2012-13 Ski Season Progress Report as of December 31, 2012

During the third week of October a widespread western storm hit many regions of the West with up to 3+ feet of snow. No areas opened to the public from this storm. This October snow is not counted in season totals except for a few higher and colder places that were at least half open for Thanksgiving weekend. Overall western November snowfall was average or better with the conspicuous exception of Colorado, which has had less than half normal snow and still has very limited skiing. There was a substantial storm along the West Coast at the start of December with much snow at high elevation but rain lower down. Then a big Pacific Northwest storm moved into most of the Rockies with more moderate snows. The middle 2 weeks of December were very snowy over most of the West with the biggest dumps along the West Coast. Thus all areas in the Pacific Northwest, US Northern Rockies and Western Canada were close to or at full operation for the holidays along with Utah's Cottonwood Canyons and most Sierra resorts. During the holiday week there was another big storm in California and Utah, with lesser amounts in adjacent regions. Not much storm activity is predeicted for the West in early January.

California: North Tahoe had some of the most October snow, with 37 inches at Squaw Valley which opened a couple of runs for a one-day private event. Farther south Kirkwood got 24-31 inches and Mammoth 17 inches. Mammoth and Kirkwood preserved the early base and with 3 feet of dense new snow were 60% and 50% open for Thanksgiving. The late November/early December storms dumped 4+ feet of snow at 9,000+ feet but mostly rain below 7,000. Mid-December storms were colder, dropping 4 feet of snow even at lower elevations. Thus most but not all of the previously rained upon terrain was open by Christmas. The holiday week storms dumped another 3-4 feet so nearly all Sierra terrain is open with base depths of 4-12 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

213

155%

97%

Northstar

172.5

184%

96%

Mt. Rose

183

176%

100%

Heavenly (top)

209

200%

98%

Kirkwood

214

151%

100%

Mammoth

218

203%

100%

Southern Cal

20

74%

10-80%

Arizona Snowbowl

80

113%

95%

Pacific Northwest: The entire region got 3-5 feet of snow during Thanksgiving week. Late November snow was mostly rain at base elevations and mostly snow above ~5,000 feet. First half of December snow ranged from 3+ feet in Oregon to 5-7 feet in Washington and at Whistler. The pre-Christmas week snow was another 5 feet over the entire region and Mt. Baker's base went over 150 inches. Holiday week snow ranged from less than a foot in Canada to 2 feet in Oregon.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

220

137%

100%

Crystal Mt.

260

179%

100%

Stevens Pass

259

151%

100%

Mt. Bachelor

208

147%

100%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: October snow fell over most of these areas, topped by Revelstoke's 69 inches, some of which was in September. November snowfall was at least average through most of the region. Base depths are in the 4-5 foot range and much more terrain than normal is open early. Big White, Silver Star and Sun Peaks were all 93+% open before Christmas. There was 3-5 feet of snow during the first half of December, including to the areas that had low elevation rain the previous week. The pre-Christmas Northwest storm dumped 3 feet in the Okanagan and 4-6 feet in the Kootenays. All of the region was close to full operation for an excellent holiday season. Base depths range from 4 feet in Alberta to 8 feet at Whitewater, with less than a foot of new snow during the holiday week.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Lake Louise

89

138%

99%

Sunshine

153

169%

97%

Revelstoke

179

125%

100%

Kicking Horse

116

116%

88%

Whitewater

232

164%

100%

Red Mt.

148

149%

100%

Fernie

184

138%

100%

Castle Mt.

107

110%

100%

U. S. Northern Rockies: Overall November snowfall was average but as in other regions high elevation areas had more snow, less rain and have more open terrain. Most areas have had 4-6 feet of snow in December but Schweitzer has had 9 feet from the strong Northwest storm track. Sun Valley had 4 feet in November and 3 feet in early December for one of its best early starts. Big Sky was 75% open by mid-December and 92% for Christmas. Most of the region had a strong holiday season. Last week there was 1+ foot of snow in the Tetons and lesser amounts further north.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Grand Targhee

186

115%

100%

Jackson Hole

153

115%

96%

Whitefish

106

91%

100%

Bridger

105

106%

100%

Schweitzer

171

171%

100%

Sun Valley

114.5

167%

97%

Brundage

94

85%

100%

Utah: The northern areas in Utah got the most October snow, 45 inches at Powder Mt. and 36 at Snowbasin, but the Cottonwood areas got a 4+ foot mid-November dump. The next 2 weeks Utah was dry but in mid-December there was 3-6 feet of snow and another 2-3+ feet during the holiday week. The Cottonwood areas were close to full operation by mid-December but the Park City group and the Ogden areas reached majority operation around Christmas and still have a few steeper runs that need more coverage to open. Brian Head was limited before Christmas but got nearly 4 feet last week.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

197

113%

95%

Snowbird

168

115%

94%

Brighton/Solitude

171

103%

100%

Park City group

106

104%

90%

Snowbasin

90

89%

76%

Brian Head

96

93%

100%

Northern and Central Colorado: This region had a near record dry November, even worse than last year. Despite 2-3+ feet of snow during mid-December most areas were half or less open during the busy holiday period. Steamboat got a 3+ foot dump at Christmas and is close to full operation. Other areas got 1-2 feet during the holiday week. Vail opened some but not all of the back bowls at Christmas. With ongoing normal snowfall the areas half or more open now should recover from the holiday crush and have most terrain open by mid to late January. The areas still under half open are not likely to approach full operation until February.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Beaver Creek

88

78%

73%

Breckenridge

83

83%

63%

Copper Mt.

47

49%

32%

Keystone

62

80%

53%

Loveland

61

56%

20%

Steamboat

121

94%

98%

Vail

101

82%

80%

Winter Park

92.5

77%

70%

Southern and Western Colorado: The Gothic Snow Lab between Crested Butte and Aspen (snowier climate than either) had had the driest start in its 39 years of records through early December but got 5 feet in the last 3 weeks. Snowfall leader Wolf Creek was open but sketchy until it got 4 feet in the second week of December. Second half of December snow was 5 feet at Wolf Creek and 2-3 feet elsewhere. Aspen/Snowmass is in similar shape as many of the I-70 areas. Taos is 50% open and Crested Butte 34%. Aside from Wolf Creek the more southern areas are still 3+ weeks behind normal and should be avoided before late January.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

74

94%

78%

Gothic Snow Lab

92

81%

N/A

Crested Butte

68

86%

35%

Telluride

66

77%

33%

Durango

69

82%

87%

Wolf Creek

132

109%

100%

Northeast: Hurricane Sandy was all rain in New England and eastern Canada so Sunday River missed a Halloween opening for the first time in 5 years. Killington was open 2 days earlier in October but then closed. The snow from Sandy was in the Appalachians, where 2 North Carolina areas opened with snowmaking assistance but none in West Virginia where over 2 feet of snow fell. Northeast snowfall was less than a foot through Thanksgiving, but there was up to a foot of snow in late November. There was minimal snow in the first half of December. The week before Christmas there was 2-3 feet of snow in northern New England, the Laurentians and the Quebec City area, topped by 5+ feet at Le Massif. Christmas week snowfall of 2-4 feet has finally opened most terrain and surface conditions are excellent.
Percents open: Okemo 98%, Stratton 93%, Hunter 81%, Sunday River 92%, Sugarloaf 92%, Tremblant 94%, Ste. Anne 91%

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid)

98

90%

92%

Stowe

102

125%

91%

Sugarbush

122

139%

100%

Killington

70

86%

96%

Whiteface

64

98%

78%

Cannon Mt.

59

122%

66%

Le Massif

91

112%

98%

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