2023-24 Ski Season Progress Report as of December 31, 2023

Late October 2023 saw moderate snowfall in northern and central regions. Early November weather was mostly dry in central and southern regions. Northern regions saw more rain than snow the first week of November but have accumulated some snow since then. All snowfall totals (Italic numbers are from Open Snow) are since November 1 and nearly all open terrain before December was on snowmaking. There were modest storms mid-November through Thanksgiving. High snowfall areas like Alta, Revelstoke and Mt. Bachelor delaying openings were red flags. For Thanksgiving Targhee was 63% open but next in line were Alta at 29%, Wolf Creek at 20% and Sunshine at 19%. This was overall the worst November in western North America since 2007, with no region getting more than 60% of normal snowfall. A series of storms hit the Pacific Northwest during the first week of December, extending inland to the northern and central Rockies. Low altitude resorts had a lot of rain along with the snow. Alta and Targhee were the only areas over half open on 4+ foot bases December 9-10. During the middle two weeks of December scattered storms averaged only one foot and no one got more than 2 feet. During the holiday week Steamboat and Whistler were the only areas to get more than a foot of snow. Next most were Stevens Pass and Winter Park at 8 inches. Western season snowfall through December averages only 57% of normal, exceeding only the 38% of the infamous 1976-77 season. Many areas are less than half open with bases under 3 feet degraded by holiday traffic and should be avoided for a few weeks at least pending much more snow.

California: November storms were only a few inches so Thanksgiving skiing was very limited and only on manmade. Early December snow was as much as a foot only NW of Tahoe and above 8,000 feet. It snowed about a foot above 8,000 feet Dec. 20-22 but rained below 7,000. Mammoth, Kirkwood and Mt. Rose are about half open, but base depths average 2 feet. This region should be avoided indefinitely until there is more snow with November-December regional snowfall 31% of normal, fifth lowest of the past 52 years. 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

39

31%

29%

Alpine Meadows

31

20%

13%

Northstar (mid estimate)

23

27%

30%

Mt. Rose

60

65%

45%

Heavenly

23

20%

28%

Kirkwood

52

37%

50%

Mammoth

28

26%

50%

Southern Cal

3

7%

0-38%

Arizona Snowbowl

23

33%

31%

Pacific Northwest: Only Whistler opened a modest 7% at Thanksgiving, while all other areas delayed opening. Early December storms dumped 2-3+ feet of snow, but also 4-5 inches of rain. Mid-December rain ended with about a foot of snow in Washington and Whistler. Holiday week snowfall was 2+ feet at Whistler, several inches in Washington but almost nothing in Oregon. Base depths are in the 2-3 foot range and open terrain at Whistler, Crystal and Bachelor is lowest 10th percentile of the past 28 years. November-December 49% regional snowfall was 4th lowest of the past 52 years.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Whistler

108

67%

54%

Stevens Pass

70

104%

80%

Crystal Mt.

68

46%

38%

Mt. Hood

56

35%

52%

Mt. Bachelor

68

42%

54%

Canadian Rockies and Interior B.C.: November rain turned to snow earlier in this region for some of the highest early season totals. However November was still only 60% of average. Revelstoke opened Dec. 9, Whitewater Dec.15 and Red is still not open. In early December Fernie and Revelstoke got 3 feet of snow but also low elevation rain. Open terrain expanded the most at Banff and Kicking Horse, which got 2 feet of snow and no rain. Mid-December snow was 1-2 feet but just a few inches fell over the holidays. Silver Star expanded to 77% open and Sun Peaks to 72% for Christmas. Base depths average 3 feet, with a little more above 5,000 feet at Fernie, Whitewater and Revelstoke. November-December 69% regional snowfall was 6th lowest of the past 52 years.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Big White

66

58%

66%

Lake Louise

70

104%

80%

Sunshine

72

76%

72%

Revelstoke

116

81%

69%

Kicking Horse

72

74%

77%

Red Mt.

42

45%

11%

Whitewater

89

65%

50%

Fernie

100

77%

58%

Castle Mt.

57

56%

37%

U. S. Northern Rockies: November snowfall was less than half normal with the usual exception of Targhee. During early December 3-4 feet of snow fell in the Tetons, bringing Targhee's base to 58 inches. About 2 feet fell farther north with considerable rain below 6,000 feet. Only Lookout got more than a foot in mid-December and the holiday week was dry. Base depths aside from Targhee are less than 3 feet. November-December 51% regional snowfall was second lowest of the past 52 years. Schweitzer and Big Sky (41%) have record low terrain open at New Year's over the past 25 years, with Sun Valley second lowest and Jackson third lowest.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Grand Targhee

120

74%

94%

Jackson Hole

59

45%

47%

Schweitzer

46

46%

21%

Lookout Pass

69

44%

60%

Brundage

45

43%

37%

Sun Valley

17

25%

20%

Whitefish

76

66%

44%

Bridger

29

29%

55%

Big Sky

42

37%

41%

Utah: November snowfall was about half normal and Alta's opening was delayed one week, but it reached majority operation on a 5 foot base after 6 feet of snow in early December. The other Cottonwood areas got 3-4 feet and were over half open by mid-December. Park City areas were much more limited. Utah is the leading western region in November-December snowfall at 72% but snowfall over the past 3 weeks was less than a foot. Only Alta has a New Year's base over 4 feet and even other Cottonwood areas are reported low tide.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Alta

132

79%

90%

Snowbird SNOTEL

109

73%

91%

Brighton/Solitude

106

70%

79%

Park City (mid estimate)

61

64%

40%

Snowbasin

77

75%

97%

Brian Head

29

31%

75%

Northern and Central Colorado: Early snowmaking openings were A-Basin Oct. 29, Keystone Nov. 1, Eldora and Winter Park. Nov. 3. November snowfall was less than half normal so Thanksgiving was very limited. Early December snowfall was 3+ feet at the high snowfall areas Steamboat, Vail and Winter Park and averaged 2 feet elsewhere. During the rest of December Steamboat got 3 feet but other areas no more than 1.5 feet. Steamboat and Vail reached majority operation mid-December, followed by Winter Park at Christmas, though base depths are not quite 3 feet. Other areas are no more than half open with bases barely over 2 feet and should be avoided until there is more snow. November-December 62% regional snowfall was sixth lowest of the past 52 years and overall open terrain is around 20th percentile for New Year's.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

A-Basin

40

45%

12%

Beaver Creek

55

50%

43%

Breckenridge

56

53%

51%

Copper Mt.

61

65%

35%

Keystone

53

66%

46%

Loveland

44

41%

19%

Steamboat

101

81%

90%

Vail

75

63%

86%

Winter Park

87

74%

79%

Southern and Western Colorado: November snowfall was about half normal. Early December snowfall exceeded expectations with over 2 feet at most areas, though only a foot south of the San Juans. Mid-December snow was close to 2 feet at the southern areas but less than a foot farther north. The holiday week was mostly dry. Aspen, Wolf Creek, Purgatory and Monarch are at least 3/4 open but on less than 3 foot bases. November-December 67% regional snowfall was seventh lowest of the past 52 years

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Aspen/Snowmass

68

87%

74%

Gothic Snow Lab

51

47%

N/A

Crested Butte

63

79%

61%

Monarch

59

66%

93%

Telluride

63

72%

56%

Purgatory

51

61%

81%

Wolf Creek

70

57%

100%

Taos

52

60%

39%

Northeast: The season started slowly through Thanksgiving. Most of November's snow came in the last week to open more trails. Northern Vermont has had 3 feet in the first half of December, though farther south there was more rain. Trail counts crashed the week before Christmas with heavy rain over the entire Northeast, with little recovery during the holidays with more rain. Percents open: Okemo 36%, Hunter 39%, Sunday River 19%, Sugarloaf 23%, Tremblant 47%, St. Anne 17%.

Area

Season Snow

Pct. of Normal

Pct. of Area Open

Jay Peak (mid estimate)

109

97%

15%

Stowe

69

79%

28%

Sugarbush

67

80%

37%

Killington

43

56%

32%

Stratton

24

40%

40%

Whiteface

27

51%

27%

Cannon

35

73%

30%

Le Massif

48

60%

25%

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