Who gets the first snow?

JstHuckIt

Member
In the lower 48...Im getting all jittery and such and in MN and SD we don't get shit till tgiving and even then it sux...
 
PNW for sure. baker sometimes gets dumped on pretty early. i would always see lots of pros out there rippin real early season gnar. 2 years ago i saw t hall and seth up there opening week
 
I'm not really sure as far as the whole country goes, so i'm not claiming Colorado gets the earliest snow, i'm just stating what i know about it.

Colorado seems to always get snow in early September down around Silverton and Wolf Creek, and usually hits the rest of the state in Mid september to start building bases for Ski resorts and openings as early as Mid-October. And making passes like loveland pass skiable in early october.
 
i also agree with the PNW. I hiked for some turns in October last year, i wish it would come sooner this year. I am ready for snow!
 
about sept 22 last year wolf creek colorado had about twenty inches of skiable snow, october had snow, and they opened on halloween
 
what the fuck is the lower 48, maybe you shold lead to me as what the fuck the lower 48 is. that would be greaaaaaaat
 
its in B.C. but when my mountain opens on november 23rd, theres about 3-4feet of fresh when you hike a bit where no ones been, perfect for pow jumps
 
for east coast u.s. tuckerman's ravine (mount washington) is usuall skiable in late october/ early november but you'll be hiking
 
A-basin opened first last year i think? In CO, snowbird in UT opens pretty early too.
 
yeah brighton is early too. utah resorts alta snowbird too. big and little cotton wood canyon get puked on every year.

best part is its an hour away :)
 
sep 29 on my birthday last year was denvers first official snow fall. a-basin beat loveland to open on october 14 i think
 
i got snow in west virginia ocotber like 18th it wsa pretty sweet since i hadnt seen the shit in like forever. but i would say that washington will probably get the first flurry
 
Its pretty obvious...and if anything you should have fucked up by including Hawaii, not Alaska. Including Hawaii doesnt make sense though as its lower 48, not 49, and as posted above the lower 48 includes the 'core' of America- the 48 states linked together.
 
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