Winter Park Daily Snow

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

By Joel Gratz, Founding Meteorologist Posted 1 year ago November 6, 2023

Still tracking snow for Wednesday into Wednesday night

Summary

Following dry weather on Monday and Tuesday, we'll see some snow on Wednesday morning, and then there is a chance for additional snow on Wednesday night.

Update

Lifts are spinning, and of course, open terrain is limited with 3 trails available.

Temperatures have been borderline for snowmaking the last few days, and these borderline temperatures will continue on Monday and Tuesday.

Looking ahead, I am still expecting that a storm will bring snow during the middle of the week.

The first part of the storm should bring 1-3 inches of accumulation on Wednesday morning through Wednesday early afternoon.

The second part of the storm on Wednesday night into Thursday morning is much more uncertain. The storm could dive to the south and deliver little snow, or winds from the east could keep most of the snow east of the divide (just east of Winter Park), or maybe just enough storm energy will be present and will bring a few additional inches of snow to Winter Park. We'll keep an eye on the evolving forecast and hope for the best, which would be a few additional inches of snow on Wednesday night into early Thursday.

Following the midweek storm, we will see dry yet colder weather on Thursday, Friday, and maybe Saturday with favorable snowmaking conditions. Then the next chance for natural snow will be during a stormy period around the November 15-19 time frame.

Thanks for reading!

JOEL GRATZ
Meteorologist at OpenSnow.com

Snow conditions as of Monday morning

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

Last snowfall:
* 10-15” Saturday to Sunday (Oct 28-29)

Terrain
* 3 of 24 lifts
* 3 of 171 trails
* Latest update

Snowpack compared to the 30-year average:
* 88%

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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