southern
California ski resorts are hopeful about the weekend's thin layer of
snow that fell in the San Gabriel Mountains. It wasn't significant
enough to think about opening, but it was enough for local Mountain High
ski resort to crow "It's Snowvember!"
Mammoth Mountain ski area
farther north got the real deal: 12 to 16 inches of snow fell at the
Sierra resort during the weekend, and it has been making snow too.
"We
have had the [snow] guns blazing since Friday and will keep them on as
long as [temperatures] allow," a spokeswoman said in an email.
When
will resorts open for the season amid the state's record drought? It's
all weather-dependent, not just based on how much snow falls this month
but also how cold it gets.
Mammoth is aiming for Nov. 13, with
the first chair heading up the mountain at 8:30 a.m. (Mammoth does a
countdown.) Lift tickets for the day cost just $50 each.
In the Lake Tahoe area, Heavenly and Northstar California plan to open Nov. 21, and Squaw Valley is aiming for Nov. 26.
June Mountain Ski Area has set a Dec. 13 opening date, and Alpine Meadows plans to open Dec. 12.
Southern
California ski resorts enjoyed an early dusting, but hot, dry weather
is about to return. Mountain High near Wrightwood has assembled a "first
snow" gallery on its Facebook page and is hoping for a mid-November
opening. (Average opening date for the past decade is Nov. 16.)
bear
mountain resort in Big Bear Lake closed its seasonal bike park and
chair lift Saturday because of the inch or so of snow it received. Its
website says the resort will return to summer activities for now, with
no prediction of an opening date for skiing.
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