
"Overall, the Alps pick up a couple light waves from Fri night (01/23) through Mon (01/26), with the best totals favoring the southern Alps and the Dolomites. Snow levels stay safely low for most areas, generally around 1,800-2,700 feet, and temperatures run cold enough to keep surfaces wintry, mostly in the teens and 20s °F. Snow quality looks solid to very good for midwinter, with many periods posting SLRs in the 15-19:1 range, while a few lower-elevation windows run denser with SLRs closer to 12-14:1."
"The more meaningful stretch arrives Sat night (01/24) through Sun night (01/25), with lingering light snowfall into Mon (01/26) at a number of resorts. This pulse is still modest, but it spreads snowfall more broadly and stacks up best in the southern Alps and higher western Alpine zones, where several areas reach mid single-digit totals for the event. Snow levels frequently hover near 1,800-2,600 feet, keeping precipitation solid, while SLRs commonly land in the 16-19:1 range,"
Light snow waves affect the Alps from Friday night (01/23) through Monday (01/26), with the southern Alps and Dolomites receiving the best totals. Initial western activity produces mostly 1–3 inches, with higher-elevation French and Swiss terrain faring best for dry snow. The larger Sat night–Sun night pulse spreads snow more broadly and yields mid single-digit totals in favored southern and higher western zones. Snow levels generally sit near 1,800–2,700 feet, keeping precipitation snow at most resorts. Temperatures remain mostly in the teens and 20s °F. Snow-to-liquid ratios commonly range 15–19:1, with some lower-elevation windows denser near 12–14:1.
Read at SnowBrains
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]