Mountain Collective Daily Snow

Heads up, there may be fresher snow! Read the latest Mountain Collective Daily Snow

By Sam Collentine, Meteorologist Posted 5 years ago March 11, 2019

Target UT, CO, and NM

Summary

The incredible storm cycle for the West will come to an end this week as a powerful storm targets Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Dry weather will then settle in for the West on Friday and continue through Wednesday, March 20th.

Short Term Forecast

Let's get started with the deepest reports from the Collective Resorts over the past 5 days.

Deepest 5-Day Totals

Snowbird: 45 inches

Alta: 38 inches

Snowmass: 37 inches

Aspen Highlands: 36 inches

Aspen Mountain: 36 inches

This Week

This week will start off with a bang as a powerful storm spins up through the southwestern US and brings snow to Utah, New Mexico, and Colorado through Thursday, March 14th. 

Taos will be the spot on Monday and Tuesday morning, followed by Alta/Snowbird on Tuesday night and into Wednesday. Aspen Snowmass will then be in the crosshairs on Wednesday and into Thursday. 

Further north, Revelstoke and the SkiBig3 Destinations will receive moderate totals on Monday and Tuesday. Sun Valley, Big Sky, and Jackson Hole will only receive a light refresh on Tuesday and Wednesday.  

Extended Forecast

Upcoming Weekend & Next Week

Following the fun through the middle of this week, the West will dry out by Thursday night and settle in for an extended period of dry weather through about March 20th. There continues to be signs for a stormier pattern during the final 7-10 days of March but we'll see how it shapes up in next week's update. 

As always, stay tuned to the 1-10 day forecasts for all of the Mountain Collective destinations and our team of local forecasters for the latest updates. 

Thanks for reading and look for my next update on Monday, March 18th.

SAM COLLENTINE

Meteorologist at OpenSnow

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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