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New Snow!
May 16, 2008

Arapahoe Basin 2"










Special Weather Feature
Snow conditions reporting terminology

The terms and definitions below are used by many North American ski resorts to describe snow conditions. The resorts describe this as a "universal language," which is true in the sense that most resorts use the same terminology. Check out your resort's snow conditions!

The definitions are courtesy of the New England Ski Areas Council.

Term Abbreviation Definition
Average Base Depth-An average of the high and low amounts of snow over the entire ski area (or on a particular trail. -ed). Machine-made and natural snow amounts are combined.
Primary Surface Condition-The type of snow condition which covers at least 70% of the terrain open to skiers.
PowderPDRCold, new, loose, fluffy, flaky and dry snow which has not been compacted.
Packed PowderPPPowder snow, either natural or machine-made, that has been packed down by skier traffic or grooming machines. The snow is no longer fluffy, but is not so extremely compacted that it is hard.
Machine Groomed SnowMGSLoose granular snow that has been repeatedly groomed by power tillers so that the texture is halfway between LSGR and PP. Some of the snow is granular and has been so pulverized that the crystals are like powdered sugar. It's neither LSGR or PP. This condition occurs only after a warm/freeze with multiple grooming passes.
Wet SnowWETSNPowder or packed powder snow that has become moist due to a thaw or rainfall, or snow wihch was moist when it fell.
Wet Packed SnowWETPSNatural or machine-made snow that has been previously packed and becomes wet usually because of rainfall.
Loose GranularLSGRThis surface results after powder or packed powder thaws, then refreezes and re-crystalizes, or from an accumulation of sleet. This is also caused by machine grooming of frozen or icy snow.
Frozen GranularFRGRThis is undoubtedly the most misunderstood surface condition in ski reporting. It is defined as a hard surface of old snow formed by granules freezing together after rain or warm temperatures. Frozen granular will support a ski pole stuck into its surface while ice will chip away and not support a pole.
Wet GranularWETGRLoose or frozen granular snow which becomes wet after rainfall or high temperature.
IceICYNot to be confused with frozen granular, ice is a hard, glazed surface created either by freezing rain, ground water seeping up into the snow and freezing or by the rapid freezing of snow saturated with water from rain or melting. Ice will chip away and not support a ski pole when stuck into it.
Variable ConditionsVCWhen no primary surface (70 percent) can be determined, variable conditions describe a range of surfaces that a skier may encounter. Parts of trails can be Loose Granular, partly Packed Powder, and parts Frozen Granular, for example.
Corn SnowCORNUsually found in the spring, Corn Snow is characterized by large, loose granules during the day, which freeze together at night, then warm up again and loosen during the day.
Spring ConditionsSCThis is the spring version of Variable Conditions. It is used when no one surface can describe 70 percent or more of the open terrain.
Windblown SnowWBLNPowder or granular snow which has been blown by wind into forming a base.