Vail, Colorado Ski Report
If you’re dreaming of ripping laps at Vail right now, hit the brakes for a second: the mountain is in full off-season mode and officially closed for winter, so think “bike shorts and hiking shoes” more than “goggles and face mask.” Vail’s own terrain status lists the winter terrain as closed for the season, and lifts are not running for skiing or riding at the moment. That means no groomers, no avalanche control, and no in-bounds lift-served turns until next winter’s opening day rolls around. Looking back at how the season wrapped, Vail’s latest official snow and weather report shows a base depth of about 30 inches when operations were winding down, with a season total of roughly 168 inches recorded by the resort. New snowfall in the last 24, 48, and even 7 days was sitting at 0 inches as the lifts shut, which matches what you’d expect for late spring: the storms have backed off, the sun is in charge, and the snowpack is melting and consolidating rather than stacking up fresh layers. If you’re trying to picture actual ski conditions at the tail end of the season, think classic Colorado spring skiing: firm and possibly icy early, softening to corn by late morning on south-facing slopes, then getting heavy and slushy down low by mid-afternoon. Groomed pistes would have been the go-to for fast, predictable laps early in the day, with off-piste terrain and steeps coming into their sweet spot once the sun had a chance to work the surface. By closing, expect thin spots, rocks, and bare patches on sunny, lower-elevation aspects, and more supportable, smoother snow up high where the coverage hangs on longer. Because the ski season is over, there are no “open lifts and trails” stats to chase right now. Earlier reports near closing suggested that only a portion of the terrain and lifts were still spinning as Vail gradually wound down operations, but that’s all in the rearview mirror. Right now, if you’re standing in Vail Village with a board under your arm, you’re either very optimistic or here for something else entirely. Weather-wise, early June in Vail usually means cool mornings, mild afternoons, and a strong sun at altitude. Expect daytime highs generally in the 60s to low 70s Fahrenheit in the valley with cooler temps up high, and the typical Colorado mix of bluebird stretches punctuated by the chance of afternoon showers or a quick thunderstorm. For skiers and riders, that translates into great conditions for summer training, trail running, mountain biking, or dialing in your gear for next winter, but not for sliding around on lift-served snow. Any “new snow” you might see over the next five days is likely to be a brief high-elevation dusting during a spring storm rather than something you can realistically ski with resort support. A couple of local-style tips if you’re planning a visit: bring layers, because mountain weather still changes fast even in early summer; pack sunscreen like you’re going heli-skiing—the UV at Vail’s elevation does not mess around; and if you’re scouting for next winter, keep an eye on Vail’s official channels later in the year for the new season’s opening date, updated snow totals, and which bowls and lifts are spinning first. In the meantime, you can still “think like a local” by treating Vail as your training ground: hike up to scope the lines you want to hit next season, lap the bike park when it opens, and start betting with your friends on which back bowl will ski best after the first big dump. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
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