Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Huge Snowfalls In North America, Warm But Still Great In The Alps

It has been the snowiest week of winter 2011-12 in much of North America with resorts reporting up to 90cm/three feet of snow in 48 hours or as much as 170cm (nearly six feet) over the full week. There’s been snow right across the continent with up to 1.2m (four feet) reported in New England on the eastern side.
In contrast the Alps have seen temperatures rise up to 30 degrees on a few weeks ago and conditions are now reported to be mostly ‘Springlike’ with little fresh snow in the past week. In Scotland conditions have deteriorated badly with little snow left due to exceptionally warm February weather there, peaking at less than one degree lower than the all time high temperature.The avalanche risk is quite high at many resorts on both sides of the Atlantic either because of the large volumes of snow in places in north America or warm temperatures making the snowpack unstable at places in the Alps. So everyone is advised to fully heed warnings.
Resorts in Austria had some of the best snowfalls in the Alps at the end of last week. Most resorts received 10 – 30cm of fresh snow but the Freesports Arena Krippenstein reported 60cm (two feet) and Fieberbrunn 40cm. Big resorts like Zillertal and Hohentauern got 30cm while 15cm (6 inches) were measured in Sölden, Stubaital and Flachau. The top snow depth can now be found in Zugspitzplatt Ehrwald (495cm), St Anton (465cm) and Kleinwalsertal (460cm).
The avalanche risk is high (level 4) in Mayrhofen as the temperatures are getting milder (around 0-5+ degrees in Arlberg, 2000m) and not much new snow is expected for the next few days although later in the week there may be fresh snow at altitudes above 2000m.
In France warm weather has moved in to the Alps, impacting the huge snow pack that built up over the past three months. "In recent days, temperatures have been unseasonably mild for the time of year - up to 10/12°C in the early afternoon ... so it feels like in April", says Stéphane Giraud of Skiinfo.FR / Mountain News Corporation. The snow depth recorded by ski resorts remain high (still more than four metres/13 feet) at Chamonix, 350cm (nearly 12 feet) at Alpe d'Huez and 345cm (11.5 feet) at Flaine). "However, in a week, conditions have greatly changed: after the cold and fresh snow in recent weeks, the current holidaymaker, are now skiing on heavier/wetter snow", adds Stéphane. "The essential accessory of the week is sunscreen". This spring-like weather should continue until Friday, then the sky will have cloud cover from Saturday and it should then, perhaps, snow at high altitudes (above 1800/2000m) provided that the temperatures drop dramatically (otherwise there is a danger of rain…)
There’s been little fresh snow in Italy in the past week with some of the country’s deepest snowpack (3m/10 feet) in the south of the country near Rome at ski areas like Campo Imperatore. However most of the major resorts across the north of the country still have healthy snow depths on upper slopes of 90-150cm (3-5 feet).
Switzerland has had a quieter week for snowfall although conditions are still reported to be good. "Gstaad is experiencing an exceptional winter. Magnificent snow also transforms the landscape into a wonderland in March. The slope conditions could hardly be any better", said Kerstin Sonnekalb, the resort’s Public Relations Manager. Resorts like Arosa, Laax and Disentis 3000 reported 10cm (4 inches) in total for the last seven days. Ebenalp/Appenzellerland can be happy about 40cm (16 inches) of fresh snow, the most of all Swiss resorts. Snow depth in the ski resorts are still perfect even with ‘Spring like temperatures” here too. The deepest snow can be found in Engelberg (541cm), Laax (385cm), Champex-Lac (380cm) and Crans Montana (365cm). Pyrenees and Rest of Spain
After several very snowy weeks there’s been little new snow in the Pyrenees in the past week, but most resorts in Spain and Andorra remain in good shape because of those earlier accumulations.
Scandinavian ski areas have seen some of the best snowfalls in Europe over the past week. Snowy Jolster in Norway has added another 70cm to its huge 2011-12 snowfall tally and coastal Voss has reported the same amount of new snow.
It’s been another week to forget for Scottish skiing with what may have been the warmest ever February day in the country this week. The double digit temperatures have wiped out the remaining snow at Glenshee and The Lecht and there’s only limited terrain open on upper runs at Cairngorm, Nevis range and Glencoe with warm temperatures continuing. To rub salt in the wounds strong winds have stopped those three centres from offering snow sports on most days in the past week in any case.
There have been huge snowfalls in Canada once again with British Columbia’s great snowfall season already receiving a further boost with several resorts reporting up to three feet (90cm,) of fresh snow falling over a 48 hour period in the past few days. "More Powder Crazed than a kid in a Krispy Kreme store. The Griz has delivered- over 3 feet in 48hrs of Dry, Light Pow to Fernie Alpine Resort, heart of the Powder Highway!", said an excited ‘Powder Matt’ Mosteller, the Vice President of Marketing and Sales for resort owners the Resorts of the Canadian Rockies. A little further west Revelstoke Mountain Resort received 82cm of snow this past week with the peak of the storm hitting just in time for Saturday skiers and delivering a whopping 34cm (14 inches) in just 24h hours. "Incredible powder conditions were enjoyed all weekend long as the storm finally tailed-off on Sunday, opening the skies to some beautiful sunshine for the past two days. More snow is in the forecast for this week with the heaviest portion predicted just in time for our weekend visitors again!", said Sarah Windsor from the resort. For a change though there has been almost as much snow in Eastern Canada as in the west. Mont Sutton has had the most in Quebec in the past 7 days with 82cm (nearly three feet). Big falls have been reported too by Le Massif (70cm) and most other resorts in the region have had at least a foot (30cm) over the same period.
The past week has been the snowiest of winter 2011-12 across the USA with resort’s from Alaska to new Hampshire reporting huge snowfalls – most several feet, the biggest as much as 171cm (a few inches short of six feet) at Alyeska in Alaska. It’s been particularly good news, albeit later in the season than they might have liked, for areas that had been catching up from below-average snowfall earlier in the winter like California and New England. In New England huge snowfalls have included 120cm (four feet) for Stowe including 60cm (two feet) in 48 hours, and 136cm (4.5 feet) at Sugarbush. "For Stowe skiers and riders, this is the storm everyone has been waiting for!", summarised a statement from the resort. There have been big falls reported in all the major ski regions including Colorado and Utah with Jackson Hole in Wyoming, which has been having a good snowfall season already, adding another 90cm/3 feet plus of snow in the past seven days.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Swatch Freeride World Tour (Røldal, Norway): The Die is Cast After Face Inspection

Pressure is on! D -1 of competition the riders were up on the mountain to inspect the face for tomorrow. Through binoculars they scoped their lines on "Couloir 1 & 2", a 700 metre wide face with a vertical drop of 300 metres with plenty of cliffs (some really big) and a steepness of 35-55 degrees.
Even if it dumped the last few days the snow quality of the face is pretty uncertain. Today it has been windy and yesterday it rained. Will we see pow, crust, ice or wind packed tomorrow or probably a bit of everything?
Freeride World Tour checked in with some of the riders during inspection:
Jess McMillan (USA) - bib nr 1
"I’m psyched to be bib number one! Lucky number! I prefer to be out early to enjoy watching the others. I also like first bib because as you don’t see others go down your vision stays clean and it doesn’t make you hesitate and want to change line".
Reine Barkered (SWE) – bib nr 15 - first bib men
"It’s the first time in my 80+ competition career that I got bib number one! I am very excited. It’s a really fun face, a bit short but with a lot of features from top to bottom. We have competed on it for the RFC (Roldal Freeride Challenge) in April but the snow is a whole different story now. In April it is usually easy spring snow conditions, now I am a bit worried for difficult and rotten snow".
Julien Lopez (FRA) – bib nr 25:
"Jim Jack is in my heart and will be tomorrow at the start line. My run will be a tribute to him. I’m happy with my bib nr 25, a pretty early number, I’m the sixth skier (men) to go. There is less pressure when you don’t stand around for too long before the start. The face has big drops and if you want to win here you need to go big. It’s all or nothing. But the big unknown is the quality of the snow.".
Sam Smoothy (NZL) – bib nr 29 (ranked nr 1 ski)
"The pressure is off for me here. Everything will be judged in Verbier. So I’ll just try and stay on my feet, go fast and do some big jumps…"
Aurélien Ducroz (FRA) – bib nr 38
"I really don’t care what bib number I have. It has been proven in the past that you can win with any bib, early or late in the start field. The face is a beautiful, aesthetic face with icefalls in it but there is not that big variation. I am afraid everyone will do the same big cliff and the winner will come down to who jumps it highest and cleanest. I think there will be a lot of surprises in the snow. It seems very changing even with patches of ice in there".
Douds Charlet (FRA) – bib nr 22 (ranked nr 2 snb – and dad in 2 months!!)
"Number 22 is a good bib. I think the snow will be crusty, which means it will be hard to stomp the big jumps. I will really pay attention to the snow. There are some aesthetic icefalls in the face and as I love ice climbing I’m going to jump them. But my meniscus hurts so I’m a bit concerned".
Torgrim Vole (NOR) – bib nr 33
"They just dynamited the face and it did not move. The snow will probably be pretty compact, which is good as then it will stay the same from first to last rider. I got the same bib as when I won in -09, 33 is my lucky number! But the face looks totally different from when we usually compete here in the spring, a lot more snow! I am not really sure yet on my line choice, but might be similar to my run 2009. I think we will see fluid runs with one or two big jumps straight in the fall line. It’s cool to be on home turf!".
David Underland (NOR) – bib nr 18 - local wildcard snb
"I am stoked to have an early number. I did the comp several times in spring snow and the cliffs where way blacker then than now!".
Before face inspection, the FWT athletes and organisers gathered for an emotional, unofficial "open mike" ceremony in tribute to Freeskiing World Tour’s head judge Jim Jack.



Thursday, February 23, 2012

More Big Snowfalls in the Alps as Western North America Gets Dumped On

Snow conditions are excellent almost everywhere now with most of the world’s major ski regions either enjoying sunny periods after huge snowfalls; or enjoying fresh new huge snowfalls, or both.
Austria, Switzerland, Germany, the Pyrenees, Scandinavia and Western North America have all been reporting big accumulations of up to 1.2m (four feet) in the past seven days and the first season-extension announcements are starting to come in.
The only downside to this is that the avalanche danger is high to very high off piste in many areas, with tragedies occurring in America and the Alps this week.
Austrian ski resorts got a lot of fresh snow during the latter half of last week. Four resorts got more than a metre of snow including two over 1.2m (four feet) - Kleinwalsertal (125cm) and Diedamskopf (120cm). Kanzelwand/Fellhorn with 105cm and Bichlbach (100cm) with the other two. More than 100 other ski areas reported falls of 20 - 85cm and so by the weekend the avalanche risk was very high (grade 4 of 5). This has eased a little over the past few days but in some parts the danger is still high. "After the heavy snow falls the weather is perfect at the beginning of the week and ski conditions could not be better", says Skiinfo’s Gerda Moritz. Two resorts just cracked the five-metre snow depth, St Anton now has 515cm (over 17 feet) of snow at the top of the mountain and the Dachstein Glacier reports 510cm (17 feet). Zugspitzplatt Ehrwald is a couple of inches behind on 495cm.
In France average snow depths in the northern Alps are running at 242cm (eight feet) at the top of the slopes and 114cm (just under four feet) at the bottom of the ski areas. Although there has not been a huge amount of fresh snow in the region over the past week, conditions are mostly excellent thanks to the huge accumulations in December and January building up big bases. "After an early February that was cold and snowy, conditions are exceptional", says Skiinfo France’s Stéphane Giraud. With 430cm of snow at the top of the slopes, Chamonix is the snowiest, followed by the Grand Massif ski area (Flaine, Morillon, Samoens and Les Carroz) where there is 375cm. Elsewhere in France the average snow depths are 178cm at the top of the slopes of the Pyrenees and 112cm at the top of the slopes of the Southern Alps.
Italy has seen some of the best snow in Europe over the past week with some smaller areas reporting up to 90cm (three feet) of snow in the past week. The Dolomites received heavy snow earlier this week with most areas reporting between 20 and 40cm in 24 hours up to Monday morning.
Ski resorts in Switzerland had lots more snow in the last week. The conditions are perfect at the moment and there are more sunny days expected this week. The most snow fall reported for the entire continents of Europe and north America in the past seven days – 140cm – was reported by Ebenalp/Appenzellerland. It was one of nearly 50 Swiss resorts reported new snow of 50 – 100cm. Engelberg still has the greatest snow depth in Europe with 541cm.
Conditions are good in most of the ski resorts in the Pyrenees after more snow fell in the past week. Cauterets in France has the deepest snow in the region with 3.1m (10.3 feet) but it is closely followed by Baqueira-Beret (picture attached) in Spain with 3 metres. Vallnord has the deepest snow in Andorra with 2.2m (7.3 feet).
There’s been more heavy snow in Scandinavia this week, particularly in Norway where Jolster reported over 1.2m (four feet) more snow and Roldal moved up to a 4.3m snow base.
Conditions have further deteriorated in Scotland over the past seven days with the Lecht remaining completely closed with little cover remaining and the other four centres having only limited snow left. Cairngorm and Nevis range have the most on upper slopes. With storm force winds closing centres on Monday and temperatures now in double figures in the valleys it’s not looking good at the moment.
Canada’s west has seen more healthy snowfall enabling mount Washington to be possibly the first in the world to announce already that it’s extending its 2011-12 ski season, by a week so far to April 22nd. At Revelstoke in BC they’re reporting, "Incredible snowfall over the Family Day/President’s Day weekend shich has set the stage for fantastic skiing and riding conditions with a deep base of 226cm!". More than 40cm of snow fell on the resort over the weekend creating daily powder conditions. The forecast for this week predicts more snow on the way, with heavy snowfall anticipated for the weekend. Revelstoke has received 19cm of snow in the last 48hrs, 51cm in the last 7 days, with a total of 764cm (25.5 feet) of snowfall to date this season!
There’s deep snow in Colorado (USA) this week after some of the biggest falls in the state’s history brought snow cover right back on target. One of the biggest accumulations has been at Steamboat, which reported 40 inches (a metre) in the past 48 hours and is expecting more snow for four out of the next five days. Other resorts are reporting less epic, but still significant snowfalls. For example Vail has had a foot (30cm) of new snow in the past few days and is now fully open. Elsewhere in the west the snow is still falling heavily in Washington State, Alaska and Wyoming. Jackson Hole reported another foot (30cm) today and Mt Baker is one of four resorts in the world (and the only one in North America) with a snowbase of more than five metres (nearly 17 feet). California is still lagging behind its normal deep snow but is in increasingly good shape. In North lake Tahoe for example Northstar is now 84% open while Heavenly at the south of the Lake has had more than a foot of snow in the past week. Mammoth Mountain, further south still, is 100% open.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Vail Resorts To Acquire Kirkwood Mountain Resort in Lake Tahoe

Vail Resorts today announced that it has enteredinto an agreement to acquire Kirkwood Mountain Resort at Lake Tahoe, Calif., recognized by skiers andsnowboarders as offering some of the best high alpine advanced terrain in North America. Vail Resorts ispurchasing the ski resort as well as the undeveloped sites at the center of the base area which are zonedfor residential and commercial development for a purchase price of approximately $18.0 million. The sellerwill retain a participation interest in the base area parcels and will continue to own the remainder of the realestate development sites. Following the acquisition, Vail Resorts will now operate three world-classmountain resorts in the Lake Tahoe region which between them offer the entire breadth of the skiing andriding experience, including Heavenly Mountain Resort in South Lake Tahoe, Northstar California on thenorth shore and Kirkwood Mountain Resort.Vail Resorts also announced that, effective immediately, Heavenly and Northstar pass holders will haveaccess to Kirkwood and Kirkwood pass holders will be able to ski and ride Heavenly and Northstar.
"We are thrilled to welcome Kirkwood into our family as our seventh world-class mountain resort. Kirkwoodoffers some of the most extraordinary ski terrain found anywhere in North America with high alpine trails andthe most annual average snowfall in Lake Tahoe. Kirkwood represents skiing and riding at its purest,something we intend to retain and protect long into the future", said Rob Katz, chairman and chief executiveofficer of Vail Resorts. “When combined with Heavenly and Northstar, we will be able to offer our guests andpass holders unparalleled value with the very best that Lake Tahoe has to offer. We are excited to be ableto offer Kirkwood to our pass holders right away – it’s like opening day to a whole new season”. As of today, Epic Pass and Epic Local Pass holders will have unrestricted access to ski and ride Kirkwood.Tahoe Value Pass holders can ski and ride there every day except on Saturdays. Kirkwood pass holderswith the following passes will have access to Heavenly and Northstar: Premium Pass holders and 7 WoodPass holders will have unlimited, unrestricted access to Heavenly and Northstar, while 6 Wood Pass holderswill have access to Heavenly and Northstar six days a week, Sunday-Friday, with no holiday restrictions. 5Wood Pass holders will have access to Heavenly and Northstar five days a week, Monday-Friday. TheCompany also announced that it intends to retain a Kirkwood-only season pass and Kirkwood-only daily lifttickets, priced comparably to what’s offered today.
Located about 35 miles southwest of South Lake Tahoe, Kirkwood Mountain Resort offers pure high alpineskiing and riding at its best. The ski resort’s unique location, completely surrounded by National Forest atop the Sierra Crest combined with elevations ranging 7,800 to 9,800 feet, create a geographical predispositionto receive the lightest, driest and most plentiful snow in the Tahoe region with an average of 472 inchesannually. Kirkwood offers 2,000 feet of vertical drop and more than 2,300 acres of terrain from groomedbeginner runs to hair-raising cornices, cliffs and the most high-angle grooming around. The resort offers fourterrain parks, from beginner to advanced, as well as a Boarder X course.Vail Resorts expects to close on the acquisition of Kirkwood Mountain Resort within the next month. Furtherterms of the agreement were not disclosed. Closing is subject to certain conditions, including transfer of theU.S. Forest Service Permit.
Vail Resorts is the leading mountain resort operator in the United States. Vail Resorts operate the mountain resorts of Vail, Beaver Creek, Breckenridge and Keystone in Colorado, and Heavenly, Northstar and now Kirkwood in the Lake Tahoe area of California and Nevada, and the GrandTeton Lodge Company in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The Company's subsidiary, RockResorts, a luxury resorthotel company, manages casually elegant properties. Vail Resorts Development Company is the real estateplanning, development and construction subsidiary of Vail Resorts, Inc. Vail Resorts is a publicly heldcompany traded on the New York Stock Exchange.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Resorts and Digital Communications

As published in Ski Area Management Magazine (January, 2012)
By Peter Duchessi and Rick Kahl



In fall 2011, executives and managers from almost 100 ski resorts in the U.S. and Canada responded to a survey about their use of several important technologies/services, including social media networks, microblogging services, and resort apps, which their ski resorts employ for promotional and communications purposes. The survey was conducted by GenAura and SAM Magazine, to provide insight into current practices and explore the sales-generating potential for these digital tools.


As resorts expand the range of their digital communications strategies, they are finding success in a growing number of media.
Facebook and Twitter have quickly joined resort websites as major means of digital communications. But other, newer technologies and services, including resort apps, QR codes, and group sales services (e.g., Groupon), are less widespread, and may have potential for areas that adopt them.
These are the key conclusions of a survey conducted by GenAura and SAM Magazine last fall. The survey reached nearly 100 resorts and probed their use of digital communications for both promotional and marketing purposes.
Resorts across North America are effectively using resort websites, social media networks (e.g., Facebook), and microblogging services (e.g., Twitter) to enable their promotional strategies. Ninety-eight percent of the ski resorts have a resort website, 95 percent use social media networks, and 82 percent employ microblogging services for promotional purposes.
But these resorts are less likely to use other new technologies to enable promotional strategies. Just 40 percent of all ski resorts report using group coupon services (e.g., Liftopia, Groupon), and less than a third use location-based services (e.g., Foursquare). Similarly, about one-third of the ski resorts report using QR codes, while just over 20 percent report using resort apps for promotional purposes. Yet all these technologies/services can help boost sales, as a few of the resorts using them have discovered.
And digital promotions succeed, for the most part. The survey showed that conventional promotions dispensed via websites, social networks, Twitter, and text messaging regularly achieve both short- and long-term sales gains. For websites and social networks, more than 80 percent of resorts report that digital promotions increase sales, most often long-term sales. Group coupon services, Twitter and virtual communities that resorts sponsor are also effective.
Other digital communications have the potential to increase sales, although these are not as widely used by resorts. Of resorts that have their own apps, nearly half report initial and prolonged sales increases for promotions that are offered through the apps. This is also true for both on-mountain and off-mountain QR code-based promotions.
Location-based services are can also have a positive sales impact. Almost one-third of ski resorts using location-based services for check ins report a sales increase, and 39 percent using location-based services for task completion report elevated sales.
The takeaway: resorts should explore the newer digital technologies and services, and not rest on the success of the older, more established digital vehicles (websites, Facebook, and Twitter). As consumers expand the range of their digital tools, resorts that follow suit can gain a greater share of wallet.
Communications Strategies
The news here is similar to that for digital promotions: resorts have primarily used websites, social media, Twitter, online advertising, and distribution/sharing services (e.g., YouTube) to enable their communications strategies. For advertising purposes, virtually all resorts use a website and nearly all are present on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. And the majority use paid online advertising.
How effective are these for advertising? A whopping 95 percent of areas report that advertising on their websites drives both short- and long-term sales increases. Additionally, 84 percent of the resorts that advertise via social networks report initial and prolonged sales increases. Paid online advertising succeeds 75 percent of the time, and distribution/sharing and microblogging services pay off between half and two-thirds of the time.
But only a third of resorts are using text messaging and QR codes for advertising purposes. And fewer still use virtual communities and resort apps. Is this because these technologies and services are less effective than websites, social media networks, and microblogging services, or because resorts have not learned to exploit them yet? Hard to say.
Text messaging pays off about half the time. With QR codes and resort apps especially, resorts have a ways to go in using them to raise revenues. Only four in ten of those who use QR code-based ads, on- or offsite, report a sales increase. With resort apps, just 25 percent report a sales increase. Given the great potential of resort-specific apps, it’s clear that there’s a good deal of untapped potential in this avenue.
Bottom Line
What does all this mean? Resorts should continue to use websites, social media networks, microblogging services, distribution/sharing services, and paid online advertising to drive short- and long-term sales. And they should become familiar with the newer technologies, including resort apps, QR codes, and location-based services, because there are opportunities to increase sales with those technologies as well.
Additionally, the survey shows that some technologies and services, including resort apps, distribution/sharing services, and social media networks have more of a long- versus short-term impact on sales; consequently, they are especially useful for retaining customers and keeping them engaged. Not many areas have used resort apps and location-based services for check ins and task completions, but there’s no reason resorts can’t adapt these tools for that purpose. QR codes are also not widely used yet, but resorts that have employed them report increased sales about a third to half of the time, which is encouraging. As resorts become more clever in the way they use QR codes, these percentages will most likely rise.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Snowfall Slows In The Alps and The Pyrenees

The big story of the past week has been a second week of very low temperatures in Europe, a period which is just coming to an end with warmer temperatures coming in off the Atlantic to the West. The cold weather has meant it has been too cold for much snow to fall anywhere.In fact with snowfall in North America fairly muted still there have been very few big accumulations of snow anywhere in the world over the past week, the smallest falls for two months. Italian resorts have fared best with some 60-90cm (2-3 feet) accumulations.
Austria’s ski slopes are all in a great shape with the low temperatures and some small snowfalls from time to time. The snowfall has calmed down during the last week in Austrian ski resorts. In recent days the most snowfall has been reported in Salzstiegel with 40cm. There’s been 32cm at Innsbruck’s Nordkettenbahnen over the past week and 25cm at Feuerkogel. The most snow came down on Valentine’s Day-Tuesday, with three resorts reporting a powder alarm for more than 20 cm new snow, including Diedamskopf (30 cm), Innsbrucker Nordkettenbahnen (30 cm) and Damüls (20 cm). The best snow depths can be found with 470 cm at Dachstein Glacier and St Anton.
With very cold weather predominant in France over the past week there has been little fresh snow, with the biggest falls of 40cm over the past seven days coming at small resorts in the south of the country and in the Pyrenees. There has been some fresh snow though to freshen up the slopes which in most cases have deep bases built up over the previous two months. Avoriaz reports 10cm (today – Wednesday 15 February), La Rosiere 5cm for example. The deepest snow in the country is in the Chamonix Valley with 4.3m (12.3 feet).
Resorts in Italy have posted the most snowfall in the past 7 days of any country in the world. The little area of Monte Amiata was the only one to report more than a metre of new snow anywhere in the world this week, with 165cm (5.5 feet). Some of the larger resorts in the dolomites have had impressive snowfalls – 60cm (two feet) for Arabba and 45cm (18 inches) at neighbouring Alta Badia. Here are all snow depths in Italy.
There are excellent ski conditions across Switzerland at the moment with small falls of snow most days keeping the pistes fresh. That means slopes can be well groomed each day. The biggest falls of the past week were only 45cm and 40cm in total at Degersheim and Ebenalp/Appenzellerland. Engelberg still haws the deepest snow depth of 476cm, followed by Champex-Lac, and also Laax, both with 380 cm.
The Pyrenees have continued to have some good snowfalls over the past week with Spain’s Baqueira Beret (picture attached) coming out top with another 30cm accumulation overnight on Tuesday. It now has a snow base of 2.5m, not far behind Cauterets on the French side which has the deepest snow in the region at 3m (10 feet).
With little fresh snow in the Alps, the new snow falling in Scandinavia, particularly in the past 48 hours, has made it one of the snowiest regions in Europe at present. Are (Sweden), the region’s biggest resort, is the only one in the world to issue Powder alarms for 20cm+ falls for two successive days. Norwegian resorts have the deepest snow in the area however with Røldal the deepest at 385cm (13 feet).
Although England was gripped by sub-zero temperatures last week, in an unusual contrast Scotland was not, and temperature were up to 20 degrees higher than the -15C reported in South Eastern Britain. This has had some affect on snow cover at the five Scottish ski areas with The Lecht particularly hard hit with only very limited terrain open. The other four areas have between 25 and 50% of their terrain open.
Canada remains buried deep in snow but the cold temperatures of January have eased to make the experience of skiing or boarding it all ever more pleasurable. "Warm ski temperatures and impeccable grooming have made for great cruising from top to bottom on all mountain faces while soft snow awaits in the 15 gladed areas around the mountain", said a statement from Revelstoke in BC. "Additional top-ups of snow over the last few days (11cm in 48hrs and 17cm in the last 7 days) over a deep base of 208cm has enhanced the soft snow surface and groomed conditions". The deepest snow in the country is in BC with Powder king deepest with 401cm, however Mont Sainte Anne over in Quebec is not far behind with 368cm.
There have been some significant snowfalls in the USA over the past week, good news with a holiday weekend for Presidents Day in the country. Resorts in California, which has had a particularly challenging winter with snowfall typically a third of the average rate in contrast to the previous record breaking winter, have reported healthy accumulations of up to 25cm (10 inches). Resorts say conditions are now great. The deepest snow in the country is still in the NorthWest with Mt Baker in Alaska living up to its title of the world’s snowiest resort with 478cm (16 feet) of snow lying), 2cm (less than an inch) more than its closest rival (Engelberg in Switzerland with 476cm). Eaglecrest in Alaska is second with 401cm (13.3 feet).

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Sochi 2014 Celebrates Two Years To Go With Volunteer Launch

The Sochi 2014 Organising Committee has marked the two-year countdown to the start of the Games by announcing details of its volunteer recruitment program.
An estimated 25,000 volunteers will work during the Games in Sochi in more than 20 areas, including meeting and greeting the delegations at the airport and helping to organize the closing ceremony.
Applications can be made via a form on the volunteers official website. Anyone between the ages of 18-80 (on 6 January 2014) is eligible to become a Sochi 2014 volunteer.
Following the online application, bids will be received by one of 26 Sochi 2014 volunteer centres situated all over the country, according to a chosen activity area and region of residence. Applicants will receive registration acknowledgement within a few days of submitting their application, and those whose bids satisfy the requirements mentioned at vol.sochi2014.com will be invited to a selection interview.
Different events held all over the country, in conjunction with the 26 Sochi 2014 volunteer centres, will mark the start of the volunteers’ recruitment. The most important event will be in Sochi at the "Rosa Khutor" Alpine Center in Krasnaya Polyana, which Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Dmitry Kozak is due to attend. Volunteers will light a giant heart (1.2m x 1.2m), the symbol of the Sochi 2014 volunteer movement.
The President and CEO of the Sochi 2014 Organizing Committee, Dmitry Chernyshenko, noted: "If volunteers come to Sochi they will not just get a nice volunteer uniform, but also the chance to see their sports idols. The best of the best, chosen through competition, will be involved in a great historical event, which they will remember for their whole lives".