Deep Snow in the East: Better Conditions in the West | Welove2ski
Snow Report

Deep Snow in the East, and Better Conditions in the West

In the French Alps they could do with some more snow. In Austria, they wish it would stop.
Deep Snow in the East: Better Conditions in the West | Welove2ski
Val Thorens in France on Wednesday night. Photo: Val Thorens/Facebook

Thank goodness. The French Alps got some snow this week, which has perked up the pistes no end. In the north, over the Portes du Soleil, they had about 30cm on Tuesday and Wednesday. The Chamonix valley had about 20cm, and in the Tarentaise (home to the Courchevel, Val d’Isere et al) about 15cm fell. It’s been cold too, so the snow has settled to down to the valley floors.

However, you wouldn’t call these snowfalls heavy. What’s more, on the lower slopes, they’re lying on a thin, hard-packed underlayer, which will start to re-emerge as the new snow is scraped away by passing traffic. So wrap up warm, stay high – and stick to the deeper, softer cover at altitude. This photo, posted this morning in Val d’Isere by John Yates-Smith of YSE, shows you what’s waiting if you know where to look.

Deep Snow in the East: Better Conditions in the West | Welove2ski
Photo: yseski.co.uk

By contrast, they’re desperate for the snow to ease up in Austria and eastern Switzerland. Here, the white stuff has been falling almost continuously since December 30. As a result, across the Tirol the avalanche warning is almost universally 4/5 today, which precludes any off-piste skiing. Even so, Austria has seen a steady run of avalanche fatalities in recent days. Be careful if you’re skiing there now or in the near future, and take all avalanche warnings seriously.

 

The snow depths tell their own story. Above St Anton, there’s now 445cm of settled snow on the Valluga, and 230-330cm mid-mountain. In the Tiroler Zugspitz Arena, there’s 170cm mid-mountain, and 325cm of snow at the top. Meanwhile, the Nordkette above Innsbruck is closed again because of the avalanche risk.

Deep Snow in the East: Better Conditions in the West | Welove2ski
Photo: skiwelt.at

Pictured above is how it looked earlier today above Ellmau in the Skiwelt. When the skies do eventually clear, and the snow settles….wow. However, there’s now sign of an immediate change in the weather.
 

 

Meanwhile in North America…

Deep Snow in the East: Better Conditions in the West | Welove2ski
Photo: whistler.com
Whistler announced recently that this season it’s broken its December snowfall record: 384cm in one month, compared with the previous high of 380cm set in 1994. The season total so far is 678cm. The current mid-mountain snow depth is 287cm.
 

 

About the author

Sean Newsom

As well as founding Welove2ski in June 2007, Sean has written about skiing and snowboarding in the British press for 28 years. For the last 20 of them, he’s also been the ski travel editor at The Sunday Times.

Add Comment

Click here to post a comment

Newsletter

Processing...
Thank you! Your subscription has been confirmed. You'll hear from us soon.
Get the WeLove2Ski Snow Report
Looking for the best snow? The WeLove2Ski Snow Report delivers twice-weekly updates on snow conditions across the Alps, Europe, Asia, and North America—no fluff, just the facts you need to plan your next adventure.
ErrorHere