Vail, Colorado Ski Report
If you’re dreaming of carving fresh corduroy or hunting for late-season pockets of pow in Vail right now, hit the brakes: the mountain is officially closed for the winter and has shifted into full off-season mode. Vail’s own terrain and lift status page lists winter terrain status as “Closed For The Winter Season,” and prompts you toward the Epic app for future updates, which is local-speak for “put the skis away and grab your bike instead.” That means no lifts spinning, no open trails, and no current on-mountain ski operations. The most recent official snow and weather report from Vail shows classic end-of-season stats: 0 inches of new snow in the last 24 and 48 hours, 0 inches in the last 7 days, a base depth around 30 inches, and a season total sitting at roughly 168 inches before they flipped the switch to summer. For historical context, Vail tends to average well over 250 inches a season, so locals will tell you this winter wasn’t exactly legendary, but it still delivered plenty of good storm cycles and some excellent groomer days while it lasted. With the lifts closed, current “snow depth at base and summit” becomes more of a trivia point than something you’d plan your ski day around. What you’ll actually find up there now is rapidly melting spring snow, patchy coverage, and big bare spots—think sun-cupped remnants in the trees, ribbons of white on north-facing aspects, and dirt or grass on many lower slopes. From a local perspective, you’d only be “skiing” now if you’re into sketchy backcountry-style novelty laps, and that calls for full avalanche awareness, route-finding skills, and a realization that it’s more type‑2 fun than resort cruising. On-piste versus off-piste is an easy call at the moment: with grooming operations done for the season, there is no true “piste” in the resort sense. Everything is effectively off-piste, ungroomed, and not maintained. Late in the melt cycle, the snow is usually refrozen and firm in the morning, turning to deep, grabby slush and runnels in the afternoon. Rock sharks lurk just under the surface, so locals who insist on earning a novelty June turn drag out rock skis they don’t mind destroying. Weather-wise, if you’re “thinking like a local,” you’re not checking a ski report—you’re eyeing the forecast for biking, hiking, rafting, and après on sunny decks. Early summer in Vail typically brings cool mornings, warm afternoons, and the return of afternoon showers and thunderstorms as the season progresses. Plan on layering: light jacket or hoodie in the morning around the village, T-shirt weather by mid-day, and be prepared to duck inside for a quick storm later in the day. Bluebird stability still rules many mornings, but the vibe has shifted from goggles to sunglasses. For the next five days, you can generally expect a mix of sun and clouds with seasonally warm temperatures in the valley and cooler air up high, with an increasing chance of afternoon showers or storms as we move deeper into summer patterns. Overnight freezes at higher elevations can still happen, which matters more for early-morning hikers and bikers than for skiers now. If you’re planning a trip, the key local advice is: don’t come expecting lift-served skiing. Instead, lean into summer Vail—mountain biking, hiking the front-side trails, checking out mountain cams for those lingering high-elevation snowfields just for fun, rafting the Eagle and Colorado Rivers, and lingering over drinks in the sun while you swap stories about next winter’s lines. Keep an eye on Vail’s official snow and weather report and terrain status pages once fall rolls around; that’s where you’ll find the freshest numbers on base depth, new snowfall, open lifts, and groomed runs as soon as the snow starts flying again. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
239 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Vail, Colorado Ski Report!