Mammoth Mountain, California Ski Report
If you’re the kind of person who hears “June” and thinks “corn laps” instead of “beach trip,” Mammoth is absolutely still calling your name. The lifts are spinning on a classic Eastern Sierra late-season snowpack, with that firm-early, hero-soft-late cycle that locals live for. Right now the upper mountain is still holding a respectable winter’s worth of fun, with snow depths around 90+ inches up high and roughly 20–25 inches down near the base, so you’re riding on a solid but clearly spring-thinned pack rather than midwinter walls of snow. The Mammoth Snowman local report sums it up: mornings start on the firm side, then the surface loosens quickly into smooth, carvable corn as the day warms, especially on sun-exposed aspects. That means you want to ski and ride like a local: chase the sun, follow the freeze–thaw. Hit upper groomers and east- or south-facing pitches first, then roll into mid-mountain as things soften, and save the lower mountain and park laps for late morning into early afternoon before it turns to true slush. On the official mountain report, Mammoth is flagging typical June hazards: with warm temps and a shrinking snowpack, you’ll find thin cover, some exposed rocks, dirt patches, and narrow or “necked down” cat tracks in places, especially near lift load and unload zones and on lower-elevation routes. Off-piste is very much “know before you go” territory now: anything that isn’t groomed will be a mix of refrozen chunder first thing and heavy, grabby mank later in the day unless you time it perfectly. Locals treat off-piste like a short, quality hunting mission this time of year—pick specific lines that get just the right amount of sun, hit them in a small window, then head back to the groomers and park. In-bounds, Mammoth has been running a spring-style lift setup consolidated around Main Lodge and the upper mountain. Eagle and Canyon typically shut down by early April with all operations shifting to Main as the season winds down, and by June you should expect a smaller but still very functional pod of lifts serving the best snow and terrain rather than full-resort coverage. Earlier in the spring the mountain had 179 of 180 trails and 23 of 25 lifts open, but June operations focus on the highest quality skiing rather than raw trail count, so think fewer lifts, still plenty of ways down. Terrain parks often stay in the mix late, but with more slushy takeoffs, shorter lines, and a laid-back vibe—perfect for mellow laps and filming with friends. Weather-wise, you’re in full-on Sierra spring mode: think clear or partly cloudy skies most days, strong sun, and freezing levels well above the base by late morning. The 5-day outlook calls for mild days on the hill with daytime temps soaring into the 40s and 50s°F up top and significantly warmer down low, plus light to moderate winds that can occasionally kick up more strongly over the exposed ridgelines. Nights still dip low enough for a surface refreeze, which is what sets up that ideal corn cycle. New snowfall in the last 24–48 hours is basically zero and that’s likely to remain the story—any June storm is a bonus surprise, not something to plan around. You’re here for sun, soft snow, and long laps, not blower pow. For season stats, Mammoth punched in a solid winter again: earlier in March the base depth was reported around 76 inches with a season total of roughly 240+ inches, and that has since compacted into the late-season pack you’re sliding on now. The resort has already committed to an extended season, running into early June and even targeting operations through Memorial Day in 2026, which tells you how confident they are in the high-elevation coverage and the snowmaking backbone. Thinking like a local, a few pro tips: wax for warm snow—yellow or red wax, not cold-blue bricks—or you’ll feel like you’re riding Velcro by noon. Start early, finish early; most of the best skiing is from first chair through late morning, and many people are happily off the hill or on the sundeck by midafternoon. Expect variable coverage at runouts; be ready to side-step a thin spot or two and keep your eyes peeled for “thin cover” and slow signs. Piste conditions are the star: morning corduroy that turns to velvety corn, then mashed potatoes; off-piste is for those who love adventure and know how to read spring snow. And finally, sunscreen, light layers, and maybe even a jersey or hoodie instead of a heavy jacket—this is Mammoth spring skiing at its most playful: less storm chasing, more lap stacking, tailgate hanging, and squeezing every last turn out of a long Sierra season. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
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