
"A very active pattern targets the Northern Rockies through early next week, with the deepest new snow focused on the Tetons and southwest Montana while interior British Columbia, Idaho, northwest Montana, and the Canadian Rockies all pick up meaningful base-building storms and a milder, wetter stretch beyond. Expect a standout storm from Thursday night through Saturday, a secondary refresh Sunday into Monday, and then a shift toward warmer, still-active weather next week that favors continued upper-mountain accumulation but increasingly dense snow at lower elevations."
"The first main storm from Thursday night through Saturday centers on the Tetons and southwest Montana, delivering the most exciting powder potential of this cycle. Persistent northwest flow feeds several waves across western Wyoming and southwest Montana, producing sustained mountain snow for Grand Targhee, Jackson Hole, Big Sky, and Bridger Bowl. Snow levels run roughly 3,000 to 4,000 feet early, rising toward 5,000 to 6,500 feet late in the period, so these high-elevation resorts stay solidly in snow while adjacent valleys see more mixed precipitation."
A very active storm pattern will affect the Northern Rockies through early next week, producing the deepest new snow over the Tetons and southwest Montana and significant base-building storms across interior British Columbia, Idaho, northwest Montana, and the Canadian Rockies. A primary storm Thursday night through Saturday will bring sustained mountain snow to Grand Targhee, Jackson Hole, Big Sky, and Bridger Bowl, with snow levels rising from roughly 3,000–4,000 feet to 5,000–6,500 feet. Snow-to-liquid ratios start around 14–17:1 and fall into the low teens late, yielding generally light, dry snow at high elevations. A secondary wave Sunday–Monday will refresh the snow, while warmer, wetter conditions next week favor continued upper-mountain accumulation and denser snow at lower elevations.
Read at SnowBrains
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