
"California stays locked in a warm, dry spring pattern with no meaningful snowfall in sight. Every forecast keeps all resorts dry through the next 10 days, so the main story for skiers is a brief bump in wind around Tahoe this weekend followed by stronger warming early next week."
"From Thursday through Sunday, the individual guidance is strongly converged on dry weather statewide, with the only meaningful change a weak front brushing northern California late Saturday into Sunday. That front looks moisture-starved, so there is no storm timing or snowfall intensity to resolve and snow-level differences are irrelevant this cycle."
"Most Tahoe-area resorts look likely to see sustained west to northwest winds in the 10 to 20 mph range with gusts around 20 to 30 mph Saturday, while Mt. Rose is the standout for stronger exposure and has several solutions pushing gusts into the 35 to 40 mph range."
California remains locked in a warm, dry spring pattern with no meaningful snowfall forecast through the next 10 days. All Sierra resorts will experience spring conditions rather than storm skiing, with daytime temperatures ranging from upper 40s to upper 50s through Sunday, then warming to upper 50s and 60s Monday and Tuesday. A weak, moisture-starved front will brush northern California late Saturday into Sunday, bringing wind impacts primarily to Tahoe-area resorts with sustained west to northwest winds of 10-20 mph and gusts of 20-30 mph, while Mt. Rose faces stronger exposure with gusts potentially reaching 35-40 mph. Mammoth will remain quieter with winds mostly under 15 mph. Confidence in this forecast pattern is strongest from Thursday through Tuesday due to tightly grouped guidance on the dry pattern and temperature trends.
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