelstoke

261

90%

58%

Kicking Horse

195

96%

100%

Whitewater

206

65%

100%

Red Mt.

135

61%

70%

Fernie

169

56%

42%

Castle Mt.

99

46%

Closed

U. S. Northern Rockies: There were several storms in November in Wyoming and Montana. There was not much early December snow except for Sun Valley getting snow from the south. Big Sky is 97% open, but steep terrain is reported rocky. Idaho skiing improved with pre-Christmas storms except at the panhandle areas which probably had some Northwest rain, while the Tetons got about 3 feet of snow. The entire region got 2+ feet of snow over the holidays, and was the most favored western region in the first half of January with 1.5-3 feet of snow. Low altitude areas near the US border got the late January and early February Northwest rain while others only had the warm spells. Only the Tetons and SW Montana have had more than a foot of snow in the past month. Melt/freeze condtions prevail everywhere except of the highest north facing slopes.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whitefish

190

73%

90%

Bridger

172

73%

100%

Grand Targhee

245

64%

100%

Jackson Hole

244

78%

92%

Schweitzer

122

61%

48%

Brundage

156

64%

100%

Sun Valley

118

73%

100%

Utah: The season started dry but the Cottonwood areas got a mid-November 3 foot dump. Other areas did not get so much and have had very limited skiing mostly on snowmaking. The pre-Christmas storm dumped 2-3 feet of heavy snow in the Cottonwoods, and over a foot of fluff topped that off over Christmas, bringing the base up to 5-6 feet. The areas outside the Cottonwoods were still quite restricted because some of that pre-Christmas storm was rain up to 8,000 feet. These areas were about half open at Christmas and about 3/4 at New Year's. The second week of January storms dumped up to 2 feet, bringing all areas close to full operation. However that was nearly the only snow for the entire month, so spring conditions have prevailed since the late January warmup. February snowfall was barely a third of normal, though most of it was in the second half of the month. There was one early March Wasatch storm averaging 2 feet, but again followed by warm weather. Brian Head got 7 feet of snow from the late February/early March Southwest storms. Wasatch areas outside the Cottonwood Canyons should be avoided due to deteriorating conditions with over 2 months of mostly warm and dry weather.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

254

62%

100%

Snowbird

249

69%

94%

Brighton/Solitude

207

54%

96%

Park City group

137

59%

88%

Snowbasin

127

53%

95%

Brian Head

202

83%

100%

Northern and Central Colorado: A-Basin opened one snowmaking run on October 17 and has been 95+% open since mid-January. Most of November was stormy in this region, so much more terrain than usual was open for Thanksgiving. There was little snow the first half of December so base depths settled to the 2 foot range. The pre-Christmas dump of up to 3 feet of dense snow pushed the base depths into the 4 foot range for very good holiday skiing at most areas. There was another 1-2 feet over the holidays. January and early February snowfall was about half of normal, and late February snowfall was about average. There has been about 1.5 feet so far in March. Most areas are not far below average for the season due to the better earlier months. Despite recent warm weather, this is the most promising region for the late season.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Beaver Creek

240

95%

100%

Breckenridge

271

97%

100%

Copper Mt.

223

103%

100%

Keystone

167

94%

94%

Loveland

234

94%

100%

Steamboat

217

75%

100%

Vail

250

90%

100%

Winter Park

223.5

83%

96%

Southern and Western Colorado: November snowfall was above average north but below average south. Snowfall and open terrain have lagged the Front Range areas. The pre-Christmas storm brought 2+ feet to Aspen and Telluride and lesser amounts elsewhere. Holiday week snowfall was about a foot except for 3 feet at Wolf Creek. The second week of Janaury storms dropped 2+ feet at Wolf Creek and 1+ foot in other southern Colorado areas. The region averaged only about a foot of snow from mid-January to mid-February, leaving sketchy conditions on no more than 3+ foot bases. The late February/early March Southwest storms dropped 4+ feet of snow at Aspen and Crested Butte and 5-7 feet in southern Colorado. Taos was also slammed with these storms, so its base jumped from 43 inches mid-February to 80 inches at the end of the month. The new Kachina chair opened Feb. 13. This region has the best March skiing but most of these areas close in early April ue to remote location.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

168

87%

99%

Gothic Snow Lab

207.5

74%

N/A

Crested Butte

176

90%

63%

Durango

147

73%

100%

Telluride

212

102%

99%

Wolf Creek

271

92%

100%

Northeast: October was too warm for any areas to open by the end of the month. November was good for snowmaking but there was intermittent rain along with some snow late in the month. The first half of December was colder with 2-3 feet of snow, so skiing was much better than normal for early season. Unfortunately widespread rain fell just before Christmas, producing icy surfaces and reduced trail counts for the holidays. January had average snowfall but consistent cold temperatures for a mostly good month of skiing. February was outstanding with 4-6 feet of snow and no thaws or rain, vastly superior to most western regions. Early March has remained good in northern areas with 2+ feet of snow, but farther south there has been the first rain and thaw since Christmas. Percents open: Okemo 85%, Stratton 87%, Hunter 79%, Sugarloaf 87%, Sunday River 88%, Tremblant 100%, Mt. St. Anne 100%.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid)

275

101%

100%

Stowe

253

101%

100%

Sugarbush

206

93%

100%

Killington

178

89%

68%

Cannon Mt.

171

129%

100%

Whiteface

136

93%

90%

Le Massif

147

78%

100%

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