Saturday, October 2, 2010

K2 Skis Unveils Grom Inspired Website For Young Ski Addicts

K2 Skis Unveils Grom Inspired Website For Young Ski Addicts

K2 Sports launched its youth focused, destination website today – K2Groms.com.  The website is a platform for the K2 Brand to communicate its message and goals with the future’s best of skiing and snowboarding while creating a fun, educational portal for little rippers.
K2 Sports launched its youth focused, destination website today – K2Groms.com. The website is a platform for the K2 Brand to communicate its message and goals with the future’s best of skiing and snowboarding while creating a fun, educational portal for little rippers.
SEATTLE, Wash. —  K2 Sports has launched a new youth focused website called  K2Groms.com that the company says is a platform for the K2 Brand to communicate with the future’s best of skiing and snowboarding while creating a fun, educational portal for little rippers.
The site features a gaming area with three K2 specific games, a video portal that showcases video content from all K2 brands, an online store to purchase K2 Groms gear and a membership area that enables kids to select their own K2 Groms avatar, register to become an official K2 Grom, and receive a free K2 Groms sticker pack and membership card.
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Utah long range weather forecast

Southwest U.S.
Long Range Weather Forecast for October 1st - November 30th

Includes California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona

October 2010
1st-3rd. Unsettled.
4th-7th. Gusty winds, showers.
8th-11th. Fair, chilly.
12th-15th. Milder, then showers.
16th-19th. Mostly fair.
20th-23rd. Unsettled from West Coast east.
24th-27th. Clearing, turning colder.
28th-31st. Unsettled, showery.
November 2010
1st-3rd. Pleasant most sections, except turning stormy for Utah.
4th-7th. Clearing, cold.
8th-11th. Pleasant, then unsettled with gusty winds, precipitation. Some wet snow Nevada, Utah, northern Arizona.
12th-15th. Fair.
16th-19th. Gusty winds, heavy precipitation, snow for Utah.
20th-23rd. Fair, cold.
24th-27th. Light snows for Nevada, Utah, parts of Arizona, then fair, cold.
28th-30th. Fair at first, then stormy. Snowstorm Utah, showers, thunderstorms Arizona.

Utah Snow Reports end of the 2009 / 2010 season

Utah Snow Reports for the end of the 2009 / 2010 season

Resort Name Weather New Snow Surface Open Terrain Events / Links
Alta, UT
April 25, 2010 05:44
mostly cloudy
45
Apr 24: 4" Packed Powder - Variable Conditions
Base 112" - 112"
84 of 114 trails open
1600 of 2200 acres open
3 of 11 lifts running
70% open
web cam
trail map

Beaver Mountain, UT
March 29, 2010 09:15
sunny
46


Base 53" - 53"
48 of 48 trails open
664 acres open
6 of 6 lifts running
0% open
web cam
trail map

Brighton, UT
April 18, 2010 06:40
overcast
36
Apr 14: 6" Spring Conditions
Base 109" - 109"
66 of 66 trails open
1050 acres open
7 of 7 lifts running
100% open
web cam
trail map

Deer Valley, UT
April 11, 2010 05:18
partly cloudy
34
Apr 07: 8" Packed Powder - Powder
Base 112" - 112"
100 of 100 trails open
2026 acres open
21 of 21 lifts running
100% open
web cam
trail map

Park City, UT
April 18, 2010 06:05
clear
56
Apr 14: 3" Spring Conditions - Variable Conditions
Base 64" - 90"
65 of 110 trails open
3300 acres open
8 of 16 lifts running
70% open
web cam
trail map

The Canyons, UT
April 11, 2010 07:10
partly sunny
45
Apr 07: 4" Variable Conditions - Spring Conditions
Base 78" - 98"
153 of 167 trails open
3411 of 3700 acres open
17 of 18 lifts running
92% open
web cam
trail map

Powder Mountain, UT
April 11, 2010 11:16
sunny
48

Packed Powder - Spring Conditions
Base 69" - 90"
124 of 124 trails open
5500 acres open
7 of 7 lifts running
100% open
web cam
trail map

Snowbasin, UT
April 18, 2010 05:31
sunny
62
Apr 14: 1" Spring Conditions - Variable Conditions
Base 42" - 87"
75 of 113 trails open
1700 of 3200 acres open
3 of 10 lifts running
60% open
web cam
trail map

Snowbird, UT
June 11, 2010 09:52


Spring Conditions
Base 80" - 80"
70 of 85 trails open
2500 acres open
2 of 12 lifts running
82% open
web cam
trail map

Solitude, UT
April 18, 2010 06:37
partly cloudy
55
Apr 14: 6" Spring Conditions
Base 102" - 102"
40 of 65 trails open
1200 of 1200 acres open
5 of 8 lifts running
70% open
web cam
trail map

Sundance, UT
April 05, 2010 08:17
snow
38
Apr 04: 7"
Base 67" - 67"
42 of 42 trails open
450 acres open
4 of 4 lifts running
0% open
web cam
trail map

Brian Head, UT
April 17, 2010 06:29

Apr 13: 6" Packed Powder - Powder
Base 65" - 65"
65 of 65 trails open
650 acres open
8 of 8 lifts running
100% open
web cam
trail map

Wolf Creek Utah, UT
March 18, 2010 11:51
sunny
57


Base 30" - 40"
20 of 20 trails open
0 acres open
4 of 4 lifts running
0% open
web cam
trail map

Soldier Hollow XC, UT
March 28, 2010 14:13

0


Base 0" - 0"
0 of 0 trails open
0 acres open
0 of 0 lifts running
0% open
trail map


* snow report data provided by SnoCountry.com

Winter snow prediction 2010 2011

Winter Forecast 2010-2011: Heavier Snow for Chicago, Minneapolis and Detroit, Normal Snowfall for NYC, Philly and D.C.

 

The major metropolitan areas of the mid-Atlantic that were pummeled with snow last year will get a break this winter, but that doesn't mean there will be no snow to shovel. In contrast, Chicago, Milwaukee and Minneapolis could be in the heaviest snow zone this upcoming winter.

Winter's Worst Cold and Snow
Overall, AccuWeather.com Chief Long-Range Meteorologist Joe Bastardi is predicting that the worst of winter's cold and snow will be from the Pacific Northwest into the northern Plains and western Great Lakes. That will put cities like Portland and Seattle that escaped with a very nice winter last year, colder and snowier this year. Fargo and Minneapolis to Green Bay will also receive above-normal winter snowfall.
Other cities predicted to receive above-normal winter snowfall include Chicago, Omaha, Minneapolis, Detroit, Cleveland, Seattle and Portland.
Bastardi predicts severe cold will hit Alaska and western and central Canada.
"The Canadian winter will be as harsh as last year's was gentle," Bastardi said.
Wintry Battle Zone But No Snowmageddon
In general, the East Coast will be granted a reprieve from the tremendous snowfall that caused 2009-2010's winter to be dubbed "snowmageddon."
This does not mean a free pass for the Northeast. Bastardi predicts late November and December could get winter off to a fast start in the East, with a major thaw coming for much of the country in January.
Bastardi makes the early cold connection between this year's active hurricane season and his winter forecast.
He said that years that see significant landfall, such as 1995, 2008 and 2005, usually also have cold for much of the eastern and central portions of the nation in December.
He said this year from the central Rockies to the Northeast a higher variance of temperatures will be present - "greater-than-normal swings between winter's coldest and warmest days." The conflicting warm and cold air masses contributing to these temperature fluctuations have placed this area into what Bastardi calls the "Wintry Battle Zone."
Despite the wild swings in temperatures, cities like New York, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., will still have near-normal snowfall. To put this in perspective, New York City receives an average of 28.4 inches of snowfall during winter.
Warmer and Drier South
The South and southern Plains will escape the worst of the winter weather with warmer and drier conditions compared to last year. Dallas, which received near-record snowfall last year, will be lucky to get normal snowfall this year.
While these areas will be warmer and drier, this does not preclude the southern Plains and South from the threat of a couple of ice storms, as cold air tries to intrude southward.
The best weather this winter will be in Florida. Bastardi suggests that Florida will be a great winter destination, with warmer-than-normal temperatures all winter long. We will also see warmer weather all along the Gulf coast, which could help the beach resorts recover from the economic downturn associated with the oil spill.
Southern California May Suffer from Drought
Southern California and portions of the Southwest could be threatened by a severe drought and high danger for wildfires, as Bastardi predicts a much drier-than-normal winter season for the region.
According to AccuWeather.com Senior Meteorologist and West Coast Expert Ken Clark, strict water management for Southern California could result come next spring and summer.
However, Bastardi predicts that from San Francisco and areas to the north, there could be more precipitation.
"This may be a great winter for building the Pacific Northwest and Canada snowpack, which is opposite of last winter," said Bastardi.
Temperatures this Winter
Temperature-wise, Bastardi is forecasting slightly higher-than-normal temperatures (0.5 to 1 degree warmer) for Boston, Washington, D.C., and New York City.
Detroit, Chicago, Kansas City and Minneapolis will be a degree or so cooler than average, while much of the western part of the nation may see temperatures that dip a couple of degrees.
Bastardi said Salt Lake City could be as much as 1-3 degrees colder, while Denver will be about 2 degrees below normal and both San Francisco and Los Angeles will have temperatures about 1.5 degrees cooler.
Above-normal snowfall is predicted for the Great Basin region, the Northwest and northern Plains, while the South and Southwest will get less snow than average.
Story by Kirstie Hettinga, Carly Porter and Henry Margusity, AccuWeather.com Staff Writers.
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forecasters say Winter could be a whopper,

Winter could be a whopper, forecasters say

The most intense La Niña conditions since 1955 are brewing near the equator, raising the odds of a wild winter in the Pacific Northwest. Meteorologists say more rain, colder temperatures and bigger snowstorms are likely.
Seattle Times science reporter
Are we in for this again?
The mere mention of snow will have many in Seattle remembering December 2008, when a series of storms over two weeks brought repeated snowfall, paralyzing the city during the holiday-shopping season. Metro Transit service was reduced by about half, and who can forget the famous scene in which two charter buses slid down a Capitol Hill street and dangled precariously over Interstate 5?
Snow this winter could bring the first significant test of Seattle's new snow- and ice-removal plan, including the use of salt, which previously was avoided because of environmental concerns.
The most intense La Niña conditions since 1955 are brewing near the equator, raising the odds of a wild winter in the Pacific Northwest.
Meteorologists say more rain, colder temperatures and bigger snowstorms are likely.
"There's the potential for whoppers — but no guarantees," Washington state Climatologist Nick Bond said Thursday at a National Weather Service briefing.
The snow that paralyzed much of the Puget Sound region during the winter of 2008-2009 is one example of what a La Niña pattern can produce.
"La Niña winters are snowy winters," said Brad Colman, National Weather Service meteorologist-in-charge for Seattle. "Skiers and departments of transportation should be paying attention."
The flip side of the more-famous El Niño pattern, La Niñas occur when the ocean near the equator becomes colder than usual. Current temperatures are the coldest for this time of year since the Eisenhower administration.
Computer models predict the pattern will continue, and possibly strengthen, throughout the season, Colman said.
Ocean temperatures affect air circulation. Those patterns in turn tweak the strength and location of the jet stream that brings the Northwest much of its weather.
Generally, La Niña winters start out wet, with fairly average temperatures, said University of Washington meteorologist Cliff Mass. By January, temperatures plunge and snowfall increases.
"We could end up with a snow-free Thanksgiving, but no one should think that means anything," Mass said. "We tend to have the big snow buildup after the new year, both in the mountains and the lowlands."
Floods are possible, particularly early in the season.
The La Niña year of 2007 brought drenching rains to southwest Washington, closing Interstate 5 for several days. But though wetter overall, the majority of La Niña years are not marked by major floods, said National Weather Service hydrologist Brent Bower. That's because the powerful storms that trigger most Northwest floods are more common during so-called neutral years — when there's neither a La Niña nor El Niño.
The risk of flooding in the Green River basin is much lower this year, thanks to improvements at Howard Hanson dam, said Larry Schick, meteorologist for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Seepage from the dam raised fears last winter, but installation of a grout curtain within the weakened embankment has bolstered the structure. Improvements to a drainage tunnel that are expected to be finished by next fall should lower the risk even more, Schick said.
"We're not out of the woods completely ... , but the situation has improved."
Sandi Doughton: 206-464-2491 or sdoughton@seattletimes.com