CONDITIONS: Packed Powder
LIFTS: 16/18
TRAILS: 165/165
TEMP: 49/20.
Snow finally fell on Steamboat last Thursday to ensure the 2007/2008 ski season is in fact the snowiest ski season on record. This past weekend, the Steamboat Pilot and today was knee-deep in articles (and photos) about the history of Steamboat Springs weather patterns.
Perhaps the most talked about article was the Pilot's "Steamboat Hits 450 Inch Mark" which presented all kinds of graphs, statistics, quotes and photos of Steamboat's record snowfall. Here is a taste:
- 8,400,000
Pounds of scoria spread on local roadways by city snowplows - $106,000
Money spent on truck rentals for hauling snow - 1,300
Overtime hours logged by city snowplow drivers - 75,000
Cubic yards of snow hauled out of town - 450
Inches of snow to fall on Mount Werner since October, a new record - 23
Snow removals, by dump truck, in Ski Time Square and along Lincoln Avenue - 0
Days of school cancelled because of snow by the Steamboat Springs School District
Top Steamboat winters
- 2007-08: 450 inches and counting
- 1996-97: 447.75 inches
- 1983-84: 447.5 inches
- 1995-96: 441.25 inches
- 2005-06: 432 inches
- 1992-93: 423.5 inches
- The ski area surpassed the 300-inch mark for the season Feb. 1; six days later, it surpassed the 350-inch mark on Feb. 7; and on March 2, it surpassed the 400-inch mark. These three key milestones were reached within a month’s time.
Tom Ross from the Steamboat Pilot and Today was perhaps unimpresed by the storm last Thursday that was supposed to deliver 14 inches of powder snow and only coughed up 4 inches. But, he was impressed by Jim Fain's passion for Colorado weather: "He’s so engrossed with snowfall statistics that he compiled an 11-page bound booklet this month. It is crammed with every statistic he could find about seasonal snowfall and ski area visitation — not just for Steamboat, but for the entire state of Colorado."
Fain's book raises some very interesting questions about Steamboat's record snowfall. Read complete "Winter of Powder Eating Grins."
Statistics, opinions and facts aside, Tom Ross is correct when he notes "The winter of 2007-08, with back-to-back-to-back 100-inch months, will always be remembered as the season of constant powder-eating grins..."