Winter Park Daily Snow

Heads up, there may be fresher snow! Read the latest Winter Park Daily Snow

By Joel Gratz, Founding Meteorologist Posted 5 years ago April 28, 2019

Update

Season Wrap-Up

Reminder: Winter Park is closed, and Mary Jane will be open through May 12th.

In my final daily post on Monday, April 22, I provided a season overview with a snowpack graphic. Click here to see that discussion: https://opensnow.com/dailysnow/winterpark/post/15290

Friday Night Recap (April 26)

A few waves of intense showers hit Winter Park on Friday night and total snowfall was 6 inches. This was more snow than I was expecting. We’ll take it! The morning offered fun new snow, then temperatures hit the upper 30s by midday and afternoon.

Sunday into Monday

We’ll start the day on the drier side, then look for showers and periods of intense snow on Sunday afternoon and Sunday night. The Monday morning snow reports should show 3-6+ inches of accumulation.

Monday through Wednesday

The first round of intense snow should arrive on Monday midday and continue through Tuesday morning. Expect 6-12+ inches and Tuesday morning should be a deep powder day. Get out early on Tuesday morning to enjoy the snow before any breaks of sunshine turn the powder into a soup.

The second round of intense snow should arrive late Tuesday and continue through Wednesday midday. This part of the storm could deliver another 5-10 inches and Wednesday morning should be the third powder day in a row.

Thanks for reading and check back for a post each morning during this storm cycle!

JOEL GRATZ
Meteorologist at OpenSnow.com
Contact me: [email protected]

Snow conditions as of Sunday morning

New snow mid-mountain:
* 0” (24 hours Saturday 500am to Sunday 500am)
* 0” (Overnight Saturday 400pm to Sunday 500am)

Last snowfall:
* 6” on Friday Night (April 26)

Terrain
* 5 of 21 lifts
* 64 of 167 trails
* Latest update

Snowpack compared to the 30-year average:
* 104%

About Our Forecaster

Joel Gratz

Founding Meteorologist

Joel Gratz is the Founding Meteorologist of OpenSnow and has lived in Boulder, Colorado since 2003. Before moving to Colorado, he spent his childhood as a (not very fast) ski racer in eastern Pennsylvania.

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