Mammoth Mountain, California Ski Report

Mammoth in June: Chasing Corn and Following the Freeze-Thaw Cycle Before Summer Takes Over

5 min · 7 jun 2026
aflevering Mammoth in June: Chasing Corn and Following the Freeze-Thaw Cycle Before Summer Takes Over artwork

Beschrijving

If you’ve kept your skis waxed and your boards tuned, Mammoth is still dishing out turns, but you’ve officially entered bonus-round, locals-only spring/summer mode. As of the latest report, the mountain is sitting on roughly a 13-inch base with a very limited late-season setup and just a handful of lifts turning, about 3 out of 25, focused on keeping the best upper-mountain strips of snow accessible for a final fling before bikes fully take over the hill.¹ Operations have shifted to an early-bird schedule, with lifts spinning in the cooler morning hours and wrapping up early afternoon, so think dawn-patrol energy rather than lazy brunch laps.² New snowfall this week has been more about refresh than reset. A series of cool, unsettled systems has dropped light rain at the lowest elevations and mixed snow up around the 8,000-foot base and above, with the upper mountain seeing a modest top-off in the past few days that has helped smooth out the high-traffic lines without turning it into a midwinter powder frenzy.² Once the June sun kicks in each day, anything new quickly blends into the existing pack, so expect firm-and-grippy corduroy first thing transitioning into soft, carvable, almost-slushy snow by late morning — classic Mammoth corn if you time it right.⁴⁵ Trail-wise, you’re in quality-over-quantity territory. The resort is consolidating terrain, so only a limited pod of groomed runs is open, with off-piste essentially in “hike and hope” mode: coverage is thin, rocks and dirt are poking through, and what used to be powder stashes are now more like obstacle courses unless you really know the lines.⁴ Local style is to chase the grooming report in the morning, lap those smooth strips while they’re still firm, then follow the sun as aspects soften — and call it a day before the snow turns to mashed potatoes. Weather is doing its part to keep the season alive. Cooler-than-normal temps and that on-and-off wintry pattern have extended the fun into June, with daytime highs staying cool enough up high to preserve the remaining base, while nights dip low enough for the surface to refreeze.² Over the next few days, expect a mix of sun, passing clouds, and the chance of a stray shower or light snow at upper elevations, plus some wind on the ridgelines. Think layers, not parkas: a light shell, midlayer, and low-profile gloves will cover most scenarios, with goggles that can handle both flat light and bright sun. For the season snow nerds, Mammoth has had a solid year overall. Earlier in the season the mountain was reporting a base in the 70-plus-inch range and a season total climbing into the mid-200-inch zone by early March, with nearly the entire trail map and most lifts open at peak.³ The resort typically averages about 400 inches annually and runs November through June, and this year followed that “long season” script with enough coverage and cool temps to warrant an extension all the way to early June.⁷² Piste conditions right now are very much “follow the freeze–thaw.” In the morning you’ll find firm, fast, and a bit chattery on the steeper pitches; by mid-morning it softens into that perfect hero-snow window where you can rail big GS turns or surf it on a board without worrying about grabbing an edge. Off-piste is only for those with their eyes open and bases sacrificially waxed: expect variable depths, surprise sharks (rocks), and narrow snow ribbons between exposed patches.⁴ Local trick: bring your rock skis or that board you don’t mind adding some “character” to. A couple of practical notes if you’re heading up: with only a few lifts running and Panorama Gondola shut down for maintenance,² lines can briefly stack up on the remaining chairs right when they open, but they usually thin out fast as people spread across the limited terrain. Parking and crowds are mellow compared to peak winter weekends, and you’ll start to see the full Mammoth mashup — skiers in jerseys and jorts, riders in hoodies, and mountain bikers rolling around the village as the summer scene fires up. Watch for thin spots and marked hazards; patrol and mountain ops are actively flagging rocks and bare patches, but the snow is literally melting away in front of everyone’s eyes, so conditions can change day to day.⁴ If you want to ski it like a local this week, here’s the play: be on the first chair, hit the groomers while they’re crisp, follow the sun to chase that corn cycle, and bail to the patio for a beer, burrito, or Bloody Mary once your edges start trenching too deep. Mammoth is in that fleeting, party-at-the-finish-line phase of the season — not about powder counts and vert stats anymore, but about squeezing in a few more joyous laps before the lifts go quiet and the bikes officially take over the hill. --- 1: OnTheSnow Mammoth Mountain snow report 2: Powder.com article on Mammoth extending the 2026 season 3: Freeskier report on Mammoth’s March base and terrain 4: Mammoth Mountain official mountain report 5: Mammoth Snowman late-season conditions report 7: Mammoth Mountain snowfall history For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

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aflevering Mammoth's Last Hurrah: Corn, Closures, and Locals-Only Victory Laps artwork

Mammoth's Last Hurrah: Corn, Closures, and Locals-Only Victory Laps

If you’re still craving those Mammoth laps, you’re down to the very last turns of the season – we’re in full “bonus spring” mode now, and it feels like a locals-only victory lap. Right now Mammoth is operating a small but mighty slice of the mountain. The latest mountain report shows just 3 lifts spinning until early afternoon, including the Panorama Gondola, with skiing and riding wrapping up around 1 PM. That tells you everything: this is classic late-spring/early-summer corn-harvest mode, not midwinter powder season. The current snow base is thin at the bottom, around the 10 inch mark at last report, with patchy coverage and plenty of dirt and rock showing at lower elevations. Up high, coverage is better but still clearly in “end of season” territory, with narrow ribbons and some mandatory download on lifts rather than skiing all the way to the base. New snow? Don’t count on it. The last 24–48 hours have brought exactly zero fresh, and the recent snow reports have been static on that front. It’s been days since the last meaningful storm, and what you’ll be skiing is a mix of refrozen hardpack first thing, quickly softening into that slushy, hero-corn goodness by late morning. Think firm and chattery right at opening, turning to carvable corn by 10–11 AM, and mashed potatoes by noon if the sun is out. Weather-wise, it’s full-on T‑shirt over base layer season. The official mountain forecast is calling for sunny skies with highs in the low 50s Fahrenheit at mid-mountain, light to moderate southwest winds around 15 mph with gusts in the 20s, and cool nights that help lock things up for an overnight refreeze. Over the next few days, expect a very similar pattern: mostly sunny, highs around 50–55°F up high, a bit warmer in town, lows near or just below freezing on the mountain. No real storm systems are lining up in the short term; if anything, each day will ski a lot like the last, just a touch warmer as we slide further into summer. On-piste, groomers are where the fun is at. Patrol and ops have been funneling traffic onto the best-covered lines, so you’ll find a few well-maintained strips on the upper mountain that ride surprisingly well given the date. You’ll want sharper edges for the early-morning corduroy, then you can loosen up as things soften. Off-piste is mostly for the adventurous locals who know every rock by first name: expect very thin coverage, exposed obstacles, runnels, and big sun cups. Unless you really love the “hike, sidestep, dodge the sharks” game, you’re better off lapping the groomed routes and terrain parks that are still in play. For the season as a whole, Mammoth has had another solid winter. As of early March, the mountain was sitting on a 70+ inch base with a season total in the mid‑200 inch range, and that number has inched higher with late-season storms since then. They even announced a plan to stay open through Memorial Day thanks to that deep midwinter snowpack, and then eked out extra days by trimming terrain and lifts as things melted out. Now we’re at the true tail end; the official season has been extended only to early June, and today’s limited operation reflects that. Locals’ tips if you’re coming up for a last hurrah: start early and quit early. Rope drop to about 11:30 AM is the sweet spot – you’ll get the refreeze break into perfect corn, avoid the deepest slush, and be off the hill in time for an afternoon bike ride, a hike, or a lake session. Wax for warm snow if you can; a good all‑temp leaning warm will make a big difference. Bring sunscreen like it’s your job, plus low-light or polarized lenses – the June sun at 11,000 feet pulls no punches. Terrain-wise, follow the open lifts; patrol will have closed anything that’s truly cooked, and downloading to the base is the move rather than trying to ski the last dirty patches. There are no major storm warnings or avy concerns on the typical winter scale right now, but end-of-season hazards are real: rocks, bare spots, and undercut snow bridges. Heed all closures and slow signs, especially near melt-out zones and on cat tracks that are narrowing. Parking and crowds are mellow compared to midwinter weekends, and the vibe is laid‑back – lots of locals and diehards, plenty of people lapping in hoodies and surf trunks over impact shorts, soaking in the final days of lift-served snow. If you come up with the right mindset – think “sunny surf session on snow” rather than “powder day” – Mammoth still has a few very fun laps left in the tank. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

8 jun 20264 min
aflevering Mammoth in June: Chasing Corn and Following the Freeze-Thaw Cycle Before Summer Takes Over artwork

Mammoth in June: Chasing Corn and Following the Freeze-Thaw Cycle Before Summer Takes Over

If you’ve kept your skis waxed and your boards tuned, Mammoth is still dishing out turns, but you’ve officially entered bonus-round, locals-only spring/summer mode. As of the latest report, the mountain is sitting on roughly a 13-inch base with a very limited late-season setup and just a handful of lifts turning, about 3 out of 25, focused on keeping the best upper-mountain strips of snow accessible for a final fling before bikes fully take over the hill.¹ Operations have shifted to an early-bird schedule, with lifts spinning in the cooler morning hours and wrapping up early afternoon, so think dawn-patrol energy rather than lazy brunch laps.² New snowfall this week has been more about refresh than reset. A series of cool, unsettled systems has dropped light rain at the lowest elevations and mixed snow up around the 8,000-foot base and above, with the upper mountain seeing a modest top-off in the past few days that has helped smooth out the high-traffic lines without turning it into a midwinter powder frenzy.² Once the June sun kicks in each day, anything new quickly blends into the existing pack, so expect firm-and-grippy corduroy first thing transitioning into soft, carvable, almost-slushy snow by late morning — classic Mammoth corn if you time it right.⁴⁵ Trail-wise, you’re in quality-over-quantity territory. The resort is consolidating terrain, so only a limited pod of groomed runs is open, with off-piste essentially in “hike and hope” mode: coverage is thin, rocks and dirt are poking through, and what used to be powder stashes are now more like obstacle courses unless you really know the lines.⁴ Local style is to chase the grooming report in the morning, lap those smooth strips while they’re still firm, then follow the sun as aspects soften — and call it a day before the snow turns to mashed potatoes. Weather is doing its part to keep the season alive. Cooler-than-normal temps and that on-and-off wintry pattern have extended the fun into June, with daytime highs staying cool enough up high to preserve the remaining base, while nights dip low enough for the surface to refreeze.² Over the next few days, expect a mix of sun, passing clouds, and the chance of a stray shower or light snow at upper elevations, plus some wind on the ridgelines. Think layers, not parkas: a light shell, midlayer, and low-profile gloves will cover most scenarios, with goggles that can handle both flat light and bright sun. For the season snow nerds, Mammoth has had a solid year overall. Earlier in the season the mountain was reporting a base in the 70-plus-inch range and a season total climbing into the mid-200-inch zone by early March, with nearly the entire trail map and most lifts open at peak.³ The resort typically averages about 400 inches annually and runs November through June, and this year followed that “long season” script with enough coverage and cool temps to warrant an extension all the way to early June.⁷² Piste conditions right now are very much “follow the freeze–thaw.” In the morning you’ll find firm, fast, and a bit chattery on the steeper pitches; by mid-morning it softens into that perfect hero-snow window where you can rail big GS turns or surf it on a board without worrying about grabbing an edge. Off-piste is only for those with their eyes open and bases sacrificially waxed: expect variable depths, surprise sharks (rocks), and narrow snow ribbons between exposed patches.⁴ Local trick: bring your rock skis or that board you don’t mind adding some “character” to. A couple of practical notes if you’re heading up: with only a few lifts running and Panorama Gondola shut down for maintenance,² lines can briefly stack up on the remaining chairs right when they open, but they usually thin out fast as people spread across the limited terrain. Parking and crowds are mellow compared to peak winter weekends, and you’ll start to see the full Mammoth mashup — skiers in jerseys and jorts, riders in hoodies, and mountain bikers rolling around the village as the summer scene fires up. Watch for thin spots and marked hazards; patrol and mountain ops are actively flagging rocks and bare patches, but the snow is literally melting away in front of everyone’s eyes, so conditions can change day to day.⁴ If you want to ski it like a local this week, here’s the play: be on the first chair, hit the groomers while they’re crisp, follow the sun to chase that corn cycle, and bail to the patio for a beer, burrito, or Bloody Mary once your edges start trenching too deep. Mammoth is in that fleeting, party-at-the-finish-line phase of the season — not about powder counts and vert stats anymore, but about squeezing in a few more joyous laps before the lifts go quiet and the bikes officially take over the hill. --- 1: OnTheSnow Mammoth Mountain snow report 2: Powder.com article on Mammoth extending the 2026 season 3: Freeskier report on Mammoth’s March base and terrain 4: Mammoth Mountain official mountain report 5: Mammoth Snowman late-season conditions report 7: Mammoth Mountain snowfall history For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

7 jun 20265 min
aflevering Chasing Corn at Mammoth: Your Late Season Local's Guide to June Turns artwork

Chasing Corn at Mammoth: Your Late Season Local's Guide to June Turns

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

6 jun 20265 min
aflevering Mammoth's Final Lap: Cold Temps and Fresh Snow Keep the Stoke Alive Through June 7 artwork

Mammoth's Final Lap: Cold Temps and Fresh Snow Keep the Stoke Alive Through June 7

Mammoth Mountain is finishing the 2025–26 ski season with a very Mammoth-style encore: the resort says it is staying open through Sunday, June 7, with cold temperatures, solid coverage, and fresh snow in the forecast helping keep the stoke alive. The official mountain report on June 4 says there are just four days left in the ski and snowboard season, and operations have been trimmed to a morning window from 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; the Panorama Gondola is closed for annual maintenance. [4][1] For snow, the numbers are a little split across sources, which is common late in the season when reporting can vary by location on the mountain. OnTheSnow listed a 14-inch base on June 4 with 3 of 25 lifts open, while an earlier FreeSkier report referenced a 76-inch base on March 2 during the heart of the season, along with 179 of 180 trails and 23 of 25 lifts open. [3][2] Mammoth’s own report does not surface a fresh base-depth figure in the snippet provided, but it does confirm the season is in its final stretch. [4] As for recent snowfall, Powder reports that Mammoth is expecting fresh snow this week, and OpenSnow was projecting about 10 inches over five days at the time of that report. The National Weather Service was also expecting mixed precipitation around 8,000 feet, which is right in the zone where Mammoth’s lower mountain lives, so expect the lower slopes to be more “spring storm survival mode” than blower-day fantasy. [1] Weather-wise, the vibe is classic early-June Sierra: cool enough to keep the snow alive, but with enough sun to turn soft fast once the day gets going. Powder’s coverage notes cold temps and fresh snow in the forecast, and Mammoth Snowman describes conditions as starting firm and softening quickly as the day warms up. [1][5] For the five-day outlook, the clearest forecast signal from the sources is continued unsettled weather with a chance of rain and snow near 8,000 feet and roughly 10 inches possible over the five-day period. That points to the best riding likely being earlier in the day, especially on upper mountain terrain where snow quality should hold up longer. [1] On-piste, expect a spring pattern: firmer mornings, then softer, slushier laps as the sun works on the surface. Off-piste, the smart move is to treat anything lower on the mountain as variable and bony, while higher elevations should offer the best remaining snow coverage. That said, late-season Mammoth can still surprise, and the recent forecast suggests the mountain is getting a useful top-up rather than just hanging on by a thread. [1][5] Mammoth’s season total snowfall is best described as still substantial by California standards, though the live total wasn’t directly visible in the freshest snippets. Mammoth’s own historical page says the resort averages about 400 inches in a normal year, and earlier season reporting this winter noted strong accumulation, with one source citing 244 inches by March 2. [7][2] If you are heading up, the key local-style advice is simple: get there early, ski the upper mountain first, and do not expect winter powder conditions everywhere. With closing day near, limited lift operations, and changing weather, Mammoth is serving up a fun final lap rather than a full midwinter buffet. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

5 jun 20263 min
aflevering Mammoth Spring Sessions: Bluebird Days and Slushy Party Laps Until June artwork

Mammoth Spring Sessions: Bluebird Days and Slushy Party Laps Until June

If you’re the kind of person who refuses to put the boards away just because the calendar says “summer,” Mammoth is absolutely your place right now. The mountain has officially pushed the season through June 7, with lifts spinning daily from 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., so think early alarms, frozen cords, and slushy party laps before lunch while the rest of California is mowing lawns and going to the beach. Up high, coverage is still solid for this time of year thanks to a respectably snowy season and a cool late-spring pattern that’s thrown a bit of extra refresh on the upper mountain. Local forecasters are calling for around 10 inches of mixed rain-and-snow over five days at and above the base elevation near 8,000 feet, which translates to a nice little topping of new snow higher on the hill and some classic Sierra “right-side-up” spring surfaces when it all softens. With the resort cresting around 11,000 feet, you can still find wintery turns off the top first thing in the morning, especially on north-facing aspects that have been sheltered from the sun. Down low, it’s late-season survival mode in the best way. The official snow report heading into this final stretch shows a base depth a bit over two feet in the main ski pods, with coverage thinning near the very bottom and around exposed ridgelines, so expect some fun “connect-the-dots” skiing back to the lifts. Earlier this spring Mammoth was essentially fully open, with 179 of 180 trails and 23 of 25 lifts spinning, but as the snow has retreated the operation has consolidated. Figure on a small but mighty menu of lifts, generally three or so key chairs plus access from Main Lodge, aimed at keeping the best upper-mountain terrain and park options in play. The daily rhythm is classic Mammoth spring. Mornings start firm and fast: you’ll be glad you brought sharper edges and something with a bit of backbone for those early groomers. Locals throw in a lap or two of steep, refrozen chalk off the top, then pivot as the sun does its work. By mid to late morning, the upper mountain turns to velvet corn, and the parks hit that perfect mix of edgeable landings and forgiving ruts. By the time things get truly slushy, you’re downloading, grabbing a beer on the Main Lodge sundeck, or switching to bikes and hiking shoes. Weather-wise, think bluebird dominance with a few unsettled pulses. The resort’s mountain report is calling for mostly sunny skies through this final week, cool nights that keep the refreeze strong, and daytime highs that climb enough to soften the snow without nuking it instantly. It’s still the high Sierra, so have the full kit ready: lightweight shell for breezy chairlift rides early, midlayer you can strip by 10 a.m., goggles for the top and sunglasses for the slush park laps and tailgate sessions in the parking lot. On the stats front, Mammoth has stacked up a healthy season. By early March the mountain was already sitting on more than six feet of base at Main and over 240 inches of total snowfall, building toward another classic long Mammoth year with a season that runs well into June. That deep midwinter pack is exactly why you’re still skiing now, even though the tape measure at the base doesn’t look like January anymore. As for conditions off the groomed, treat anything “off-piste” as true spring backcountry travel if you’re venturing outside the ropes. Inbounds, the so-called off-piste is really just ungroomed spring snow: morning refrozen, quickly rolling into carvable corn, and eventually heavy mashed potatoes. Once you step beyond ski-area boundaries, it’s full-on mountain travel with all the usual hazards, and the patrol is crystal clear that closed areas and rope lines are there for a reason in this thin, transitional part of the season. The main local tips: bring narrower all-mountain skis or a playful park board rather than midwinter powder planks, wax for warm snow, start early, and plan a hard stop by early afternoon. Expect limited terrain but surprisingly good quality where it’s open, plus that specific Mammoth vibe: diehards lapping until the last chair of the season, park crews milking every last feature, and a parking lot scene that feels like a summer festival—just with everyone still in boots. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

4 jun 20264 min