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European Snow report

 Poster: A snowHead
Poster: A snowHead
Courtesy of Snow-foreacst.com....

The European Alps saw a huge fall of snow last weekend leading to several resorts opening early. Bormio in Italy is not one of these, but it reported the most new snow - 60cm of fresh. Cervinia already has a 60cm base, and should have more snow before it opens this weekend. The Alpine glaciers generally saw 20-30cm of fresh snow leading to excellent conditions now that the weather has cleared. Val Senales and the Presena Glacier in Italy are open for skiing following 20cm of fresh snow on Monday. Tignes and Les Deux Alpes in France are open and also saw 20cm of fresh, while Zermatt and Saas Fee in Switzerland received a little less new snow. Snow settled everywhere above 2000m in the Alps and in a few places much lower, for example Laax has announced it'll open early for the season, this Saturday. It snowed in the Three Valleys too, but they don't plan to open until Dec 4th.

With more snow expected in a few days, this should form a base layer that will now build through the season and barring some exceptional mild-spell, it seems safe to assume that there will be no repeat of the grassy green slopes that greeted Christmas holiday skiers several years ago. Back then, news hacks everywhere were prematurely writing the obituaries of many lower resorts. With its relative abundance of low altitude ski areas, Austria was singled out as the least viable ski destination. So what happened next? Three superb seasons, and we are happy to report that not only did the glaciers of Hintertux and Molltal once again see heavy snow in mid October, that snow has once again settled to a low altitude, so low that Kitzbuhel has announced it will open early for the season on Saturday, with a 30cm base. Also opening early this weekend because of all the fresh snow, Garmisch in Germany.

Across the Atlantic, a strong La Niña weather pattern is set to dominate this season for the first time since 2007/08. This is very good news for places like Whistler. It's a shame the Olympics are not there this year because it promises to be a bumper season in the Pacific NW (but drier further south). The first of many La Niña storms dumped a foot of snow there last week (but note that they are closed until the end of November) before delivering an early blizzard to large parts of the United States, stretching from the coastal Cascades to North Dakota. Orgeon always benefits from the La Niña storm pattern, and no surprise, Timberline, which is open at weekends, got a 20cm fall out of the first storm; which incidentally hammered the Pacific coast with 25-30 foot waves - visit surf-forecast.com if you are into that sort of thing. As the storm moves east it dropped enough snow for Nakiska and Mt Norquay to open this weekend whereas Loveland in Colorado opened on the 24th. On the other side of the continent Sunday River in Maine was first to open in North America.
Snow also fell in Gulmarg in India just a week ago, forming a base layer almost a month earlier than last season, promising a good season there. It also snowed in Scotland last week and although we don't give long-range forecasts for places like Scotland where there don't seem to be reliable seasonal indicators, pretty much everyone who is into that kind of thing is predicting a winter almost as severe as the last one in Britain - good news for Scottish ski resorts if true. It should be no surprise to anyone that with all this winter weather about, high latitude Ruka in Finland has already been open for 3 weeks.
snow report



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