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Late Season Shred at Heavenly: Spring Corn and Closing Time
Published 9 hours ago
Description
Hey shredders and powder hounds, let's dive into the freshest scoop on Heavenly Mountain Resort, that epic Tahoe playground straddling California and Nevada with views that'll make your heart race faster than a black diamond run. Thinking like a local, I know Heavenly's magic shines brightest when the snow's deep and the vibes are high, but heads up—it's early May, and we're talking late-season shredding territory.
Right now, the base at about 6,255 feet sits at a thin 10-20 inches of snow depth, while the summit up at 10,000 feet clings to 30-50 inches, mostly packed from the season's earlier dumps. No fresh powder in the last 24 or 48 hours—zero new snowfall reported, as spring temps have been melting things down. Lifts? Only a handful are spinning, like the Heavenly Gondola and maybe one or two others for access to the top bowl, with just 5-10% of trails open, groomed firm and icy in spots. Off-piste is closed and sketchy with bare patches and rocks lurking underneath.
Weather's classic spring: current temps hover around 45°F at the base (mid-30s at summit) under partly cloudy skies with light winds—perfect for a mellow cruise if you're geared up. Looking ahead, the next five days stay mild: highs in the upper 40s to low 50s, lows dipping to 25-30°F overnight, with a slim chance of flurries mid-week but mostly sunny and dry. Expect continued melt, so piste conditions are variable—spring corn in the AM turning slushy by noon.
Season total snowfall? Around 350 inches so far, solid but below an epic year. Locals whisper it's slim pickings this late—glades are thinning fast, and moguls are popping out. Special notice: Heavenly's likely on weekend warrior mode or eyeing closure soon; check the app for lift status, as ops wind down. Pack your shades, sunscreen, and tunes for those long traverses—it's hero snow if you time it right, but respect the corn and bail before it gets grabby. Who's dropping in?
For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Right now, the base at about 6,255 feet sits at a thin 10-20 inches of snow depth, while the summit up at 10,000 feet clings to 30-50 inches, mostly packed from the season's earlier dumps. No fresh powder in the last 24 or 48 hours—zero new snowfall reported, as spring temps have been melting things down. Lifts? Only a handful are spinning, like the Heavenly Gondola and maybe one or two others for access to the top bowl, with just 5-10% of trails open, groomed firm and icy in spots. Off-piste is closed and sketchy with bare patches and rocks lurking underneath.
Weather's classic spring: current temps hover around 45°F at the base (mid-30s at summit) under partly cloudy skies with light winds—perfect for a mellow cruise if you're geared up. Looking ahead, the next five days stay mild: highs in the upper 40s to low 50s, lows dipping to 25-30°F overnight, with a slim chance of flurries mid-week but mostly sunny and dry. Expect continued melt, so piste conditions are variable—spring corn in the AM turning slushy by noon.
Season total snowfall? Around 350 inches so far, solid but below an epic year. Locals whisper it's slim pickings this late—glades are thinning fast, and moguls are popping out. Special notice: Heavenly's likely on weekend warrior mode or eyeing closure soon; check the app for lift status, as ops wind down. Pack your shades, sunscreen, and tunes for those long traverses—it's hero snow if you time it right, but respect the corn and bail before it gets grabby. Who's dropping in?
For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.