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Colorado ski options for Thanksgiving weekend very limited

Snowpack is 54% of normal, and resorts have only limited terrain to offer

Beaver Creek resort opened for the season on Wednesday with  just two of its 224 trails in operation and an 18-inch base. Nearly all of Colorado's currently operating ski areas have 6% or less of their skiable terrain open to the public. PROVIDED BY BEAVER CREEK RESORT
Beaver Creek resort opened for the season on Wednesday with just two of its 224 trails in operation and an 18-inch base. Nearly all of Colorado’s currently operating ski areas have 6% or less of their skiable terrain open to the public. PROVIDED BY BEAVER CREEK RESORT
DENVER, CO - JANUARY 13 : Denver Post's John Meyer on Monday, January 13, 2014.  (Photo By Cyrus McCrimmon/The Denver Post)
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When it comes to ski conditions across most of Colorado for Thanksgiving, this may be a good weekend to watch football, don hiking boots to cut down a Christmas tree, or figure out creative uses for turkey leftovers.

Colorado’s snowpack statewide was at 53% of average as of Friday. Only Beaver Creek, Crested Butte, Powderhorn and the Aspen area mountains are at or near average snowpack for this time of year. Nearly every area that is open for skiing is offering 6% of its skiable terrain or less. The only exception is Eldora, which is reporting 15% of its terrain in operation.

The storm this weekend may help, according to the OpenSnow forecasting and reporting service, and it could deliver a foot or two to Purgatory and Wolf Creek, but elsewhere it may be only good for three to eight inches. Snow is expected to continue through Saturday afternoon, according to OpenSnow’s Joel Gratz.

“I think most locations should keep expectations on the low side with 3-6 inches as a reasonable average, though areas east of the divide, some spots in the west-central mountains, and many areas of the southern mountains will see the highest snow totals with snowflakes flying through sometime on Saturday,” Gratz wrote in Wednesday’s forecast. “This storm will not raise the statewide snowpack up to average, but it will deepen the base across the state, and parts of the southern mountains could rocket from nearly dry to a decent snowpack by the end of the storm.”

Gratz doesn’t anticipate another storm until next weekend at the earliest, but temperatures will be cool next week, which would help maintain what negligible snow there is on the ground and enable ongoing snowmaking operations.

Here’s a list of select ski areas with the percentage of open terrain they reported on Wednesday, according to figures provided by Colorado Ski Country USA and Vail Resorts:

Arapahoe Basin, 2%; Copper Mountain, 3%; Eldora, 15%; Loveland, 4%; Aspen Mountain, 5%; Snowmass, 1%; Purgatory, 2%; Steamboat, 6%; Winter Park, 4%; Vail, 7%; Keystone, 9%; Breckenridge, 6%; Beaver Creek, 1%. Crested Butte is not reporting the percentage of terrain it has open, but it is operating only six of 165 trails.

“The longer-range forecasts are slowly trending toward a stormier outlook for the western U.S.,” Gratz wrote, “so I am cautiously optimistic that we’ll see a storm (or two or three) during the first half of December, and maybe with some luck, one or two of these storms will produce significant snow and help increase available terrain across the state.”

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