Skiing Stoke from Lake Tahoe

Author: Rob (Page 10 of 27)

Happy New Year!

Delicious December from Nut Hut Studios on Vimeo.

Cold temperatures and overcast skies kept snow conditions perfect from Christmas to New Years. This is a refreshing change after last season when every good ski day seemed to turn to crud overnight.

The skin track.

Squaw Valley

Robb Gaffney in the Truckee Backcountry.

Looking towards Desolation Wilderness on New Year’s Day.

Lots of Snow but Dicey Conditions Linger

Geoff Forcier plays the low angle pow game on December 23.

A Christmas made brighter and whiter by more than six feet of new snow was tainted by two in-bounds avalanche fatalities at Tahoe ski areas on Christmas Eve. A veteran ski patroller was caught in a slide during his control route in Sherwood Bowl at Alpine Meadows and a Truckee man was killed in a slide at Donner Ski Ranch. The wind blast from an in-bounds slide on KT22 at Squaw Valley the day before pulled a skier from the chairlift. He survived with injuries.

Heavy snow in downtown Truckee on December 23.

PlumpJack in the front, Tram Face in the rear.

Last Chance Chutes and Broken Arrow looking great but likely remain closed because south facing aspects are similar to those which resulted in two avalanche fatalities on Christmas Eve at Alpine Meadows and Donner Ski Ranch.

Dude, where’s my car?

Huge crown under Adrenaline Chute.


Here’s a look back at the weather on Sunday, December 23rd.

December 23rd Storm Footage from Nut Hut Studios on Vimeo.

It’s going to be wild

The good news is the Lake Tahoe Basin is expected to receive three to six feet of snow this weekend. The sketchy news is that we have a weak snowpack that will likely fail at some point during the storm cycle resulting in widespread avalanches. Check out details from the Sierra Avalanche Center here:
Snowpack in poor condition to handle new loading
You can keep track of ongoing storm conditions with our favorite local weather reporter Bryan Allegretto who is now posting at a new site called the Tahoe Daily Snow. This site is a preferred link at Skiing-Blog.com.
The Tahoe Daily Snow

Buffed Out!

Squaw Valley on December 18.

Today featured the type of snow true Sierra fiends live for. Six to eight inches of wet snow that fell yesterday had the moisture sucked out of it by cold overnight temps allowing you to rail the top four or five inches in total control at high speeds. Many Squaw locals will argue this type of hero snow is more fun to shred than bottomless powder.

Ramping up

Oly Bowl with patrol tracks.


Ski conditions have been remarkably good lately. Cold temps and steady light snow has been falling for days and should continue for several more. Enough new snow has fallen to warrant paying attention to wind loading and windslab avalanche potential.

Sierra Crest last Sunday.

December 8 snowpack tour

Kevin Quinn gives us another aerial tour of terrain from North Lake Tahoe to peaks well south of Kirkwood. Nearly all of the terrain in these photos is above 7,500 feet. You would never know there is virtually no snow at elevation 6,000 feet right now.

Tinkers Knob and Pacific Crest


Squaw Peak


Alpine Meadows


Deep in the Sierra Nevada.


Deeper in the Sierra Nevada.

Plaza Bar Gets a Facelift

The decrepit and outdated 1980’s time capsule that was Plaza Bar has been restyled into a swanky ultra lounge. Well not quite, but it does look great. Contemporary furniture fills a variety of nooks and crannies for hanging out. For those looking to class it up a notch from the Chammy, Plaza Bar may be worth a visit…especially on a storm day.

Plaza Bar upper lounge.


Plaza Bar Main Lounge.


Plaza Bar main bar.

Open the floodgates

Robb Gaffney digs in at elevation 8,900 feet.

Several days of torrential rainfall threatened to flood the Truckee River along highway 89 and in Reno.  Snow levels dropped earlier than expected on Sunday preventing any serious damage.  In classic Tahoe form, avalanche conditions went from high during yesterday’s rain/snow event to very stable today.  High snow levels for most of the storm left a huge contrast between valley floors (dirt) and higher elevations (solid base and great powder).

Surging Truckee River on Sunday, December 2.  Elevation 5,900 feet.

Downtown Reno on Sunday.  Many bridges were closed to pedestrians and traffic as a precautionary measure.

Elevation 8,300 feet on Monday, December 3.

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