The Way I Ski It: Big Sky Resort's Blog

The Ski Skinny - March 9, 2012

3/9/2012 4:18:00 PM
3.9.12-5 
Lyndsey Owens checks out the view from the peak this afternoon


BLUE SKIES and falling snow were on a perfectly rotating schedule last week, hitting Big Sky with multiple bluebird powder days - the ultimate in ski conditions.  With comfortable temperatures and calm breezes, the peak was smooth and carvy this afternoon. Lenin was chalky up top and progressively softer towards the bottom, making for spring ski conditions from Upper Sunlight down. 

For the best turns this weekend, break out your all-mountain skis and enjoy another gorgeous blue sky weekend.  Then get ready for more powder - snow will start falling again on Sunday night and stay steady throughout the week. 

 -  Greer



Get the skinny on all things snow with the weekly Ski Skinny on The Way I Ski It.  It’s a special conditions report with intel on snow quality, where to head on the hill, and expert advice on what to pull from your quiver to get the most out of your day on the slopes.  Fatty pow skis or groomer go-tos?  Get the skinny here.

 

 

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Conditions on the peak are carvy and smooth

The Ski Skinny - Feb 23, 2012

2/23/2012 3:41:00 PM
snow 2-23-12
Snow has been coming down hard all over the mountain for the past week at Big Sky.


WITH WELL OVER 20 inches of new snow in the last seven days and over a foot in the last 48 hrs, Presidents week has been powder skiing at it's finest.  But with some strong breezes hitting the mountain last Wednesday, you'll have look in just the right places to get the best turns.  The inside scoop?  Grab your all-mountain skis and head to the glades on the back side of Andesite, where Wolverine and Madagascar hold some great powder pockets, or to the perfectly wind-buffed Africa for smoother turns.

But keep those pow skis close within reach - NOAA is forecasting snow for the next seven days again with temperatures in the 20s and 30s. 

-  Greer

Get the skinny on all things snow with the weekly Ski Skinny on The Way I Ski It.  It’s a special conditions report with intel on snow quality, where to head on the hill, and expert advice on what to pull from your quiver to get the most out of your day on the slopes.  Fatty pow skis or groomer go-tos?  Get the skinny here.

 

 


Awesome powder skiing has dominated the slopes this February.

Inside The Snow Report

2/20/2012 9:22:00 AM
Carrieeli3
2011-12 Snow reporters Elizabeth and Carrie Lee discuss new snow depth on a powder day. 

 

IT'S A COMMON misconception that Big Sky’s Snow Reporter job is the plushest in town – picturing a hung over  twenty-something rolling out of bed at 5 am, checking a yardstick in his backyard, calling the snow phone with the report, and then calling it a day would make anyone envious for that kind of easy, low-responsibility job.  But getting out the conditions report for 3,832 skiable acres is a long and involved process – one that starts at 4pm the evening before and doesn’t end until well into the next day.  And the Snow Reporters?  Late night at the Black Bear or no, they’ve got to be up at 4am and ready to put in a full 8 hour day.

4:00pm:  The morning snow report begins the night before with Big Sky’s Ski Patrol crew.  As the mountain is closing, Ski Patrol calls the Snow Reporter desk and leaves a message with the day’s high and low temps, the wind conditions, and the snowfall.  This information is used in the weather section of Big Sky’s following day report.

4:00pm – 8am: The grooming crew takes to the slopes to begin the long task of grooming and shaping the slopes.  As they work throughout the night, groomers also the keep tabs on the weather and snowfall. 

4:55am: Groomers measure overnight snowfall and base depth at the scientific Lobo station.  This location has been used for 35 years and provides an accurate mid-mountain snowfall total.  The upper mountain is too dangerous to measure this early considering avalanche control work yet to be done.

5:00am: Groomers call or radio the Snow Reporter with the overnight snowfall totals, base, and any relevant weather information.  The Snow Reporter then faxes the overnight totals, terrain openings, weather, and other resort info across the country and updates bigskyresort.com for the early risers. Numerous other websites, from Snocountry to Travel Montana, are updated with this early information, and then thousands of other sites scrape the information while we all sleep.  This is all done before 6 a.m. but usually closer to 5:30a.m.

5:15am: The Snow Reporter updates the snow phone with the collected information.  This is the early phone update and it will be updated several more times throughout the morning and day. 

5:45am: Groomers drop off a report of their groomed runs at the base area for the reporter to pick up and add to our report and grooming map. 

8:00am: Patrol calls in with snow conditions from the top of lone peak and the snow reporter makes any necessary updates to the snow report and snow phone.

8:00 am – 12:00pm: As the Snow Safety team and Patrol gather for their safety and control runs they will call or radio the reporter with any snowfall updates.  Many times Big Sky will receive several inches of snow between the time of the original report and when the chairlifts start turning.  When it’s snowing hard, the patrol and reporter will remain in contact with updates throughout the morning, especially when reports come in like knee deep, thigh deep, or waist deep off the south face, when perhaps only 4-6 inches fell mid-mountain.


In between all of these steps, the Snow Reporters are calling radio stations and local businesses, faxing and emailing out reports, creating and distributing grooming maps, and updating the report on multiple different platforms and outlets.  We'll spare you the gory details, but when it comes down to it, snow reporting is a complex position that involves many elements beyond the actual snow phone.  It’s a process that requires constant communication between the mountain operations teams and the crew inside spreading the messages. 


We often joke that it truly is impossible to accurately measure snow when it comes to a mountain that is the biggest in America and faces every direction on the map, and the snow reporters always try to report a range of snowfall that gives a sense of snow all over the mounatin. 
But no matter what the report says, with 400 inches of snow a year and such a variety of terrain, you're sure to find great conditions - any day at Big Sky.


-  Greer

 

Check out Big Sky's daily snow report and sign up to receive morning email updates on the latest conditions.

Follow Big Sky Resort on Facebook and Twitter (@BigSkyResort)for up-to-the-minute updates on snow conditions.

Carrieeli4

reporter2
Snow Reporting is more than just sticking your ruler in the snow - it's a long process that involves players all over the mountain