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Snowfall brings 'phenomenal year' to Mount Charleston ski area
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Jessica Ebelhar/Las Vegas Review-Journal
Chloe Chun, a 7-year-old in her third season of snowboarding, lands at the bottom of a run at the Las Vegas Ski & Snowboard Resort on Mount Charleston Monday. She has lots to be happy about -- while resorts in Northern Nevada have limited amounts of snow that mostly is man-made, the Las Vegas resort has a snow base of 50 inches. » Buy this photo
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Snowboarders and skiers make their way down a run Monday at Las Vegas Ski & Snowboard Resort on Mount Charleston. December snowfalls have made a big difference between the resort -- which has a solid 50-inch base of snow -- and resorts in Northern Nevada, which are dealing with one of the driest Decembers on record. Jessica Ebelhar/Las Vegas Review-Journal » Buy this photo
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J.C. Caron, center, scans skiers' and snowboarders' lift tickets on Monday before they board the ski lift at Las Vegas Ski & Snowboard Resort. Jessica Ebelhar/Review-Journal » Buy this photo
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Updated: Dec. 20, 2011 | 7:28 a.m.
In 1979, it snowed in the Sahara.
In 2005, Alaskans experienced the first tornado in the state's recorded history.
In 1943, the temperature rose 49 degrees in two minutes in Spearfish, S.D.
And in December 2011, more snow fell on the ground in the southern end of Nevada than in the north.
Rare?
Yes, almost freakishly so.
Kevin Stickelman, president and general manager of the Las Vegas Ski & Snowboard Resort on Mount Charlestson, is taking full advantage.
"We are having a phenomenal year," Stickelman said. "Our visits are way up and our season passes are up more than 10 percent."
Stickelman said more locals are staying closer to home to do their skiing and more tourists are traveling to the mountain from the relatively barren ski resort areas of Utah, Northern California, Colorado -- and yes, Reno and Lake Tahoe.
"We're one of the only resorts with open terrain parks," he said, "and that's bringing us the action sports crowd that's into that whole scene."
The parks boast table top jumps, rails and other features used for performing tricks.
Eighty-two inches of snow has hit the ground at Lee Canyon since October, with most of that coming the first 18 days of this month. Stickelman said there is a solid 50-inch base .
Meanwhile, the Mt. Rose ski area between Reno and Lake Tahoe has seen total snowfall of between 21 and 24 inches since the season began -- and all of that fell in November. The base is an anemic 12 to 18 inches, according to a Reno-based travel website.
"It is very highly unusual for Northern Nevada to see less precipitation than Southern Nevada," said Chris Stachelski, a meteorologist with the Las Vegas office of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
And while the nearly 7 feet of snow that has accumulated on parts of Mount Charleston since the ski season began Nov. 18 is above average for this time of year, the meager 2 feet that has fallen near Reno is way below normal, almost historically so.
"This could be the driest December on record for Northern Nevada," said Stachelski. "There's been zero precipitation this month in Reno, and Elko has seen only a trace."
The last time the region had a snowless December was in 1883, he said. "And we're not forecasting any for the next seven days."
According to Stachelski, there are a several reasons for the lack of snow in the north.
The storms that have hit Southern Nevada in recent weeks were well-developed by the time they "blew up" over the mountain, he said, while Reno has yet to get a storm strong enough to trigger a significant snow event.
"There's been no rain, no snow, no nothing in Reno and the Sierra Nevada range this month," said Stachelski, who attributes at least a small measure of the dry spell to La Niña.
La Niña is an occasional weather phenomenon characterized by unusually cold temperatures near South America in the Pacific Ocean.
"This isn't due just to La Niña," he said. "We're getting lots of signals in the atmosphere, but we do know the dry weather won't change for the next few weeks."
Stachelski noted winter doesn't officially start until Thursday, and he holds out hope Northern Nevada might get more snow.
He said the winters of 2006 and 2007 were dry in December and January, but February and March were wetter than usual.
"We might get midway through winter and see it snap, but it will have to be substantially wetter to get back to normal precipitation," he said.
In contrast, Stachelski said the colder winter temperatures throughout Southern Nevada this fall have helped extend the overall weather pattern. The storms tracked from British Columbia, he said, but a high-pressure system in the north kept them from dumping rain or snow until they reached a chilly Southern Nevada.
Stachelski also said that while a bone-dry December is odd for Northern Nevada, dry winters are not rare.
"It isn't uncommon to have a dry winter after a wet winter," he said. "The Sierra had a near-record snowpack last year. Sometimes we even get two or three dry winters after a really wet one."
Fortunately, ski resorts in the Sierra are using technology to do what Mother Nature has not: employing snow-making machines to give skiers and snowboarders a reason to get outdoors.
An Associated Press report in Monday's Las Vegas Review-Journal said the Boreal Mountain Resort near Tahoe had sprayed more than 32 million gallons of snow this season, a record.
Last year the resort set a different kind of record when about 66 feet of snow -- the natural variety -- fell over the course of the season.
But that snow melted long ago, and this year it's a different game -- one that Stickelman is happy to play.
"It's a rare event for us to catch these storms," Stickelman said. "They've dumped 82 inches of snow on us since October, and I can tell you we are very pleased with that."
Contact reporter Doug McMurdo at dmcmurdo@ reviewjournal.com or 702-224-5512.
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Interesting to me that two weeks ago we were reading an article about a 40 year old woman that died after sledding into a tree. this article has an accompaning picture. A child on a snow board or sled or whatever. i guess if you are among the wealthy elite that can afford to pay someone to take you up the mountain so you can slide back down, just to pay them again to take you up the mountain to slide back down...... i guess it is ok to allow a child to risk sliding into a tree.? I don't get it.
@skilvnv-
So you're an imbecile?
@ Joe.Blo. I agree. They need to change their attitudes. Rip off. Maybe when the 10 lifts go in and they expand to 50 runs. But.. as of right now, bad attitude, edgy and now worth the 60 bills. These guys need a major image adjustment.
@greendragon. Yep
Something calling itself "hopeandchange" wants to be believed when it propagandizes what CRU knows about climate. I suppose readers could go look for themselves: http://www.skepticalscience.com/CRU-tampered-temperature-data.htm But, hey, don't let facts stand in the way of continuing to bury your head in the sand because then you wouldn't be idi*ts.
For the obviously ignorant conservative posters regarding climate change: http://www.skepticalscience.com/Record-snowfall-disproves-global-warming.htm "f global warming is still happening, why are some areas experiencing record snowfall events? As climate warms, evaporation from the ocean increases. This results in more water vapour in the air. Globally, atmospheric water vapour has increased by about 5% over the 20th century. Most of the increase has occurred since 1970 (IPCC AR4 3.4.2.1). This is confirmed by satellites that find the total atmospheric moisture content has been increasing since measurements began in 1988 (Santer 2007)."
@skilvnv-
So you're willing to drive 2.5 hours and pay the same amount of money for the same vertical at an area that has wind and thin cover issues? Brilliant! You'd've somewhat had an argument if you were going an hour further up the road to Eagle Point (formerly Elk Meadows.) At least there's more vertical and some great powder there. Another better option, about equidistant, is AZ Snowbowl, if they're having a good snow year. 2K vertical and some pretty decent terrain. But please, don't try to convince me that Brianhead, with it's lift-served one thousand vertical feet, is worth the gas and time over LVSSR with the same vertical. I was over Brianhead the day they closed all their lifts but Blackfoot and refused to issue rainchecks. The place is remote, the mountain can't hold its snow, the terrain is boring, and there's no reason to be there after the lifts close.
Here in Canada we are hearing that it is snowing in the heart of Las Vegas. Is that true?
Ticket price $60 bucks, 2 REAL lifts, the 3rd one used just for the bunny hill that you can hike up faster than the lift will take you. Terrible bartender w/ a major smoking problem, arrogant managers and resort crew that do not find locals of any value. I would suggest another resort for anyone who wants to ski until these FOOLS at Lee Canyon become more local friendly. Oh yeah, $6 dollar beers, $8 dollar shots, $8 dollar burger (that taste like crap), etc. Save yourself the agitation and go to Eagle Point, Brianhead or Big Bear. The gas $$$ is worth it!
That's why they don't call it global WARMING anymore. The ecos are covered either way if they call it climate change plus all their false data will still relate.