Catamount Mountain Resort Snow Report

Why Catamount Mountain Resort is Closed Right Now and When You Can Return

4 min · 19 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Why Catamount Mountain Resort is Closed Right Now and When You Can Return

Descripción

If you’re already daydreaming about carving turns at Catamount Mountain Resort, you’re a true snow lover, but right now you’ll have to keep those dreams on standby. Catamount, straddling the New York–Massachusetts border in the Berkshires, is a classic winter spot with about 1000 feet of vertical and terrain for everyone from first-timers to glade hunters, but by this point in the year its ski season has wrapped up and the lifts are no longer spinning for skiing and snowboarding. Because the resort is closed for winter operations, there isn’t an active daily ski report: no current base or summit snow depth, no new snowfall totals for the last 24 or 48 hours, and no list of open lifts or trails. Grooming crews aren’t out, there’s no patrol-managed off-piste, and terrain parks, if any were set up this past season, have been taken down or are in hibernation until next winter. Any snow still hanging around on the upper mountain would be patchy, rapidly melting spring leftovers and not something you should plan to ski, especially with no lift access and no patrol coverage. Weather-wise, conditions in the Berkshires at this time of year are firmly in the late-spring to early-summer zone. Daytime temperatures are generally mild to warm, often ranging from the upper 50s to 70s Fahrenheit with cooler nights, and precipitation tends to be rain showers or the occasional thunderstorm rather than snow. Over the next five days, you can expect a typical shoulder-season pattern up there: a mix of partly sunny days, passing clouds, and some chances of showers, especially in the afternoons. Anything frozen would be limited to a freak overnight dusting on the very highest points during an unusually cold snap, and that would vanish quickly once the sun comes out. Since the resort isn’t posting in-season reports right now, there’s also no updated season snowfall total available from official channels. Catamount’s yearly snow tally varies a lot depending on storm tracks, with some winters leaning heavily on natural snow and others relying more on the snowmaking system to keep coverage solid. If you’re curious about the exact numbers for the season that just ended, your best bet is to check Catamount’s own website, their social channels, or regional ski and weather archives as they’re updated. Practical note for anyone tempted to “earn their turns”: once the mountain is closed, you should treat it as off-limits for skiing unless the resort explicitly states that uphill travel is allowed and under what rules. There’s no avalanche mitigation, no grooming, no patrollers, and operations and maintenance crews may be moving around the hill, so it’s both a safety and a courtesy issue. For now, this is the time to tune boards and skis, scroll through your season’s photos, and start plotting next winter’s Catamount missions. Keep an eye on the resort’s site and on services like OvR Snow Bus from NYC, which typically offer day trips with lift tickets and coach transport once the snow is back. When the temperatures drop and the guns fire up again, you can expect the usual mix of groomed cruisers, learning terrain, and more challenging lines to come back online as coverage allows, along with fresh daily reports listing open trails, new snow totals, and all the details that make a powder-chaser’s heart beat faster. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

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episode Catamount Closed for Season: How Locals Plan the Off-Season and Prep for Next Winter artwork

Catamount Closed for Season: How Locals Plan the Off-Season and Prep for Next Winter

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

7 de jun de 20263 min
episode Catamount Mountain Resort: Off-Season Now, Plan Your Winter Powder Days Ahead artwork

Catamount Mountain Resort: Off-Season Now, Plan Your Winter Powder Days Ahead

Catamount Mountain Resort has officially traded in its corduroy for wildflowers right now, so if you’re dreaming of fresh groomers and cold smoke, you’re going to have to file this one under “off-season stoke” and plan ahead for next winter. The mountain is currently closed for snow sports, with all lifts listed as closed and no skiable terrain open, so think bikes and hiking shoes instead of boots and bindings for the moment. During the winter, Catamount typically spins 8 lifts and offers around 44 trails spread across the Massachusetts–New York line, with a good mix of cruisers, steeps, and park features. A mid-season “local” kind of day often sees a machine-groomed primary surface with base depths in the 18–24 inch range on piste, especially after a solid snowmaking window. When conditions line up, groomers here get that classic New England firm-but-edgable feel in the morning, softening to playful corn by afternoon on sunny days. Off-piste and glades are more hit-or-miss and highly dependent on natural snowfall; locals know to pounce right after a storm before things get tracked and bumped out or firm again. Right now, there is no new snowfall, no reported base or summit snow depth, and no open lifts or trails for skiing or riding, since we’re well into the warm season. The current weather is classic off-season mode: think mild to warm temperatures, no lift-served snow, and a resort focusing on summer operations and maintenance rather than grooming reports. The five-day forecast from snow-forecast services is all about spring–summer vibes: warm days, some clouds or passing showers, light winds, and absolutely no snow in the cards at base or summit elevations. Because the ski season has wrapped, there is no active daily snow report for new snowfall in the last 24 or 48 hours, no updated season snowfall tally being pushed out, and no grooming or trail-by-trail status to obsess over. If you’re the type who loves to plan lines months in advance, your best move is to keep an eye on Catamount’s official mountain conditions page and lift-status page as fall approaches; once temps drop, they’ll start posting which lifts are spinning, which trails are groomed, and what the surface is like from first chair to last run. Locals know that early and late season can be surprisingly fun on manmade snow here, with narrow white ribbons running through otherwise brown hillsides. When winter is on, you can usually expect machine-groomed surfaces on the main routes, with variable conditions on natural-snow trails and in the trees, especially after thaws and refreezes. Snowmaking and grooming crews generally prioritize the core frontside terrain and popular routes from the summit, so carving laps off the main chairs is often the best call on marginal days. On storm cycles, visibility can drop up high, but the reward is fresh, dense New England powder that skis wonderfully once you find the rhythm. If you’re planning a future trip, treat Catamount like the locals do: watch the weather obsessively, look for cold clear nights followed by bluebird days for prime corduroy, and pounce on any solid nor’easter that lines up with your days off. Check the resort’s conditions page the morning of your trip for the latest report on open lifts, trails, and any special notices such as wind holds, race closures, or terrain park rebuilds. And when winter returns, set that alarm early—first chair on a freshly groomed Catamount corduroy lap is absolutely worth the drive. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

Ayer3 min
episode Catamount Mountain Resort: Off-Season Now, Plan Your Return for Winter artwork

Catamount Mountain Resort: Off-Season Now, Plan Your Return for Winter

If you’re itching for turns at Catamount Mountain Resort right now, local truth: your skis are going to feel very out of season. Catamount has wrapped up winter operations and is in full off-season mode, so think hiking shoes and bike racks instead of powder skis. During the heart of this past season, Catamount was running with a respectable machine-groomed base in the 18–24 inch range across much of the hill, with groomed and packed conditions dominating the piste scene. That depth kept the core terrain open and rideable, especially on the blue and black cruisers that Catamount is known for, while snowmaking filled in gaps and refreshed surfaces after warm spells. On busy midwinter days you could expect most or all of the 44 trails and 8 lifts to spin, with 20+ trails commonly open when conditions cooperated and snowmaking ran hard. Fast-forward to now and it’s a very different picture. The official mountain conditions page shows lifts listed as closed across the board and no alpine trails operating, which is the telltale sign of an off-season Catamount local skiers recognize. The dedicated lift-status page backs that up: all primary chairlifts, including the Meadows Triple and Catamount Quad, are marked closed, and there are no posted alpine hours. With trails closed, that means zero open ski runs, no groomed surfaces, and no on-mountain lift-served skiing or riding available at the moment. As for fresh snow and storm totals, there is no current new-snow data for the last 24 or 48 hours because the resort is no longer reporting daily winter stats. In-season, Catamount typically posts new-snow numbers and five-day totals through its conditions and partner reports, but once spring hits and the lifts shut down, those snowfall counters effectively freeze until next winter rolls in. Season-long, Catamount logged multiple refreshing events, including several 6-inch-style storms that recharged the base and kept surfaces soft and carvable for locals chasing midweek corduroy and weekend laps. Exact season-total snowfall is not being actively displayed in the late-season reports, but the pattern was classic Northeast: a mix of natural snow and heavy snowmaking, with some thaw-freeze cycles smoothed out by grooming. Weather-wise, if you pull up a ski-style forecast for Catamount’s mid-mountain elevation this week, you’re looking at classic late-spring/early-summer vibes: warm temperatures climbing into the high teens to low 20s Celsius during the afternoons, mild nights, and episodes of rain instead of snow, including some heavier rain expected on a couple of evenings. Winds are generally light, more like a pleasant hiking breeze than the kind of gusts that shut down upper lifts in January. In other words, anything that falls from the sky right now is just helping the grass grow under the chairs, not stacking up into rideable snow. On-piste and off-piste “conditions” at this time of year are really just bare ground, greening slopes, and maintenance work. There is no grooming, no patrol-managed off-piste, and no avalanche or hazard mitigation because the ski area is not operating for snow sports. Locals who “think like a Catamount regular” are using this window to tune gear, plan next season’s pass, and maybe scope the mountain bike and summer activity schedule instead of hunting for late turns. If you’re planning a visit soon, the most important notice is that there is currently no lift-served skiing or snowboarding available, and no reported snow depth at base or summit because the ski season has ended. Before you make any winter-style plans, you’ll want to check the resort’s official mountain-conditions and planning pages closer to next season’s opening, when daily reports will resume with live data on open trails, lift counts, new snow, grooming, and surface conditions. Until then, Catamount is a place to daydream about next winter’s first chair while you enjoy its warm-weather offerings. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

5 de jun de 20264 min
episode Catamount Mountain Resort Closes for Season: What to Know Before Next Winter artwork

Catamount Mountain Resort Closes for Season: What to Know Before Next Winter

If you’re itching for a few last turns at Catamount Mountain Resort, it’s time to pump the brakes and grab the mountain bike instead—Catamount has wrapped up its winter operations and shifted into off-season mode for the moment, but there’s still plenty to know if you’re daydreaming about next season’s lines. Right now, Catamount’s own conditions and mountain status pages show zero ski trails open and no alpine lifts spinning, confirming that downhill snow sports are closed for the season and the resort is in its spring–summer operating rhythm.[2][4][5] The main website is highlighting warm‑weather offerings like zip lines, aerial adventure park, concerts, and lodging, which is a dead giveaway that your skis and boards will be sitting this one out for a while.[9] Local-style translation: don’t show up in boots expecting first chair; show up in sneakers ready for a scenic hike or a ride. Weather-wise, it feels much more like T‑shirt and tailgate season than puffy‑jacket season. The resort’s own weather readout has temps moving through the 50s into the upper 60s Fahrenheit during the day under fair skies and light winds, a classic mild Berkshire/Hudson Valley pattern.[8] A broader mountain forecast calls for very mild conditions, with highs reaching the upper teens Celsius (mid‑60s F) and only light rain expected in passing systems over the next several days.[7] That’s perfect for trail work, summer events, and letting the last of the snow vanish from shaded pockets. Because the ski season is over, there is no current base or summit snow depth being reported, and the resort is not listing any new snowfall in the last 24 or 48 hours, nor a running tally of season snowfall on its public pages.[2][5][6] Earlier in the winter, Catamount was carrying a machine‑groomed base in the neighborhood of 18–24 inches on its open terrain, with groomed surfaces (MG/LG) and snowmaking support, but those numbers no longer reflect on‑hill reality as the mountain transitions fully out of winter.[1][3] Off‑piste lines that ride beautifully in midwinter are now either bare ground, mud, or lush green—great for scouting next year’s tree shots on foot, not for hunting powder. Lift and trail stats for skiing are essentially at zero: no trails are open for snowsports and no chairlifts are operating for skiing or snowboarding.[2][4][5] Any lifts that do run in the warm season are for scenic or activity access, not for laps on snow, so plan your gear accordingly. There are also no active winter terrain park features, race courses, or tubing sessions listed; the tubing hill that spins on snow during the season is done until temperatures drop again.[3] For planners who like to think like a local, the move now is to use this period to scope lodging, get familiar with Catamount’s layout, and keep an eye on the resort’s mountain conditions page once late fall rolls around again, since that’s where daily lift counts, open trail numbers, and surface conditions go live as soon as snowmaking and natural snow start to cooperate.[5] Locals also watch shoulder‑season cold snaps and early storms closely, but meaningful skiable coverage here almost always depends on a combination of man‑made and natural snow, so those early‑season reports become your best friend. In terms of special notices, the key one is simple but important: in case of any on‑mountain emergency during operational periods, Catamount asks visitors to contact ski patrol via the dedicated emergency number posted on the mountain conditions page, which is worth saving in your phone when winter comes back around.[5] Off‑season, obey any posted closures, construction zones, and trail restrictions—the crew is often doing lift maintenance, trail mowing, and infrastructure work that isn’t obvious until you turn a corner. So for now, think of Catamount as your future playground: visualize carving those fall‑line groomers, ducking into the trees between New York and Massachusetts, and lapping your favorite chair. Then enjoy the snow‑free months as training season, because once the guns fire up again and the snow report starts listing fresh inches, open lifts, and machine‑groomed corduroy, you’ll be ready to drop in with a local’s confidence. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

4 de jun de 20264 min
episode Thinking Like a Local at Catamount: Winter Conditions, Timing, and the Art of the Perfect Lap artwork

Thinking Like a Local at Catamount: Winter Conditions, Timing, and the Art of the Perfect Lap

Catamount Mountain Resort may be a mellow, green summer hill right now, but let’s time‑travel a bit and talk about what it’s like there when it’s firing in winter and how to “think like a local” when you’re chasing turns on the NY–MA line. When Catamount is in full winter mode, locals check a few spots before they even pour coffee: the Catamount mountain conditions page for lift and trail status, grooming, and on-mountain weather, plus regional snow reports like SnoCountry, OnTheSnow, and the ski areas of New York association. Those reports usually show a **base depth in the 18–24 inch range on the main season snowpack**, with machine‑groomed as the primary surface and packed powder / loose granular as the secondary surface once things are skied in after a storm. That’s your classic Catamount feel underfoot: supportive base, carvable on piste, and forgiving enough for playful laps from first chair to last. A representative mid‑season snapshot from the regional report has **base depth: 18–24"**, **trails open: low‑20s out of 44**, **lifts open: 6 of 8**, and **surface: machine‑groomed / loose granular**, with snowmaking active in the previous 24 hours and about **6 inches of new snow in the last five days**. Season totals at Catamount typically build via a mix of natural Berkshire storms and aggressive snowmaking; by prime winter, you’re usually dealing with a healthy man‑made base punched up by periodic natural refreshes, which keep the groomers soft and the tree lines rideable when temps cooperate. As of right now in early June, the mountain is long closed for snowsports and has flipped to its warm‑season personality: the mountain‑status feed shows clear, cool conditions at the base with morning temps in the 40s climbing into the 60s by afternoon, light winds, and dry air. That same feed doubles as your winter lifeline: in season, locals refresh it to see which chairs are spinning, what time the wind might pick up on the ridge, and whether any weather holds are in place, especially on gusty days. For a five‑day winter forecast, skiers around here lean on specialized mountain forecasts rather than generic town weather. A typical good stretch at Catamount looks like this: one day with light snow or snow showers adding a couple of inches, followed by a string of cold, mostly sunny days with highs in the 20s or low 30s on the hill and light to moderate winds. That pattern is ideal: the snow guns can run at night, groomers lay down corduroy before dawn, and you get that hero cord and packed‑pow feel off Ridge Run, Upper Sidewinder, and the steeper pitches on Catapult before the traffic builds. On the piste, think like a local by timing your laps. Hit the east‑facing terrain early for the firmest cord and best edge hold, then migrate as the sun softens surfaces. Catamount’s grooming crew is known for consistent, race‑worthy corduroy on its main routes, so carving skis and all‑mountain boards shine here. Off‑piste and in the trees, the game is more opportunistic: wait for a true Berkshire dump or a multi‑day stretch with natural snow and cold temps before you dive in, and always expect a man‑made base underneath—fun, but edge‑aware riding. On thaw–freeze cycles, locals treat anything ungroomed with respect and stick to marked, open lines. Because this hill straddles two states, wind and microclimates can surprise you: it can be milder and almost spring‑like at the base while the summit stays several degrees colder with lingering chalky snow, or vice versa when valley fog hangs in. Layer like a local—light shell, midlayer you can stash, thin gloves in the pocket for warmer afternoons. And keep an eye on Catamount’s official conditions page the morning you go; that is where you’ll see any special notices like limited terrain for early season, race or event closures on certain trails, night‑skiing hours, tubing status, or weather‑related lift impacts. Bottom line: when winter returns, target those 18–24 inch base reports, watch for fresh 24–48 hour snow totals and snowmaking updates, aim for cold, mostly sunny 5‑day stretches, and let the grooming crew lead you to fast, fun laps—then explore the edges and trees when the Berkshires get their next proper dump. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

3 de jun de 20264 min