Jackson Hole Daily Snow

Heads up, there may be fresher snow! Read the latest Jackson Hole Daily Snow

By Sam Collentine, Meteorologist Posted 5 years ago January 18, 2019

Update

Snow Conditions

9 inches at mid-mountain and 10 inches on the upper mountain over the past 24 hours.

Jackson Hole's official snow report shows 154 inches at mid-mountain and 211 inches on the upper mountain so far this season and a base depth of 51 and 69 inches.

Our internal analysis has the snowpack currently sitting at 76% compared to the 30-year average.

Terrain Update

12 of 13 lifts. 105 of 133 trails. Latest updates.

Friday - Friday Night

We'll continue to receive a few snow showers through Friday but accumulations will be limited to only a dusting to 1-2 inches. 

Saturday - Monday

Our next round of snow will push into the Tetons on Saturday and deliver periods of light to moderate snowfall through Saturday night.

We'll then see snowfall rates increase on Sunday and into Sunday night as another organized system pushes into the region. Look for moderate to periods of heavy snow through Sunday night, followed by light snow on Monday. Last chair Sunday could be good but I would really have my eye on first chair Monday morning. 4-8 inches will be the initial call from Sunday through Monday. 

Later Next Week & Beyond

We'll then turn to next Tuesday night and Wednesday for yet another round of snow to clip the Tetons. This should once again give us a nice refresh, along with cooler temperatures.

Looking even further ahead, it does look like we'll be just a tad too far west for storms to clip the Tetons during the final week of January. This would give us dry conditions to close out the month and we'll have to look ahead to early-February for our next round of storms.

As always, keep an eye on our 1-10 day forecast for Jackson Hole and right here for the latest updates.

Thanks for reading!

SAM COLLENTINE

Contact me: [email protected]

About Our Forecaster

Sam Collentine

Meteorologist

Sam Collentine is the Chief Operating Officer of OpenSnow and lives in Basalt, Colorado. Before joining OpenSnow, he studied Atmospheric Science at the University of Colorado, spent time at Channel 7 News in Denver, and at the National Weather Service in Boulder.

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