Vail, Colorado Ski Report

Late Season Corn Cycles: Timing Your Vail Shred Before the Warmup

2 min · 2. maj 2026
episode Late Season Corn Cycles: Timing Your Vail Shred Before the Warmup cover

Beskrivelse

Hey powder hounds, dreaming of carving fresh lines at Vail? As a local whispering the inside scoop, here's the straight dope on Vail's snow scene right now—think late-season vibes with spring shred potential. Base and summit snow depths are holding at a solid 66cm across the board, perfect for those groomer cruises or sneaky tree runs while it lasts.[3] New snow's been light: just 1 inch in the last 24 hours and another 1 inch over 48, keeping things playable but not epic dump territory.[2] No massive season total updates, but it's been a solid year feeding that base. Lifts and trails? Vail's wrapping up strong—check the mountain report for the latest open count, but expect prime access to classics like Riva and Orient Express while conditions hold.[1] Weather today is mostly sunny with highs near 62°F, a 40% shot at afternoon showers or tstorms, and light SSE winds flipping west—ideal for morning laps before any pop-up action.[1] Piste grooming is smooth for speed demons, off-piste variable with that warming trend turning corn into hero snow if you time it right. Upcoming forecast looks mild: very mild days maxing 16°C midweek, some drizzle heaviest Thursday night, fresh winds keeping it lively—no big storms, but watch for below-average snow through the next 10 days.[2][3] Pro tip: Temps are climbing, so hit it early for best snow—locals are eyeing corn cycles over deep pow. No major notices, but pack layers for those tstorm zaps and confirm lift status on Vail's site before bootpacking up. Shred safe, send it! For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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episode Summer Transitions: Why Vail's Powder Dreams Are on Hold Until Next Season cover

Summer Transitions: Why Vail's Powder Dreams Are on Hold Until Next Season

Vail may be famous for its back bowls and blower pow, but right now you’ll want to leave the powder skis in the garage. The mountain is officially closed for the winter season and has shifted into full-on summer mode, so think hiking boots and bikes instead of ski boots and boards. According to the resort’s own mountain report, winter terrain is listed as “Closed For The Winter Season,” with lifts and trails not operating for skiing or riding at this time. That means no groomers, no avalanche control, and no in-bounds ski access, even if you spot some stubborn snow patches high on the peaks. The last official winter snow numbers tell the story of the season just wrapped. Vail’s snow and weather report shows a base depth of about 30 inches and a season total around 168 inches at the end of the ski season, with 0 inches in the last 24, 48, and 7 days, which makes sense given that operations have shut down for the year and storms have tapered off to spring and summer patterns. Those base numbers are legacy data now, more of a “how was the season?” snapshot than anything you can ride on today. If you’re trying to think like a local, here’s the vibe: nobody is checking “open lifts and trails” because there aren’t any for skiing right now. Instead, locals are watching the same mountain cams you would for winter, but now to see how fast the snow is melting out of the Back Bowls and when favorite bike and hike routes will be clear. The terrain and lift status page is focused on winter and calls the resort closed, while the app and site are pivoting to summer activities like hiking, mountain biking, and scenic gondola rides once summer operations kick in. Any off-piste travel on the snow that’s left is strictly at-your-own-risk backcountry style, with no patrol, no grooming, and spring-snow hazards like rocks, runnels, and unsupportable slush. In other words, if you’re hunting turns, you’re looking at touring gear and full backcountry skills, not lapping chairlifts. Weather-wise, early June in Vail usually brings classic shoulder-season conditions: cool mornings, pleasantly warm afternoons, and the increasing chance of afternoon showers or thunderstorms as summer monsoon patterns start to hint at their arrival. You can expect daytime temperatures in town to run roughly from the low 60s to low 70s Fahrenheit, with cooler temps higher on the mountain and chilly nights that still remind you you’re in the Rockies. For the next several days, locals will be checking standard weather apps for a mix of sun and clouds, with the possibility of breezy afternoons and the occasional brief shower rather than any meaningful snow. Any flakes that do fall at higher elevations this time of year are usually novelty dustings that melt quickly and don’t translate into skiable conditions on-piste. In terms of snow quality, what’s left on north-facing, high-elevation aspects is classic late-spring alpine snow: patchy, dirty, and highly time-of-day dependent. If you somehow hike for turns, expect rock-hard refreeze first thing in the morning transitioning to grabby, heavy slush by late morning or midday. Off-piste and former groomers alike will be riddled with thin spots, exposed rocks, tree stumps, and run-off channels. There is no meaningful “piste versus off-piste” distinction now; it’s all just unmanaged snowfields in melt mode. For visitors, the key special notice is simple: don’t plan on resort skiing or snowboarding at Vail right now. There are no operating lifts for winter sports, no maintained ski routes, and no avalanche control or rescue services like you’d expect in season. If you’re itching to slide on snow, you’ll have better luck looking at high-elevation summer-ski options or southern-hemisphere trips. If you’re just craving mountain time in Vail, you’re in luck: locals are transitioning to bikes, trail runs, fly rods, and patio après instead of chairlift après. The same mountains that served up powder turns all winter are now the backdrop for summer adventures. So if you’re planning a trip, think of Vail at this moment as an ex-powder hound in shorts and flip-flops: the snow story is over until next season, but the mountains are very much alive and ready for a different kind of fun. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

I går4 min
episode Vail in Summer: Why Your Ski Trip Should Wait Until Next Winter cover

Vail in Summer: Why Your Ski Trip Should Wait Until Next Winter

If you’re dreaming of carving Vail right now, here’s the locals’ take: the lifts are done spinning for the winter and we’re in full off-season mode, so think hiking shoes, bikes, and river gear instead of powder skis. Vail’s official mountain conditions page currently lists the winter terrain status as “Closed For The Winter Season,” with lifts and ski trails not in operation. That means no groomers humming at dawn, no avalanche control, and no ski patrollers keeping an eye on off-piste stashes. All alpine skiing and riding on the resort is effectively on pause until next winter. The My Epic app and the terrain and lift status page both reflect this shut-down, so if you’re hoping to sneak in a late lap, the answer is: not on the lifts this time of year. Because the ski area is closed, the usual in-season stats don’t really apply in a useful way right now. The daily snow report is still visible, but it’s essentially frozen in “summer” mode: new snowfall in the last 24 and 48 hours is sitting at 0 inches, base depth is listed at about 30 inches, and the season total at 168 inches. Those numbers are more like a historical end-of-season snapshot than a description of skiable conditions; in reality, most lower and mid-mountain slopes are either melted out or patchy, and the remaining snow up high is spring-consolidated and sun-cupped rather than soft and groomed. With no lifts turning, the number of open lifts and trails is zero, and there is no official piste or off-piste skiing. Any remaining snowfields up on the upper mountain are essentially backcountry travel now: no markings, no hazard mitigation, and no services. If you’re the type who loves to earn a couple novelty turns in June, local-style thinking means treating anything on snow as a full backcountry mission: bring proper gear, know snow and rockfall hazards, and be ready to turn around. Many locals will have already swapped to bikes, trail running, and fly rods rather than chasing those last, sketchy patches. Weather-wise, Vail is into its early-summer pattern: mild to warm afternoons in the village with cooler temps higher up, generally crisp mornings, and a rising chance of afternoon clouds or a shower as we creep toward monsoon season. Over the next five days you can expect daytime highs roughly in the 60s and 70s Fahrenheit at the base, cooler by 10–20 degrees up near ridge tops, with mostly dry conditions punctuated by the possibility of an afternoon thunderstorm. Mornings are the time for big hikes and ridge missions; locals are usually off exposed high ground by mid to late afternoon to avoid lightning and fast-moving mountain storms. Piste conditions, in the winter sense, simply don’t exist this time of year: there is no grooming, no marked runs, and no terrain parks. Off-piste, any remaining snow is classic late-spring alpine: firm or icy early, softening into grabby mush on sun-exposed faces, with rocks, brush, and open creeks increasingly poking through. You’re far more likely to see people pedaling up Vail Pass or lapping the local mountain bike trails than lugging skis. For visiting skiers and riders, the key special notice is this: plan your trip to Vail now as a summer mountain vacation, not a ski getaway. The resort is open in a different way, with village restaurants, shops, and summer activities spinning up while the ski infrastructure hibernates until the snow flies again in late fall. If you’re scouting for next winter, though, the stats are still enticing: 32 lifts, 278 runs, and a vast playground that routinely stacks up hundreds of inches of snow each season. For now, think patio après without the boots, big mountain views without the goggles, and the satisfying knowledge that when winter returns, Vail’s massive terrain will be ready for you to drop in again. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

4. juni 20264 min
episode Vail's Closed for Summer: Your Guide to Trading Skis for Mountain Bikes cover

Vail's Closed for Summer: Your Guide to Trading Skis for Mountain Bikes

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

3. juni 20264 min
episode Late May at Vail: Spring Corn, Backcountry Vibes, and Why the Lifts Are Closed cover

Late May at Vail: Spring Corn, Backcountry Vibes, and Why the Lifts Are Closed

Vail might be easing into its off-season vibe right now, but let’s treat this like you’re a snow-hungry local scoping out whether it’s worth dusting off the boards. First thing to know: by late May Vail Mountain is typically closed for winter operations, with lifts shut to the public and grooming, avalanche control, and official snow reporting all wrapped for the season. That means there’s no current official daily ski report, no active lift or trail count, and no updated 24- or 48-hour snowfall numbers coming from the resort. During normal operating winter months, Vail reports base and summit snow depths, new snow totals, season snowfall, and lift/trail status every morning. By this point in the year, however, those stats are historical rather than live. The remaining snowpack up high is highly variable: shaded north-facing slopes and bowls often hang onto patchy to decent snow above treeline, while anything sun-exposed is a mix of slush, dirty snow ribbons, rocks, and early wildflowers. Think “spring backcountry mission,” not “corduroy groomers to the parking lot.” Weather-wise, late May in Vail usually feels more like bike-and-hike season than midwinter. Daytime temperatures in the village often land somewhere in the 50s to 60s Fahrenheit, with cooler temps in the 40s or 50s on the upper mountain, and nights dropping near or below freezing at higher elevations. You can still see a dusting of snow on the peaks if a passing spring storm rolls through, but it generally melts fast and doesn’t translate into skiable lift-served terrain. Expect a mix of sun, clouds, and the possibility of afternoon showers or a quick thundershower; spring in the Rockies likes to keep you guessing with that “sunny at breakfast, raining at lunch” energy. Because the lifts are closed, off-piste and piste conditions are effectively unmanaged snow and terrain. Any skiing or riding you might be tempted to do now would be strictly backcountry-style, which in this shoulder season is often punchy, sun-affected snow in the afternoon and potentially refrozen and firm in the morning. Coverage can be very thin, with rocks, logs, and open streams, especially on lower aspects and near former trail crossings. Corn snow can be fun on the right day and aspect, but timing becomes everything: you’d aim for a brief window between “bulletproof crust” and “knee-deep mashed potatoes.” From a “think like a local” standpoint, most Vail riders have already pivoted to mountain bikes, trail running, fly fishing, or heading to other high-elevation zones that still have real spring skiing. If you’re hunting for turns, locals would tell you to watch recent satellite images, SNOTEL data, and regional avalanche forecasts instead of resort reports, and to treat anything on or around the mountain as full-on backcountry with all the required skills, partners, and gear. Cornices, wet slides, and glide cracks can still be issues on steep, snow-laden slopes even when it feels warm and mellow in the valley. As for season snowfall totals, those are locked in by now and vary year to year; Vail often lands somewhere in the ballpark of 300-plus inches in a typical winter, but the exact number depends on this season’s storm track, which you’d want to confirm directly with Vail’s official winter recap or a reputable snow-history source. Since the resort is no longer updating public snow stats, any figure you see now is a season summary, not a live reading. There are also some practical notices a visitor should have on their radar. Outside the operating season, uphill access policies can change, and certain areas may be closed for maintenance, wildlife protection, or safety reasons. You won’t find ski patrol waiting to bail you out, and emergency response is slower and more complicated. Parking rules and village services shift into summer mode, with more focus on hiking, sightseeing, and the upcoming bike park and gondola sightseeing operations rather than skiing. If you’re planning a future winter trip instead of a last-ditch spring mission, the move is to check Vail’s official snow and terrain report, plus a trusted weather source, once the resort is open again. That’s where you’ll find the real-time base and summit depths, new snow in the last 24 and 48 hours, number of lifts and trails spinning, grooming and terrain park details, and any special notices like wind holds, avalanche work, or terrain closures. For now, think of Vail as a mountain in wardrobe change: winter jacket mostly off, summer layers coming on, with just a hint of snow lingering high above for those willing to work for every turn. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

21. maj 20265 min
episode Vail's Closed for the Season: Your Late May Shoulder Season Guide cover

Vail's Closed for the Season: Your Late May Shoulder Season Guide

If you’re jonesing for turns in Vail right now, you’re sadly a few weeks too late. Vail’s winter operations have wrapped up for the season, and the mountain is no longer offering lift‑served skiing or riding. Think bikes, hikes, and slushy spring creek crossings instead of fresh corduroy. Because the resort is closed, there’s no active daily ski report: no current base or summit snow depth, no new snowfall totals for the last 24 or 48 hours, and no open lift or trail count. Vail typically stops updating its snow and lift status once the lifts shut down, and grooming, avalanche mitigation, and patrol services cease with it. Any snow totals you might find on archived reports are historical and not useful for planning turns now. Season snowfall numbers for this past winter will be locked in, but they’re mainly trivia at this point rather than a trip‑planning tool. On the weather front, late May in Vail is the classic shoulder‑season mashup. Mornings can still feel crisp with temps often starting near freezing at higher elevations, but afternoons in town warm into the 50s or 60s Fahrenheit under mostly dry, springlike conditions. A passing cold front or upslope system can still dust the high peaks with a cosmetic layer of snow, especially above tree line, but it melts quickly on sunny aspects. Expect a mix of sun and some afternoon clouds over the next several days, with the usual chance of brief mountain showers or a rumble of thunder as we push deeper into spring. Wind can be breezy on the ridges, but nothing like midwinter storm cycles. If you’re thinking about hiking for turns or touring near Vail Pass or in the high alpine around the valley, this is full‑on transition season snow. South‑facing slopes burn off and go to dirt fast, while north‑facing bowls and shaded gullies can still hold patchy, rotten snowpack. Overnight freezes can give you a short morning window of supportable crust for spring corn, but once the sun hits, the surface turns to deep, isothermal mush. That means easy to punch through, hard on your knees, and potentially hazardous if you’re traveling on or under steeper terrain. Avalanche concerns shift from midwinter slabs to springtime issues. On milder days with strong sun, steep slopes can produce loose wet avalanches, especially in the early afternoon, and lingering cornices and glide cracks can still fail. Because the resort is closed, there’s no ski patrol to monitor this; if you go into the backcountry or sidecountry, you’re on your own for snowpack assessment, route finding, and rescue. It’s worth checking the latest Colorado avalanche information and any local backcountry reports before venturing out, even this late in the season, and dialing back objectives once the snow gets punchy and unsupportive. For most skiers and riders, Vail is now in “dream about next season” mode. The mountain is transitioning toward summer operations like lift‑served sightseeing and biking on select lifts once they open, plus hiking and wildflower missions as the remaining snow retreats uphill. If you’re determined to chase snow, your best bet is to look at high‑elevation passes, volcanoes, or late‑season holdout resorts still spinning lifts in other regions, and use broader forecast tools like OpenSnow or regional resort reports to track who’s still getting measurable snow. So while you won’t find fresh groomers or open lift counts at Vail this week, the upside is that it’s a pretty great time to swap out the wax kit for a bike pump, keep an eye on the peaks for that last spring tour, and start plotting where your first true powder turns of next season are going to be. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

20. maj 20264 min