Ski Report for Catamount Mountain Resort Ski Report
Daily Ski Conditions for Catamount Mountain Resort Ski Report
Early-season turns are on at Catamount with groomed trails open and snowmaking running hard to keep things fun for skiers and riders on the New Year stretch; the mountain reported 11 groomed trails served by 4 lifts in a recent conditions post and daytime temps near 30°F with partly sunny skies. The resort’s public conditions page also showed variable daily counts (a print-friendly page listed 3 of 8 lifts and 5 of 41 trails open in one snapshot) so lift and trail counts can change rapidly depending on operations and weather. SnoCountry’s aggregated report lists base depths in the neighborhood of 12–24 inches, a season total around 18 inches, and describes the primary surface as packed powder with about 3 inches in the last five days, while noting a recent update timestamp in mid-December. Current summit and base elevations for context are roughly 2,000 ft summit and 1,000 ft base with a 1,000 ft vertical, which helps explain relatively quick freeze–thaw swings. On-site updates the mountain posts mention uphill skinning is allowed on designated routes (Esplanade, Upper Promenade, Ridge Run), so if you plan a skin up be sure to stick to those trails. Weather sites and forecasts are showing a mixed pattern: short-term partly cloudy and cold periods with milder, rain-prone days later in multi-day forecasts—SnoCountry’s outlook included highs in the 20s–40s°F across several days with rain advertised for some mid-forecast days, while other forecast services emphasize mostly dry, freeze–thaw conditions and decreasing winds on the near-term horizon. Because temperatures are hovering near freezing at times, expect piste conditions to range from groomed packed powder to firm or crusty sections in the morning and possibly softening or sticky spring-like snow during afternoon warm spells on warmer forecast days. Off-piste conditions are likely thin and variable early season: limited natural coverage in glades and lower-angle off-trail zones means exposed rocks and vegetation are possible, and operators note which trails rely on snowmaking versus natural snow—plan to avoid off-trail zones unless coverage and stability have been confirmed by patrol. The resort explicitly thanks its mountain operations crew for heavy snowmaking and grooming work and reminds guests that condition reports are snapshots subject to change, plus it publishes a ski patrol emergency number for on-mountain incidents. Practical tips from local knowledge: arrive early for the best groomed corduroy, carry layers for rapid temperature swings between base and summit, and book lift tickets or tubing time in advance on busy holiday dates when the mountain runs expanded hours and special programming. Finally, check Catamount’s live mountain conditions page before you go for the latest lift/trail counts and any operational notices—status can change quickly with cold snaps or warm/rain events that affect both snowmaking and trail openings.
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