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World snow report, low temps in Europe, more big snow for western North America

As reported by TheSkiChannel.com… Original Article can be found by clicking here.

Low Temperatures In Europe, More Big Snow For Western North America

*  More Heavy Snow In Western North America
*  Quieter In Europe
*  Heavy snow in Russia leads to cancellation of international freeride contest at 2014 Olymics resort.
*  Seven feet of snow (2.1m) in seven days at Utah’s Snowbird ski resort.

For skiing Europe has had quite a quiet week in terms of fresh snowfall but in most areas temperatures have been low, helping to maintain snow quality, and small snowfalls have helped freshen up terrain at a number of centres.  Skiing in North America there have been more huge snowfalls on the west side of the continent.

Skiing in France the cold temperatures have kept the snow in excellent condition for skiing. There’s been little new snow, except for a big snowfall recorded on Monday in the country’s Vosges region. Otherwise resorts have received 10 to 20cm (4-8 inches) through the week.  However new big snowfalls are expected for tomorrow, Thursday.

Laurie Martin Communications Officer of Montgenèvre told Skiinfo, “Snow conditions are optimal in Montgenèvre with 220cm at the top of the slopes and 160cm at the bottom. The whole area has been open since the end of December and the connections with the “Voie Lactée” (Milky Way) are also open, which is not always the case at this time of the year. The coming February holidays will be good for skiers. It has been snowing steadily since mid-December and we have a very good season, with skiers happy. The snow cover is good and stable and we expect new snowfall on Friday.”

Chamonix will host the Nissan Freeride on Saturday and then stage the postponed opening event on the next suitable day afterwards. The Russian event was due to have been staged in the 2014 Olympic venue of Sochi last week but had to be cancelled due to strong winds and heavy snowfall there.

Chamonix currently has the deepest snowbase in France with 3.9m (13 feet) on upper slopes.  Flaine has 2.65m (nine feet), La Clusaz 2.6m (8.7 feet) and La Grave 2.5m (8.3 feet).

Snow began to fall again in Austria and Germany in recent days with more new snow forecast for tomorrow and in to the weekend – especially in the western Vorarlberg, Tirol and Salzburg provinces. Temperatures have been as low as  – 20 degrees and colder in some parts.  The deepest snow is on the glaciers (Mölltal 330cm/11 feet, Kaunertal 209cm/7 feet on upper runs).  Sölden got the most snow in the country this week with 25cm (10 inches) with Kleinwalsertal reporting the biggest single fall of 17cm (six inches). Maria Alm/ Hochkönig and Alpbach had 10cm (4 inches) each.

It’s a similar picture in Switzerland where Elm reported the most new snow of the past week, with 30cm (a foot) accumulated.  Disentis, Davos and Saas Fee got 12-15cm (5-6 inches) each.  Andermatt has the biggest snow depth with 210cm (7 feet).  Saas Fee and St Moritz have only a few centimetres/inches less.

Italy has also had a quiet week although low temperatures have brought some snow at low altitude in the North of the country and also in the central Appennine mountains.  It’s snowing there now with Limone and Prato Nevoso in the north west reporting 20-25cm (8-10 inches) so far today.  The Presena and Marmolada glaciers both have the most snow with about 3.9m (13 feet) on upper slopes, Bormio has 3 metres (10 feet).

The cold weather has extended as far as Belgium where recent fresh snow fall (10cm/4 inches on 24 Jan), combined with the cold temperatures (-5°to  -15°C) has led some nordic resorts in the East of the country to re-open their tracks. Baraque Michel, Mont Spinet and Losheimergraben are offering Nordic Skiing on 10cm of snow. Other resorts, and hopefully also the Alpine resorts will follow as more cold and snow is predicted for next week.

There’s been little new snow in the past week in the Pyrenees mountains between France and Spain. Base depths in Andorra remain relatively good with 60-130cm (2-4.3 feet) at most areas providing perfectly adequate cover on all but the steepest slopes.  A new terrain park has also opened at Cerler in Spain, claiming to be the largest in the country with 18 lements and a length of 2.5km

Although there has been little new snow this week, cold weather has helped Spanish ski resorts to maintain and improve conditions on the slopes and Cerler has some of the deepest snow in the country with 175cm (nearly 6 feet) on upper slopes.

Typically resorts have 30-105cm (1-3.5 feet) at the base of their runs and 150-210cm (5-7 feet) on upper slopes.  However Sierra Nevada in the south reports the greatest snow depth of three metres (ten feet) at the top and Formigal has the most terrain open with 136km (80 miles) of runs.  More snow is expected tomorrow.

In Eastern Europe there have been some snow showers, particularly in the Czech and Slovak Republic, but it remains a moderate, if improving, first-half of the season in Bulgaria where cover remains rather thin at Borovets and Pamporovo, although better in Bansko.

Scandinavia has not had much snow in the past week, with regional leader Are reporting 7cm (three inches) of new snow on Monday and Nalovardo this most with 11cm.  The weather looks set to change in the next 24 hours with snow almost everywhere (It’s already falling) and up to a foot (30cm) of new stuff expected in the next few days in the mountains.

Resorts in Norway have begun issuing powder alarms today and Kvitfjell has one of the biggest snowfalls of the past week, with 33cm (13 inches) accumulated.

In Scotland conditions are excellent at Cairngorm, which continues its superb season with up to 1.8m (six feet) on upper slopes and 60cm (two feet) on lower runs. The area has been closed for prolonged period over the past three weeks as heavy snow blocked roads and buried lifts and restaurants, but is now fully open with great conditions.  The two other eastern Scottish ski areas at Glenshee and The Lecht don’t have as much snow but do have enough to be in great shape. On the West Coast the other two Scottish areas of Glencoe and Nevis range are open but with less snow.

More Heavy Snow For Western North America

Heavy snow up and down North America’s Pacific Coast has brought huge snow accumulations to most resorts, and also caused operational difficulties at some.

In the north there’s been yet more now at Whistler, with the Olympics now just over a fortnight away.  Its season-to-date snowfall is now nearly 10 metres (30 feet).  Fellow host Cypress Mountain also had a respite from the thaw and rain that is threatening the snowboarding and freestyle venues, with some fresh snow there too.

To the south of the region thousands of southern Californians who flocked to Mountain High resort in the San Gabriel Mountains, which has received five feet (150cm) of snow in recent storms,  were turned away by police due to dangerous road conditions and diminishing fuel and food supplies. Truck convoys were organized to deliver food, supplies and fuel to the area on Monday, with roads re-opening that evening.  However more snow is forecast, if on a smaller scale.

John McColly, Mountain High’s Director of Marketing said, “There is a reason I am in this business.  And this is it.  Skiers and snowboarders that braved the storm are grinning from ear to ear.  And I’m one of them.”

With the fresh snow there is an enormous temptation to go out of bounds but both Mountain High and the Los Angeles County Sherriff’s department advise against that.

Says McColly, “Anything outside of Mountain High’s boundaries is not patrolled so if you run into any trouble, you are on your own.  There is plenty of terrific tree skiing and natural terrain within Mountain High’s permitted area so stay in bounds, enjoy the fresh snow, and be safe.”

It’s a similar story at other western resorts, Jackson Hole has reported more than three feet of new snow, Snowbird in Utah, seven feet in seven days.

Up in British Columbia, monumental snowfall over the last week has created perfect conditions at Mount Washington Alpine Resort.  With a mid-mountain snow base of 320cm and 399cm at the top, the resort is once again the home of Canada’s deepest snowpack.  The news couldn’t be any better for the first wave of Olympic athletes who arrive this week to train at the Island mountain.

“We received over a metre and a half of snow in the last six days,” says Resort spokesperson Brent Curtain.

The Chinese Biathlon team arrived in the Comox Valley late Thursday and hit the snow on Friday, January 22nd.  The team will train at the mountain’s popular Nordic Centre, an obvious choice for numerous cross-country and biathlon teams over the next month.  A total of 26 teams from 15 countries are performing their final on-snow preparations at Mount Washington before heading back to the Lower Mainland and Whistler for the Games.

It’s been less promising on the East coast with warmer weather and some resorts reporting rain over the weekend, but it’s now colder in most areas and Smugglers Notch in Vermont is among those reporting fresh snow in the past 24 hours.

Elsewhere in the world, Japan’ Niseko looks set for record breaking January snowfall.

“Consistent snow falls for the last two weeks of December and another metre to celebrate the New Year here in Niseko have made for some epic skiing conditions with waist deep powder for everyone! With a village average top temperature of -2 °C and an average low of -8 °C since the New Year the base is in great condition. Get ready for some of the lightest, driest powder on the planet- the forecast is for continued moderate to heavy snow falls for the next week.” said an excited Ski Japan statement (www.skijapan.com).

Powder Play: Eight Reasons To Ski Utah

This article originally appeared in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, written by Stephen Regenold

Utah offer some of the best ski vacation experiences in the U.S.  With it’s deep snow, steep slopes and good value, Utah is a skiers dream come true.  Stephen Regenold, a special contributor to the Star Tribune, was gracious enough to detail 8 of the top reason to ski Utah.  World on skis has many great ski deals to Utah and offers excellent value with their Utah ski packages.

Powder Play: Eight Reasons To Ski Utah

By STEPHEN REGENOLD, Special to the Star Tribune

Our tram car bucked in the wind on its way up the mountain at Snowbird Resort. I grabbed a railing and held on as it whisked me uphill in a blizzard, the slopes of Utah’s Wasatch Range below obscured in white.

“At least the snow is deep,” a stranger shouted, his face hidden, caked with ice.

Staked like a wall at the western edge of the Rocky Mountains, the Wasatch Range towers over Utah’s Great Salt Lake and the vast desert basin beyond. For skiers and snowboarders, the range’s sharp peaks and plunging valleys — plus hundreds of inches of powder snow each season –create an ultimate playground for fast descents in deep snow.

Since 1995, when I first drove west on a winter road trip, the Wasatch has ranked as my favorite ski destination in the United States. The world validated my bias in 2002 when the XIX Olympic Winter Games landed in Salt Lake City amid the Wasatch’s pyramids of white.

The mountains near Salt Lake offer a dozen resorts, including the European-flavored Snowbird with its aerial tram and steep slopes, as well as locals’ hills like Powder Mountain. For snow quality, steep skiing, price, accessibility and variety of terrain, Utah is tough to beat. Here are eight reasons I keep going back.

SNOW

1 The region’s self-proclaimed “greatest snow on Earth” is in reference to the fluffy white stuff that falls up to 500 inches deep many seasons at Snowbird Resort, Alta Ski Area, Park City Mountain Resort, Brighton and a half-dozen other areas near Salt Lake City. Mountains jutting past 11,000 feet adjacent to the Great Basin create an abrupt interruption to desert clouds coursing east. Big snow — hundreds of inches of light, airy powder every season — is the advantageous result.

ACCESSIBILITY

2 Fly to Salt Lake City International — an inexpensive hop from the Twin Cities most of the year, especially now that Southwest is in the game — and you have 11 ski areas within an hour’s drive. Rent a car and you can be booting up at Brighton, Solitude or Alta Ski Area in as little as 45 minutes. The glass skyscrapers of Salt Lake City cut a silhouette as you drive east just before the Wasatch takes over, the urban outskirts intermingling with the foothills of the mountains. Major highways then lead uphill to most resorts. Or you can jump on a bus. The city boasts a public bus system to transport skiers at low fares from the city to the ski resorts in the mountains above town.

VARIETY

3The tight fiefdom of ski areas in the Wasatch Range, though geographically aligned, maintain a variety of resort personality types. Want utter luxury? Try Deer Valley for a day. Halfpipes and stunts are popular with a freestyle crowd at Brighton, where three terrain parks are built on the hill. Alta can be a no-frills, nostalgic peek at how skiing grew out of one of America’s original big areas. Snowbird is tall, steep and serious, with a cable car whisking skiers to 11,000 feet overhead. I have skied eight areas in Utah, and no two seemed the same.

AFFORDABILITY

4 With many ski areas so close to the Salt Lake metro area, lodging is plentiful, including moderately priced options. I have stayed in Salt Lake City for as low as $49 per night. Compared with other major ski centers in the United States, lift ticket prices in the Wasatch are not significantly less. Alta Ski Area, long known for its cheap lifts, now charges $66 per adult day, an average rate for a U.S. resort of its size. Deer Valley costs $86. But smaller Utah ski areas like Sundance Resort, Brighton, and Wolf Creek offer true mountain skiing at more affordable rates ($47, $58 and $32, respectively, for full-day adult tickets).

STEEP SLOPES

5 From the precipitous “Finger Chutes” atop Allen Peak at Snowbasin resort, to “Great Scott” and other stomach-in-throat drops in Snowbird’s infamous Cirque formation, the craggy Wasatch Range has no lack of hairy terrain. Rock-lined chutes and double-black-diamond runs pepper most trail maps in the area. Compared with Colorado, Utah offers more thrills and better steep-skiing bang for the buck.

BACK-COUNTRY ACCESS

6 Avalanche-savvy skiers and boarders can access the vast Wasatch back country via chairlifts at several resorts, where boundary gates offer legal entry points into mountain wilderness outside resort property. Two years ago, entering through a gate at Snowbasin resort, four friends and I skied — with avalanche beacons on — for 4 miles and nearly 5,000 vertical feet through the outback. A car shuttle picked us up at the other end for transport back to the resort.

INTERCONNECT TOUR

7A unique guided trip operated by Ski Utah, a private company, the Interconnect Tour allows intermediate and advanced skiers a chance to sample up to six resorts in the Wasatch in a single day. You take chairlifts and link from ski area to ski area via back-country routes that traverse alpine bowls and high passes through the Wasatch. For my trip, we began at Deer Valley Resort in the morning and finished at Snowbird. In between, guides led us through the back country and Park City Mountain Resort, Brighton, Solitude and Alta Ski Area for a whirlwind day. Cost is $250 per person, including lunch and a “golden” ticket for lift access at all resorts.

RAW ACREAGE

8At the Canyons, a resort 30 minutes from Salt Lake International, there are powder bowls, alpine faces and more than 100 cut trails. Snowbird boasts 2,500 acres of terrain streaming off two peaks. Powder Mountain is a sprawling, low-budget resort near the town of Ogden that offers five mountains and vast back-country-like skiable terrain. Park City, Alta, Deer Valley and Snowbasin are biggies, too. Ample acreage — which equals more turns in fresh snow and more mountain to explore — is a hallmark of many Utah resorts.

Stephen Regenold is a freelance writer in the Twin Cities.

The original article can be found by clicking here.