Catamount Mountain Resort Snow Report
If you’re dreaming about carving turns at Catamount Mountain Resort right now, here’s the straight scoop from a “think like a local” perspective: the ski and ride season is finished and Catamount is officially closed for winter operations for 2025–2026, so there’s no lift-served skiing or riding at the moment and no fresh snow to chase on the mountain this week. Catamount’s own mountain conditions report is the gold standard locals watch, and it clearly states that the resort is now closed for the 2025–2026 winter season and thanking guests for joining them this winter. That means no open lifts, no open trails, and no groomed terrain, with the added note that winch cats and groomers may still be operating on the hill as they transition into summer mode, so uphill travel or poking around the slopes is not recommended or particularly safe right now. In case of any on-mountain emergency, ski patrol can still be reached via the listed patrol number, but that’s more of a safety backstop than an invitation to hike for turns. Because the season is over, there is no active daily snow report: no current base or summit snow depths, no new snowfall in the last 24 or 48 hours, and no official tally of open lifts or trails for skiing. Earlier in the winter, third‑party reports often showed base depths in the ballpark of 18–24 inches with machine‑groomed surfaces when conditions were good, along with around eight lifts and more than forty trails in play at full operation, but those numbers are strictly historical for this season and not representative of today’s conditions. With spring long gone and summer temperatures locked in, any remaining snow on the hill is either patchy, dirty leftovers in shaded nooks or entirely melted out. Weather‑wise, Catamount is firmly in warm‑season mode: forecasts show classic early‑summer warmth with highs well above freezing, light winds, and no snow in the outlook over the next several days, just a mix of sun, clouds, and maybe a passing shower or some drizzle here and there. That’s perfect for hiking, biking, or checking out the aerial adventure park once summer operations kick in, but it absolutely buries any hope of lingering skiable snow. Piste versus off‑piste is a moot point now: groomed runs are grassy slopes again, and the trees and glades are reverting to their non‑winter personalities. As for season snowfall totals, Catamount and most New England feeder hills typically recap those numbers in season‑end blogs or social posts rather than in the live conditions widget, and no finalized figure is posted in the current public report. If you’re the type who loves to track stats, it’s worth keeping an eye on their announcements or season wrap‑ups, but from a practical standpoint the only number that matters at this stage is zero: zero open terrain and zero chance of lift‑served turns until next winter. Thinking like a local, the move right now is to pivot your stoke: use this time to tune your skis or board, maybe grab that base grind and edge sharpen you’ve been putting off, and start plotting next season’s powder days at Catamount. Lock in passes or ticket deals early, keep tabs on any off‑season projects on the mountain, and when the first real snow guns fire up and that conditions page flips from “closed” to a list of lifts, trails, and fresh machine‑groomed corduroy, you’ll be ready to drop everything and chase those first-chair laps like you never left. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
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