2024-25 Ski Season Progress Report as of December 31, 2024

Late October 2024 and early November saw moderate snowfall mostly in northern regions but then trending southeast into Colorado and New Mexico. Wolf Creek and Pajarito had widespread natural snow runs open by Nov. 10. Mid-November storms concentrated in the Pacific Northwest, but later in the month spread inland, especially to central Colorado. Areas in or close to full operation at the end of November included Mt. Baker, Mammoth, Lookout Pass, Grand Targhee and Wolf Creek, with Whistler and Mt. Bachelor having deep enough snowpacks to be set for the holidays. December snowfall up to Christmas was concentrated in the Pacific Northwest with moderate snowfalls in adjacent regions while the Southwest was bone dry. Northwest storms were more intense during the holiday week and spread into more regions. Snowfall totals in italics are estimates from Open Snow.

California: Several small snowfalls through mid-November assisted snowmaking openings. Stronger storms over the last week of November totaled 4 feet at Mammoth and 1-3 feet at Tahoe based upon elevation, leaving Mammoth with by far the best conditions in the region. After two dry weeks it snowed 3+ feet northwest of Tahoe and about 2 feet elsewhere, followed by 1-2 feet Christmas Week. Low elevations at Tahoe still need more snow as Palisades' base has had only 23% as much snow as higher up vs. long term average of 61%. New Year's base depths average 2-4 feet at Tahoe and 4-5 feet 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

Palisades 8,000

139

113%

82%

Alpine Meadows

93

88%

80%

Northstar (mid estimate)

62

73%

82%

Mt. Rose

120

132%

70%

Heavenly

81

72%

70%

Kirkwood

104

75%

100%

Mammoth

105.5

99%

98%

Southern Cal

3

11%

0-20%

Arizona Snowbowl

28

41%

37%

Pacific Northwest: This was the strongest November opening in the region in over a decade with multiple storms. Mt. Baker was fully open for Thanksgiving, while Whistler and Mt. Bachelor attained 4+ foot bases. 2-3 feet of snow fell in the first half of December, and another 2 feet since then. Mt. Bachelor's Dec. 10 Summit opening was the earliest in over a decade. This region had the most snow (5+ foot bases) by Christmas. During the holiday week it dumped 5 feet in Oregon and 2-3 feet farther north.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

186

117%

92%

Stevens Pass

195

127%

98%

Crystal Mt.

134

94%

92%

Mt. Hood

224

152%

85%

Mt. Bachelor

218

157%

90%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: November snowfall was high from the Northwest storms along the U.S. border and west of the Selkirks but closer to average farther east. Fernie, Whitewater and the upper half of Revelstoke attained 4+ foot bases. West of Rogers Pass an average 1.5 feet of snow fell during the first half of December, 2 feet more before Christmas, and 1.5-2 feet during the holidays, leaving average bases of 5 feet. Sun Peaks and Silver Star were 90+% open on 4 foot bases at Christmas, while areas east of Rogers Pass averaged 3 foot bases.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Big White

116

102%

100%

Lake Louise

76

113%

72%

Sunshine

86

91%

73%

Revelstoke

223

154%

90%

Kicking Horse

93

96%

100%

Red Mt.

144

160%

99%

Fernie

170

129%

97%

Castle Mt.

98

101%

89%

U. S. Northern Rockies: The Interior Northwest was loaded with snow from the November storms and an excellent holiday destination with another 3 feet in December before Christmas and 4 foot bases. Lookout Pass opened weekends starting Nov. 9. Farther south November snowfall was no better than average. Targhee reached full operation in early December but Jackson was very limited until after a 3 foot storm during the third week of December. 2-3 feet fell during the holiday week to bring excellent skiing to the entire region by New Year's.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Grand Targhee

147

91%

95%

Jackson Hole

117

90%

81%

Whitefish

116

104%

86%

Schweitzer

152

153%

100%

Lookout Pass

194

127%

92%

Brundage

134

150%

100%

Sun Valley

71

104%

76%

Big Sky

138

123%

83%

Utah: Utah's November was slightly below average in both snowfall and end of month open terrain. Alta opened more than half of runs in early December but other areas were very limited with base depths less than 3 feet. December snowfall before Christmas was less than 2 feet. 3 feet fell during the holiday week, but not much more terrain has opened yet, likely due to control work.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

152

91%

77%

Snowbird SNOTEL

124

83%

52%

Brighton/Solitude

112

74%

43%

Park City (mid estimate)

70

74%

21%

Snowbasin

91

88%

57%

Brian Head

45

48%

81%

Northern and Central Colorado: The first snowmaking openings were A-Basin and Keystone Nov. 2. Snowfall was consistent and above average from late October through mid-November and topped off by 2-3 feet the last week of November, the snowiest November since 2010. However, December snowfall up to Christmas averaged only one foot, so base depths settled down to less than 3 feet. Up to 2 feet fell during the holidays, continuing gradual terrain openings.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

A-Basin

95

108%

58%

Beaver Creek

102

94%

90%

Breckenridge

124

120%

76%

Copper Mt.

145

156%

91%

Keystone

113

142%

62%

Loveland

105

97%

32%

Steamboat

95

77%

74%

Vail

115

98%

88%

Winter Park

124

107%

80%

Southern and Western Colorado: Wolf Creek opened October 22 on 26 inches of snow and was close to full operation by Nov. 10. Pajarito, New Mexico opened one top to bottom lift and about 3/4 of terrain Nov. 9 on 44 inches snowfall. But New Mexico had almost no snow for the next 6 weeks. Aspen and Crested Butte had similar high November snow as the I-70 areas while southern Colorado had less but was still above average. December snowfall before Christmas was a foot at Aspen but no more than 3 inches farther south. Aside from Wolf Creek, the Southwest at Christmas had base depths around two feet. Holiday week snowfall averaged 1.5 feet in Colorado but less than a foot in New Mexico.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

98

124%

93%

Gothic Snow Lab

91

84%

N/A

Crested Butte

96

121%

60%

Monarch

84

95%

97%

Telluride

82

95%

59%

Purgatory

64

78%

85%

Wolf Creek

104

86%

100%

Taos

59

69%

21%

Northeast: No one opened during a warm October in New England or eastern Canada. November snowmaking was intermittent, so Nov. 15 Killington opened 3%, Sunday River 2% and Whiteface opened 7% weekends. Some areas missed Thanksgiving openings with ongoing warm weather in November. The first week of December was colder with 1-3 feet of natural snow. Some trail counts declined during the second week with mixed precipitation. Northern Vermont had a good Christmas with clear weather after 1.5 - 2 feet of new snow, but conditions and open terrain degraded with rain Dec. 29-31. Percents open: Okemo 54%, Hunter 54%, Sunday River 46%, Sugarloaf 19%, Tremblant 48%, St. Anne 23%.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid estimate)

111

99%

21%

Stowe

94

107%

39%

Sugarbush

84

102%

41%

Killington

86

112%

42%

Stratton

60

102%

59%

Whiteface

60

114%

45%

Cannon

52

108%

28%

Le Massif

62

79%

22%


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