Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Big Sky Spring Sessions: Bluebird Skies and Bomber Base Before the Melt
Published 1 month ago
Description
Ski Report for Big Sky Resort, Montana
Daily Ski Conditions for Big Sky Resort, Montana
Hey shredders, Big Sky Resort in Montana is dishing out prime spring skiing vibes right now, with a solid 52-inch base depth at the base (that's 95% of average, crushing it!) and around 53 inches reported elsewhere for that settled snowpack feel. No fresh dumps in the last 24 or 48 hours—zero inches—but the mountain's holding strong with 2224 acres open, 106 of 320 runs fired up (33% total, mixing beginner, intermediate, advanced, and expert terrain), and a whopping 40 lifts spinning (though some sources note 29-40 open as spring closures kick in).
Today's weather is your classic bluebird setup: Mountain Village at 39°F climbing to a comfy 52°F high, while Lone Peak summit tops out at 32°F with light SW winds—perfect for carving groomed packed powder pistes without getting slushy. Off-piste? Variable due to the steep Lone Mountain terrain, but expect decent powder pockets if you hike smart; check the Big Sky App for real-time lift and terrain updates.
Peeking ahead, tomorrow (March 31) stays mild around 55°F highs dropping to 16°F lows, but light snow showers could flirt with the resort level (down to 6,791ft snowline) into foggy spells and clears—maybe 1cm fresh by morning. The next few days warm up to 50-54°F highs mid-week with lows in the 20s, cooling slightly later; watch for potential 6cm by April 2 if you're chasing pow. Season total? Averaging over 257 inches historically, with this year boasting up to 400 inches in spots for epic depth—way above average!
Pro tip: Spring ops mean some lift pods closing soon, so hit those bonus weekend details on the resort site. Temps are rising, but the base is bomber—grab your board, slather on sunscreen, and send it local-style before the melt! Stay safe out there.
The best deals on gear https://amzn.to/49QUryF
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Daily Ski Conditions for Big Sky Resort, Montana
Hey shredders, Big Sky Resort in Montana is dishing out prime spring skiing vibes right now, with a solid 52-inch base depth at the base (that's 95% of average, crushing it!) and around 53 inches reported elsewhere for that settled snowpack feel. No fresh dumps in the last 24 or 48 hours—zero inches—but the mountain's holding strong with 2224 acres open, 106 of 320 runs fired up (33% total, mixing beginner, intermediate, advanced, and expert terrain), and a whopping 40 lifts spinning (though some sources note 29-40 open as spring closures kick in).
Today's weather is your classic bluebird setup: Mountain Village at 39°F climbing to a comfy 52°F high, while Lone Peak summit tops out at 32°F with light SW winds—perfect for carving groomed packed powder pistes without getting slushy. Off-piste? Variable due to the steep Lone Mountain terrain, but expect decent powder pockets if you hike smart; check the Big Sky App for real-time lift and terrain updates.
Peeking ahead, tomorrow (March 31) stays mild around 55°F highs dropping to 16°F lows, but light snow showers could flirt with the resort level (down to 6,791ft snowline) into foggy spells and clears—maybe 1cm fresh by morning. The next few days warm up to 50-54°F highs mid-week with lows in the 20s, cooling slightly later; watch for potential 6cm by April 2 if you're chasing pow. Season total? Averaging over 257 inches historically, with this year boasting up to 400 inches in spots for epic depth—way above average!
Pro tip: Spring ops mean some lift pods closing soon, so hit those bonus weekend details on the resort site. Temps are rising, but the base is bomber—grab your board, slather on sunscreen, and send it local-style before the melt! Stay safe out there.
The best deals on gear https://amzn.to/49QUryF
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.