2021-22 Ski Season Progress Report as of March 16, 2021

October 2021 precipitation was heavy along the West Coast, though mostly with very high rain/snow lines. The Oct. 24-25 storm opened Mammoth and Palisades Tahoe (formerly Squaw Valley) on Oct. 29. Substantial snow also accumulated in the Whistler alpine. November was unusually warm, plus drier than normal in many regions. The Northwest was stormy but with more rain than snow. Late November storms opened over half the terrain at the Banff areas. Revelstoke and Kicking Horse attained 5+ foot bases, which delivered good December skiing when they opened.

The warm temperatures delayed snowmaking and postponed some scheduled opening dates in the western US. Delayed opening dates are a red flag for early season skiing, particularly since the dry weather continued for a week into December. This situation would often restrict skiing through the holidays, but major storms the rest of the month wiped out all of November's snow deficit in most regions aside from Front Range Colorado and a few other far inland areas in the Rockies. Due to the November weather, October snowfall is not included in season totals other than a few places where October was material to early November open terrain.

The first week of January had major snow in the Pacific Northwest and northern Rockies with lesser amounts in adjacent regions. During the second week it rained in the Northwest while the rest of the western US developed widespread high pressure similar to November. The widespread drought persisted for 5 weeks, with nearly all western US areas getting less than half normal snow and some areas getting a foot of snow or less. Surface conditions were good at most areas in cool weather for 4 weeks, but widespread spring conditions emerged during a warm second week of February. Colder weather and a more normal snowfall pattern emerged during the second half of February, with the heaviest snowfalls being in Washington State and the Southwest. First half of March snowfall was also close to normal with the most in Utah and the Southwest.

California: There were small snowfalls in mid-October. A major atmospheric river dumped several inches of rain up to 10,000 feet before dumping 3+ feet of heavy snow Oct. 24-25. On Oct. 29 Mammoth opened 22% of terrain and Palisades Tahoe 13% but only for 3 days. It was warm in November with 7-11 inches new snow above 8,000 feet and most snow melting out lower down. Only Mammoth remained open while no Tahoe areas preserved or made enough snow to open in November. Limited terrain opened in early December with 6-10 inches snow plus cold temperatures. Then the Sierra got an average 6 feet of snow Dec. 13-16, setting up a good holiday season. Another 3-4 feet fell the week before Christmas and 4-7 feet during the holiday week. Most terrain remained open through a bone dry 6 weeks. Winter conditions remained only on north facing terrain above 8,000 feet during the second week of February. Second half of February snowfall was 1-2 feet at Tahoe and less than a foot at Mammoth but 3 feet in Arizona. First half of March snowfall in California was less than a foot, but 4 feet fell in Arizona. 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

254

76%

89%

Alpine Meadows

195

67%

91%

Mt. Rose

269

109%

96%

Heavenly

186

60%

100%

Kirkwood

217

58%

100%

Mammoth

214

76%

95%

Southern Cal

70

69%

0-90%

Arizona Snowbowl

168

86%

94%

Pacific Northwest: The entire month of October was very wet but the rain/snow line was high. November continued the warm but wet pattern. A solid snowpack of 51 inches accmulated at 6,000 feet at both Whistler and Blackcomb in November, with another 7 feet falling in December. Mt. Baker got 4 feet of snow mid-November but heavy rain reduced its base to 14 inches. No Washington or Oregon areas opened in November. 5-8 feet fell in the past two weeks before Christmas, opening much terrain. During the holiday week it snowed 5 feet in Oregon but less than 2 feet farther north. It snowed 5-6 feet during the first week of January, but rained 3/4 of the way up Whistler and above the top of Washington State areas during the second week. Whistler got a 1+ foot of snow the next week but Washington and Oregon had refrozen conditions for two dry weeks before another 1+ foot of snow hit the whole region in late January/early February. Second half of February snowfall was 4 feet in Washington State with lesser amounts elsewhere. At the end of February a warm storm rained to the top of many areas, closing some terrain. First half of March snowfall averaged 2 feet, with somewhat less at lower elevation areas.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

335

97%

97%

Stevens Pass

290

75%

87%

Crystal

282

89%

98%

Mt. Hood

338

92%

92%

Mt. Bachelor

314

92%

98%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: October snowfall was average and the Banff areas opened a week into November. November snowfall ranged from 3 feet in the Okanagan to 7+ feet at Revelstoke/Kicking Horse and Banff. 5-7 feet fell in December before Christmas, so this was the overall top region for the holiday season on 4-6+ foot bases. Sun Peaks and Silver Star have been 90+% open since Christmas. First half of January snowfall averaged 3 feet but during the second week there was some rain below 5,000 feet. Second half of Janaury snowfall averaged 1.5 feet and first half of February 1 foot. Second half of February snowfall averaged two feet, though there was a stretch of extreme cold during the last week before the Northwest rain reached some lower areas near the US border. 1.5 to 3 feet fell during the first half of March.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Big White

222

93%

94%

Lake Louise

234

169%

96%

Sunshine

304

154%

98%

Revelstoke

344

113%

100%

Kicking Horse

266

127%

100%

Red Mt.

154

71%

93%

Whitewater

318

101%

100%

Fernie

310

104%

79%

Castle Mt.

290

127%

99%

U. S. Northern Rockies: November snowfall was well below average. The lower interior Northwest areas had mostly rain in November but had 6-8 feet of snow in December. Southern Idaho got 5+ feet from the California storms, bringing Sun Valley to 79% open by Christmas and 100% at New Year's. Bridger did not open until Dec. 21 and Big Sky's early season was below normal, 48% open at Christmas and 64% at New Year's. Targhee was close to full operation by mid-December and had 6+ feet of December before Christmas. Jackson had about 4 feet before Christmas and the Lower Faces opened at New Year's after the Tetons got 3+ feet during the holidays. 2-4 feet fell during the first half of January, bringing Big Sky up to 82% open. Only at Lookout Pass did as much as a foot of snow fall during the second half of January or the first half of February. Spring conditions developed at most areas by mid-February. The second half of February had colder weather and two feet of snow, though some of the Northwest rain affected the interior Northwest. During the first half of March the Tetons and areas near the Canadian border averaged 2.5 feet while other areas averaged 1.5 feet.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whitefish

231

88%

95%

Bridger

154

65%

100%

Grand Targhee

283

74%

95%

Jackson Hole

221

71%

92%

Schweitzer

253

110%

100%

Lookout Pass

353

98%

100%

Brundage

191

79%

100%

Utah: Utah had well above average October snowfall, but it was gradual so no one opened and it melted out below 8,000 feet. November tied for driest in the 42 years of Alta Collins records at 22 inches. For the Cottonwood areas only a residual base from October is added to snow totals. In the last three weeks 6-8 feet of snow fell in the Cottonwoods but 3-4 feet elsewhere. Skiing at Christmas was very limited outside the Cottonwoods but improved by 4 feet of snow during the holiday week. The Wasatch averaged 2 feet of snow during the first week of January but has had less than a foot through mid-February. Second half of February snowfall was 1-2 feet in the Wasatch but 4 feet in southern Utah. First half of March snowfall was 4+ feet in the Cottonwoods and 2-3 feet elsewhere.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

308

78%

100%

Snowbird SNOTEL

258

73%

95%

Brighton/Solitude

258

72%

97%

Park City (mid estimate)

134

57%

85%

Snowbasin

196

81%

100%

Brian Head

164

69%

100%

Northern and Central Colorado: October and November snowfalls were modest, so the openings (A-Basin Oct. 17, Keystone Oct. 23 and Loveland Oct. 31) were all less than 2% open. No areas were as much as 10% open at the end of November. 3+ feet of December snow before Christmas only put a small dent in November's shortfall. 2 feet of snow during the holidays improved open terrain from only 1/3 at Christmas to over half at New Year's. First half of January snowfall averaging 2 feet brought many areas close to full operation. Second half of January snowfall averaged a foot and first half of February just under a foot. Second half of February snowfall averaged two feet. First half of March snowfall averaged 2 feet, with areas farther west getting more than those to the east. A-Basin is 99% open.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Beaver Creek

184

74%

100%

Breckenridge

194

71%

100%

Copper Mt.

183

85%

96%

Keystone

129

70%

100%

Loveland

158

63%

89%

Steamboat

200

70%

100%

Vail

191

70%

97%

Winter Park

196

73%

98%

Southern and Western Colorado: November snowfall was less than half normal. Wolf Creek has been open since the end of October but ended November with a 14 inch base. A second week of December storm dumped up to 3 feet in the San Juans and fully opened Wolf Creek. 2-3 feet fell in the two weeks before Christmas and 4 feet during the holiday week. Crested Butte was the most favored area for the December storms, so much of its North Face opened during the first week of January. During January 2+ feet fell in west central Colorado but the Southwest averaged barely a foot. Taos got 3+ feet during the second half of December, was 20% open during the holiday week, rising gradually to 90% at the end of January. Most areas averaged half a foot during the first half of February, but a localized storm dumped 2+ feet at Wolf Creek and 3 feet at Taos, opening Kachina Peak on Feb. 5. 2-4 feet fell during the second half of February. An average 3 feet fell during the first half of March, with Telluride, Wolf Creek and Taos getting 4 feet.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

260

134%

99%

Gothic Snow Lab

214

79%

N/A

Crested Butte

229

117%

99%

Monarch

187

85%

100%

Telluride

205

96%

91%

Purgatory

188

94%

100%

Wolf Creek

357

121%

100%

Northeast: No one reported new snow in New England or eastern Canada until the second weekend of November. Killington opened Nov. 6. Cold weather and some snow in late November and early December opened about a quarter of terrain. Mid-December was warm and rainy so holiday skiing was among the worst third of seasons despite modest progress later in December. 1+ foot of snow fell during the first half of January and cold weather finally pushed most areas over half open. Two more feet of snow and continued cold during the second half of January brought many areas close to full operation. Conditions remained excellent over a week into February with up to two feet of snow until a warmup during the second week. Rain during the third week of February resulted in a poor President's weekend, but it dumped 2-3 feet in late February to restore good conditions. It rained during the first weekend of March but dumped 2+ feet during the next week. Percents open: Okemo 73%, Hunter 64%, Sunday River 86%, Sugarloaf 58%, Tremblant 100%, Ste. Anne 100%

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid estimate)

229

88%

100%

Stowe

193

85%

82%

Sugarbush

142

66%

99%

Killington

177

90%

89%

Stratton

82.5

54%

82%

Whiteface

171

120%

82%

Cannon

131

96%

77%

Le Massif

205

108%

100%

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