Winter Park Daily Snow
By Joel Gratz, Founding Meteorologist Posted 2 years ago January 25, 2022
A little bit of snow
Summary
We have some fresh snow on Tuesday, a little more is possible on Thursday, then during the middle of next week, we will have a high chance for more snow.
Update
On Tuesday just before sunrise, light snow fell on the mountain. We saw about 1 inch at mid-mountain (the snow stake cam is down, so we're just going with the official 1 inch report).
Now on Tuesday at 700am, we are seeing intermittent light snow, and snowflakes could be in the air through Tuesday midday or afternoon. We might see just a little more accumulation, or we could see a period of steadier snow this morning or midday that could add a few inches to our snow total. Either way, this is not a big storm, but at least a little fluffy powder will be fun to ride on top of groomers and any north-facing, softer areas of the mountain.
On Wednesday, we will see sunny skies with high temperatures in the teens.
On Thursday, we'll see more clouds and there could be a few flurries or snow showers with minimal snow accumulation. Temperatures will be chilly with a high around 10-15°F.
On Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, we'll enjoy gorgeous weather with mostly sunny skies and warmer temperatures that top out in the 20s and low 30s.
Then, during the middle of next week, we have a decent chance of seeing significant snowfall between about Tuesday, February 1, and Friday, February 4. But, when it comes to exactly when we could see the most snow and how much snow could fall, we'll need another few days until having higher confidence in the details of the forecast.
Thanks for reading and please check back each morning for daily updates!
JOEL GRATZ
Meteorologist at OpenSnow.com
Snow conditions as of Tuesday morning
New snow mid-mountain:
* 1” (24 hours Monday 500am to Tuesday 500am)
* 1” (Overnight Monday 400pm to Tuesday 500am)
Last snowfall:
* 1” Monday Night (Jan 24-25)
Terrain
* 19 of 23 lifts
* 151 of 166 trails
* Latest update
Snowpack compared to the 30-year average:
* 98%