Berkshire East Mountain Resort Ski Report

Berkshire East's Early-Season Conditions: Groomed Runs, Snowmaking, and Weather Outlook


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Ski Report for Berkshire East Mountain Resort

Daily Ski Conditions for Berkshire East Mountain Resort

Fresh tracks alert: Berkshire East is open and serving machine-groomed corduroy with a fresh dusting and solid early-season coverage across much of the mountain, with the resort reporting about 3 inches of new snow at the summit from Wednesday night that helped open Upper Competition and Big Chief and expand the early-season trail list. The resort’s official mountain report lists anticipated open trails including Outback, Riva Ridge, Lower Mohawk, Bobcat, Top Notch, Big Chief, Ralicki’s Run, Deer Run, Lower Competition and Upper Competition, and indicates lifts serving lower and upper terrain are anticipated to be running during posted early-season hours. Snow-depth trackers show upper and lower snow depths in the neighborhood of 15 inches (about 38 cm) in recent updates, consistent with early-season grooming and snowmaking coverage shown on regional snow sites. Local forecasts and mountain operators emphasize heavy snowmaking activity and cold temps that have set the stage for a long season and kept base conditions in good shape for opening weekend and the current weekday schedule.

Right now on-mountain weather has been cold enough for snowmaking and pockets of natural snow; AccuWeather and other forecast services have been calling for generally cold daytime highs through mid-December (with averages around the upper 20s to low 40s depending on the day) and overnight lows in the teens, which is why the hill has been able to keep and groom its early snow. Short-range forecast models show mostly dry to partly cloudy conditions for the next several days with a risk of milder, wet systems later in the week (some services show highs rising into the 40s toward the middle of the week), so expect a mix of cold, ski-friendly days and a couple of milder, wetter periods that could affect surface quality if temperatures climb above freezing. Mountain-specific forecasts (J2Ski/Snow-Forecast) currently project little to no significant new snow in the immediate 48-hour window but note that conditions can change quickly and that snowmaking remains the backbone of trail coverage this early in the season.

Piste conditions are listed as machine-groomed and in good early-season shape thanks to extensive snowmaking and recent natural flurries, while off-piste/sidecountry options remain limited and are generally not recommended—snow depth and coverage off groomed trails are variable early season and the resort’s reports focus on groomed runs opening first. Season-to-date snowfall numbers for the mountain are modest (this is typical for early December), and OnTheSnow and Snow-Forecast list average seasonal snowfall for Berkshire East around the regional long-term average (OnTheSnow cites roughly 63 inches as an average), but current cumulative totals remain early-season and will grow as storms and snowmaking continue.

Practical tips for anyone heading up: buy tickets or passes online (the resort emphasizes advance purchase and has posted early-season and holiday hours), expect shorter lift lines on weekday openings but busier holiday and weekend sessions, and dress for cold, changeable weather because milder midweek highs could produce patchy freeze-thaw surfaces later in the day. Also note there is no uphill travel this week per the mountain update and mountain operations have cautioned that lift/trail availability and hours are subject to change as they expand operations. For the friendliest intel, check Berkshire East’s live mountain conditions page and social channels before you drive, since snowmaking, staffing, and weather can alter which lifts and runs are open on short notice.

If you want real-time last-minute decisions: the resort’s mountain conditions page and snow report are updated regularly and list exact open lifts/trails and any special notices, while third-party services (Snow-Forecast, J2Ski, WeatherBug) give a quick look at the next five to seven days of temperatures and precipitation trends to help you pick the best window for pow-hunting or polished groomer laps.

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Berkshire East Mountain Resort Ski ReportBy Inception Point Ai