Ski Report for Catamount Mountain Resort Ski Report
Daily Ski Conditions for Catamount Mountain Resort Ski Report
Catamount is open for winter play but still building out coverage: base depths are shallow and conditions are largely variable after recent early-season snowmaking and a few natural flurries. The resort’s public reports list a base depth around 12 inches and a season total near 6 inches as of early December, with snow described as “variable conditions.” The resort and third‑party trackers report about 6" total for the season and roughly 6" over the past 72 hours in early December, while 24–48 hour reported new snow has been minimal to none in most automated feeds.
Lifts and trails are limited as Catamount ramps up operations: the mountain has eight chairs total but lift and trail openings have been restricted—third‑party trackers showed about 4 lifts and 9 trails open at one point, while the resort’s own live status pages have at times shown lifts closed for intensive snowmaking (0/8 lifts and 0/41 trails on a maintenance day) as they prepare to expand weekend and weekday skiing hours. Current publicly posted hours note weekend operations and upcoming weekday opening changes while explicitly warning the report is a snapshot and subject to change.
Weather on the hill has been cold enough for snowmaking with forecasts calling for mainly partly cloudy, below‑freezing nights and highs in the 20s–30s (°F) in the near term; the 5–7 day outlooks from local forecast services show mostly dry, partly cloudy days with the next significant precipitation not expected in the short range, though models vary and milder rain is possible later in some runs of the forecast. Wind and temperature at summit (2,000 ft) will be a few degrees colder than the base (1,000 ft), which is important for whether natural snow sticks versus melts during daytime warms.
Piste conditions are being reported as variable with groomed beginner and lower‑elevation runs supported by snowmaking, while off‑piste terrain remains thin and best avoided unless you are prepared for rocks/brush and inconsistent coverage; snow‑making corridors and the trails with machine snow are the safest bet right now. Expect firm, occasionally icy early mornings, softer machine‑made snow mid‑day, and refreeze cycles overnight—standard early‑season patterns for a New England hill leaning heavily on guns.
Practical tips for a visitor: check Catamount’s official mountain conditions page before driving—staff have announced temporary lift shutdowns to concentrate snowmaking and posted evolving weekday/weekend hours so plan for possible limited terrain and shifted opening times. Bring microspikes or plan for icy parking/paths in the morning, dress in layers for freeze‑thaw swings, and consider renting gear on site if you want to avoid bringing equipment for a limited‑coverage day. The resort also notes snow tubing and many lower‑season activities are scheduled to open later as coverage improves, so if tubing or specific trails are your goal, verify those opening dates before you go.
If you’d like, I can fetch the resort’s live conditions and lift‑status now and give a minute‑by‑minute summary for planning your drive, or map nearby alternative hills if Catamount’s coverage looks too limited for the weekend.
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