Thursday, April 3, 2025

About That New Ski Resort in the Oquirhhs...

Hopefully most of you have figured out that the previous post, New Ski Resort to Open in the Oquirrhs, was April 1st foolery.  

A good April fools joke needs to be somewhat believable, so let's break down that post a bit more.

First, the idea of development and possibly a ski resort in the Oquirrhs is quite believable.  Surely as the Wasatch Front metro area expands and the Salt Lake, Tooelle, and Utah Valleys are paved over, there must be developers with an eye on the undeveloped island that is the Oquirrhs.  In fact, Kennecott Land once spoke quite seriously about building a ski resort on their property in the Oquirrhs.  If a ski resort can be built in the snow desert and scrub oak of the Mayflower area, eventually one will probably come to the Oquirrhs.  

Is snow as plentiful in the Oquirrhs as the Little Cottonwood?  No.  The Rocky Basin Settlement Snotel in the southern Oquirrhs at 8700 feet has a median peak SWE of 24 inches compared to 43 inches at 9100 feet at Snowbird.  The Rocky Basin Settlement number though is pretty close to the 25 inches at Thaynes Canyon (9250 ft) in the upper reaches of Park City Mountain Resort.  However, the Oquirrhs also get about as much lake-effect as the Cottonwoods.  Below is the water equivalent snowfall (left panel) produced in lake-effect storms showing that the SNOTELs in the Oquirrhs are on par with Mill D North and Snowbird.  


Is there a powder Shangri-La as I suggest in the post?  Probably not.  I haven't been touring in the Oquirrhs this winter as suggested by the post, but I have in the past.  My guess is that there is no magic microclimate like Little Cottonwood in the Oquirrhs, although there are more mountain lions and fewer people.

Is snow farming from season to season a real thing?  Yes it is.  That article from Levi was real.  They are piling up snow, preserving it beneath geotextile blankets, and using it to open the following season.  Could such a thing happen in Utah?  I don't know, but there is the expertise at the U to figure it out and it strikes me as potentially being worth looking into as it preserves water, energy, and money.  Perhaps it would be most feasible at a place like Alta which typically closes when the snowpack close to its deepest so there's no impact on their skiing business to pile up the snow at the time of peak snowpack.  Maybe they could preserve enough to have cover for Mambo->Corkscrew come the next November.  Or Main Street where there's no snowmaking but maybe they could preserve snow near the base of Mt. Baldy which has less total incoming solar due to topographic shading.  

And finally, we have the extension of the red-line Trax into the Oquirrhs.  That was pure fiction designed to give away the April 1st foolery.  There are no such plans.  We can't even get rail to our current ski areas.  

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

New Ski Resort to Open in Oquirrhs

Over the past several months I have been working with a group of investors developing a new ski resort for the Oquirrh Mountains west of Salt Lake City.  My non-disclosure agreement expired today, so I thought I would take the opportunity to talk about their plans.  

The Oquirrh Mountains have extensive amounts of private land, mainly owned by Rio Tinto/Kennecott.  This investment group, however, owns approximately 8000 acres of land near the ghost-town of Ophir at elevations between 7000 and 10000 feet elevation.  You haven't seen me much in the Wasatch this winter because I've been doing a lot of ski touring on the property, avoiding crowds and getting to know the dry powder of the Oquirrhs on an intimate basis.  


I thought snowfall wouldn't be as plentiful as in Little Cottonwood, but after skiing a season there, I'm pretty certain the resort gets more.  It's simply an incredible microclimate, fueled by lake effect funneled into a terrain concavity.  If you think Alta gets a lot of snow in northwest flow, wait until you see this place in northerly flow.  I've toured in five storms with snowfall rates of more than 4" an hour.  There's little doubt that this is the future of lift-served skiing in northern Utah.  

In addition, to provide insurance against climate change, the investors have secured substantial water rights for snowmaking and are planning on developing Utah's first extensive use of snow farming in order to recycle snow from season to season.  They have hired an expert from Levi, Finland, where this is now being done to preserve snow from one season to the next.  

In fact, they are planning a trial run as they build out the resort over the next 18 months.  Next season, while they will still be under development, they will start making snow on what will be their signature run, Showcase. Comparable in length and pitch to famed upper, mid- and lower warm springs run at Sun Valley, the plan is to blow snow into deep piles next winter and then preserve those piles through the summer by covering them with white, geotexttile blankets to reflect sunlight and insulate the snow piles, allowing as much as 70% of the snow to survive through the warm season.  

They then plan to open the 2026/27 season in mid September with 3000 vertical feet of skiing on Showcase.  They expect to do this each season moving forward, pipping Snowbird for Utah's longest season.  

The main challenge at this stage is figuring out how to get people to the base of the resort.  The investors are currently working with UTA on plans for an extension of the Trax Red Line through an old mining tunnel in the eastern Oquirrhs.  Incredibly, this tunnel is built at grade, allowing light rail to deposit skiers at the base of the resort without having to use an expensive cog-railway design.  

I anticipate that this development will completely transform skiing in northern Utah.  Once skiers get an appetite for the dry powder of the Oquirrhs, Little Cottonwood will be an afterthought and the red snake will be dead.  

Sunday, March 30, 2025

What Causes "Flat" Light

The quality of light strongly affects one's confidence as a skier.  On a sunny day, most of the solar energy (about 85% of it when the sun is high in the sky) is direct, meaning that it is traveling along a straight line from the sun to the Earth's surface.  This results in large brightness contrasts between directly illuminated surfaces and those in shadows.  Even subtle textures in the surface of the snow are easily seen.  

Descending a groomed run at Ischgl, Austria on a sunny day dominated by "direct" solar energy.

All else being equal, it is much easier to ski on such days.  It is easier to see the steepness of the terrain, variations in the snow surface, and subtle changes in the snow conditions.  

However, on day with thick overcast, even high overcast, the light can be "flat." Flat light is a colloquialism for situation in which there are no shadows, as was was the case at times at Alta today (Sunday).  

Flat light at Alta on Sunday, March 30th

Flat light is produced when most of the light from the sun isn't direct but is instead diffuse.  When skies are covered by thick clouds, the sunlight is not direct because it has been scattered by the liquid water and ice particles in the clouds.  As a result, the Earth's surface receives sunlight from all parts of the sky, resulting in a lack of shadows.  This is particularly problematic for seeing contrasts in a white surface like snow.  

High clouds sometimes vary in depth, so on a day like today, there can be variations in the flatness of the light.  Below is a photo I took looking up upper Sleepy Hollow off the Supreme Chair at 11:07 AM.  At that time, the sun was only partially obscured and there was enough direct radiation for the trees to cast shadows and for one to see some texture in the snow, as evident in the foreground of the picture.  


On our next run, at 11:33 AM, the sun was nearly obscured and there was considerably less direct radiation.  Shadows were less apparent and the texture and variability of the snow were harder to see.  


Such conditions though are not anywhere near as bad as they can get.  Add fog and one can have a hard time telling up from down.  Balance becomes difficult and one can even suffer from vertigo.  

Goggles can help some.  Color tints with higher light transmission that enhance contrast are usually best on flat light days.  Skiing closer to trees and other darker objects can also help.  

One of Bruce Tremper's ten commandments of avalanche safety is "thou shalt never go first."  This commandment is especially important on powder days with flat light, as a set of tracks helps to provide some contrast in an otherwise featureless landscape.  Be generous to your friends on these days and let them have first tracks.

Friday, March 28, 2025

Dusty Spring Morning

With yesterday's strong south winds, dust moved into Salt Lake Valley and environs yesterday and lingers this morning with visibility somewhat reduced as one looks to the central Wasatch from the University of Utah.

Source: https://home.chpc.utah.edu/~u0790486/wxinfo/cgi-bin/uunet_camera_explorer.cgi

Observations from the University of Utah show strong south winds yesterday afternoon and evening with PM2.5 levels increasing after about 1600 MDT from 3 to 8 ug/m3.  After settling some through 0200 MDT, they then climbed again to 13 before settling some this morning.  


These numbers are not high and are at good to low-moderate air quality levels, but nevertheless, there's plenty of dust in the air.  

Give the overall flow yesterday, the dust in the Salt Lake Valley was likely from sources to the south and the southwest given the flow direction and not from the exposed Great Salt Lake bed.  The flow direction was such that if there was dust emitted from the Great Salt Lake bed, especially Farmington Bay, it would have been transported to the northern Wasatch Front.  I'm not sure if there could be a some dust from the lake bed mixed in now given the shift to northwest flow last night but I suspect most of this is still from origins to the south and southwest. 

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Dry Spring -> More Typical Spring

The work week has proven spectacular with mostly sunny skies and mild temperatures.  "Anything season" is here, meaning that you can do pretty much any type of recreation you desire, sometimes on the same day.  The lower-elevation trails have dried out now in many areas and are quite passable for hikers and bikers. Meanwhile, we still have a deep snowpack at upper elevations.  

Today's sunrise from the Avenues foothills.

We will, however, be transitioning from the dry spring pattern we've experienced the last few days to a pattern that will bring the occasional mild spring storm system to northern Utah.  This transition won't necessarily be abrupt as a couple of weak systems move through Friday and Saturday.  After that, there's a series of troughs that move through.  It's not easy for me to summarize my expectations for the timing and strength of these storms as there's a good deal of variability in the Utah snow ensemble.  Just look at the spread at the end of the 10-day period.  

The best way to summarize this is perhaps simply to say changeable, with the occasional mountain snowstorm interspersed with breaks.  It's a time for adaptation to what Mother Nature brings rather than having strong expectations for what's to come.  Fortunately, spring in northern Utah means a plethora of options.  

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Downtime for weather.utah.edu

Due to utility work at the University of Utah data center, weather.utah.edu is expected to be down for approximately two days.  Don't shoot the messenger. 

In the meantime, enjoy the sunny, warm March weather and stop worrying about the next storm.  The forecasts looked like spaghetti anyway, so who the hell knows what's going to happen.  

In the meantime, for your entertainment purposes, there were some beautiful lenticular clouds over the central Wasatch yesterday.  


Such clouds are produced by mountain waves, up and down motions produced by the interaction of the atmospheric flow with the topography.  The clouds form where the flow is forced up and dissipate where the flow is forced down.  The layering is produced by vertical variations in relative humidity, which causes saturation in areas of ascent to be reached at different levels of vertical displacement.  

Lenticular clouds have been confused with flying saucers.  Let's not let this start a social media conspiracy theory.