Monday, March 30, 2009

Last time at Vail for the season?




Ray & I made it to Keystone Friday and had some of the best conditions of the season. Decided to hike up to Erickson Bowl. It was 1.5 miles uphill. I figured out I'm not likely to be a candidate for backcountry skiing. We had the best lines with untracked POW in months. Ray is jumping off a cornice at Erickson Bowl in Keystone (I followed) and I am jumping off a cornice at Sun Down Bowl in Vail. The other shot is a line we took down Erickson. Note the lack of tracks ;) only critters before us.

Hit Vail Sat & Sun as well. Sat was a blue sky day. Had some great runs! Happy Hour at Mezzaluna then hit the hot tub.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Blizzard Conditions Expected; Travel Discouraged Noon-9PM

Bring it on!
8-15 Inches In Denver, Up To 2 Feet In Foothills

UPDATED: 11:00 am MDT March 26, 2009
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DENVER -- Call it the snow-pocalypse, the March Blizzard 2009 or the Spring Storm. Whatever you call it, it's going to be a storm to remember.

The snow has already started to come down but the worst of it is expected to hit between noon and 9 p.m., when flakes will fall at a rate of an inch per hour.

Although the metro area is expecting a foot of snow -- it's not the amount of snow that's worrisome. It's the wind.

The snow and gusty winds will create whiteout conditions that will make driving anywhere extremely treacherous or even impossible. Travel on the roads are HIGHLY DISCOURAGED between noon and 9 p.m. today. Expect hazardous driving conditions all over the state but particularly on the Eastern Plains and along Interstate 25.

A BLIZZARD WARNING is in effect for the Denver Metro and along the Front Range. The warning begins Thursday at 6 a.m. and extends to Friday at 6 a.m.

Very windy conditions will create blowing and drifting snows all over the state, with strong wind gusts for as high as 50 mph expected. In most areas, there will be sustained winds of 20 mph to 30 mph. Whiteout conditions will be common is most areas as the snow starts to fall.

Heavier amounts of snow are expected on the south and west sides of Denver, including in Ken Caryl, Highlands Ranch, Parker and Golden -- where up to 20 inches will be possible.

Storm totals in the foothills will range from 1-2 feet by Friday morning. The Palmer Divide is also looking at about 1-2 feet of snow through Friday morning. Up in the high country, snow started falling heavily on Thursday and continue through Friday with snow totals expected to range from 1-2 feet, mainly areas east of the Continental Divide.

Current Snow Totals

As of 10:30 a.m.

*
* 7 inches -- Boulder
* 6 inches -- Broomfield, Lyons, Nederland
* 6 inches -- Evergreen, Lafayette
* 5.5 inches -- Longmont
* 5 inches -- Westminster
* 4 inches -- Fort Collins
3 inches -- 7NEWS Studios

We have missed most of the storms this season, but this storm will not miss the Denver area. The low pressure center of the storm will cross central and southeastern Colorado today and tonight, and put Denver and the northeastern plains in the prime location for heavy snow.

Snow began falling in the mountains Wednesday night and spread across the foothills and Front Range urban corridor early this morning. The heavier snows started falling in Denver around the morning rush hour and will now continue through the day.

So far this winter, Denver has only recorded 18.8 inches of snowfall. The record for the least snowy winter is 20.8 inches set back in 1888-89.

This storm has a favorable track to bring heavy snowfall to the Front Range. The storm track for this system will move it through southern Colorado - a better position to bring snow to the metro area. We should have a good northeasterly wind -- an upslope -- that will increase the moisture along the Front Range.

The snow in the high country is welcome news as the recent warm weather has thinned the snowpack. The storm should push the average snowpack back above normal across the mountains.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

All quiet on the Western Front

It's been so warm and dry that I haven't even thought of skiing for nearly a month. With the weather forecast calling for snow we might hit Vail this weekend. Other than that I've been working sporadically on odd jobs trying to make a few bucks. No good leads and nothing much on the recruiting front as of today. Anybody need a room painted, their dog walked, car detailed????

Space Station module named Colbert

WASHINGTON (AP) — NASA’s online contest to name a new room at the International Space Station went awry. Comedian Stephen Colbert won.
The name “Colbert” beat out NASA’s four suggested options in the space agency’s effort to have the public help name the addition. The new room will be launched later this year.
NASA allowed write-ins, and Colbert urged viewers of his Comedy Central show, The Colbert Report, to write in his name. And they complied, with 230,539 votes. That clobbered Serenity, one of the NASA choices, by more than 40,000 votes. Nearly 1.2 million votes were cast by the time the contest ended Friday.
NASA reserves the right to choose an appropriate name. Agency spokesman John Yembrick said NASA will decide in April but will give top vote-getters “the most consideration.”
In addition to Serenity, NASA’s suggested choices were Legacy, Earthrise and Venture.