WARREN, Vt. – Ever hit the slopes only to find 4 inches of fresh snow instead of the 8 inches you were promised? That may be because ski areas have exaggerated their snowfalls on weekends to entice skiers, according to a study by two Dartmouth College professors.
That depth deception may fall by the wayside, however, as skiers and snowboarders can now use an iPhone application to report real-time snow levels and keep resorts honest, the study said.
Economists Jonathan Zinman and Eric Zitzewitz, skiers who took offense to a fluffed-up claim, studied snow reports from 2004 to 2008 and compared them to area government weather stations. They found that ski resorts across the U.S. and Canada reported more fresh snow — 23 percent more, on average — on skier-coveted weekends than during the week. Resorts with more business to gain were the ones most likely to boast of deeper snowfalls, their study said.
It may not seem like much: a resort's bragging of an 8-inch snowfall when the slopes really got only 4 or 6 inches. But to a skier or snowboarder, those extra inches make slopes more desirable.
The so-called "weekend effects" in snow reporting were larger for resorts with more expert terrain and within closer driving distance to populated areas, Zinman and Zitzewitz said.
"This is consistent with expert skiers valuing fresh snow more highly and with resorts near cities having more potential to attract weekend skiers," the report said.
The resorts question the findings. For one thing, they say, the government's weather stations aren't necessarily in the same snowy spots as the slopes. And they say overreporting snow does them no good if disgruntled skiers and riders find less snow than expected.
"It doesn't serve you to overreport snow," said JJ Toland, spokesman for Sugarbush Resort. "If you do overreport and make a false promise, people show up and they just become angry that you lied to them and they won't come back."
And in the age of camera phones, Twitter, blogs and other social media, they couldn't lie if they wanted to, the resorts say.
"The resorts, now, frankly they can't get away with it," said Parker Riehle, of the Vermont Ski Areas Association. "They won't get away with it because the skiers and riders won't put up with it."
The iPhone and the application SkiReport.com are apparently helping keep resorts honest, allowing skiers to log reports in real time, from chairlifts or base lodges.
"Exaggerations fall sharply, especially at resorts where iPhones can get reception," the report said.
Anna Rosenthal, 57, of Portland, Conn., said she wasn't surprised to learn ski areas may have snowed their customers.
"I believe that they want to get people out there to ski," she said, before boarding a lift at Sugarbush resort in Vermont. "As long as the conditions are good when I get there, I'm fine."
And David Ilsley, 51, of Lexington, Mass., who has skied all over the U.S., said he expects some hype.
"I think you expect it, so you kind of plan for it," he said, standing outside a Sugarbush lodge. "So, if they're saying one thing, you know it's probably not quite that good."
He's found resorts in the East tend to exaggerate more than those in the West, which get more snow, but neither do so enough to harm the quality of the skiing, he said.
Some say it's all a bit of a gamble.
"We expect snow, and you don't always get what they tell you're going to get," said another Sugarbush skier, Lou Bizian, 45, of Rutherford, N.J. "But, fortunately, this week, we got what we thought we were going to get."
Other skiers and riders say the resorts' recent snow reports are right on.
"Usually they're pretty accurate," said snowboarder Isabel Beavers, 20, of Northboro, Mass., who reads snow reports daily. "I mean Sugarbush at least is honest because they've been saying they haven't had any snow for the past few days, and it's true."
The report's authors decided to investigate after hitting the slopes at an unnamed Vermont resort that had reported 6 inches of new snow.
"We got there, and there was like 2," Zitzewitz said.
He and Zinman compared new natural snowfall reported by more than 400 ski areas to snow amounts reported by area government weather stations. Their work, presented at a National Bureau of Economic Research conference in July, has not been published.
In calculating average daily snowfall, the researchers considered a wide range of snowfalls over time — as deep, for instance, as the 29 inches recorded on Feb. 14-15, 2007, in Waitsfield, about 5 miles from Warren, as well as mere dustings of snow. The report did not break out individual daily reports or name resorts.
Ski areas complain there can be big variations between the amount of snow at the mountain and the amount at a weather station in a different spot.
But that's not the point, Zitzewitz said. The average match weather station was 26 miles away and 160 feet below the summit in the East; in the West it was 52 miles away and 280 feet below, he said.
"In general, if all we were finding was the resorts were reporting more snow than the weather stations, we'd probably say, well, that's because they put ski resorts in good places for snowfall. But that's not what we're finding," he said. "What we're finding is that the difference changes with the day of the week, and so that's got to be due to something man-made."
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On the Net:
Snowed: Deceptive Advertising by Ski Resorts: http://www.dartmouth.edu/~ericz/snowed.pdf
Friday, February 19, 2010
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Torah Bright suffers a cuncusssion while training for the X Games
Concussion puts a cloud over Torah Bright's sunny Vancouver forecast
By: Chris Mauro
Snowboarder Torah Bright, Australia's 23-year-old halfpipe rider known for her sweetheart personality and supermodel good looks, is poised to become an Olympic darling next month in Vancouver. Bright is widely considered the frontrunner in the superpipe, and undoubtedly the biggest threat to her powerful U.S. counterparts. She stands a good chance of stealing the gold medal – along with plenty of hearts – over the next few weeks, which means the Olympics will be her big breakout moment.

But Thursday morning, Bright became the latest halfpipe star sidelined by injury when she suffered a concussion while training for the Winter X Games in Aspen, Colo. It's the latest in a series of hard knocks she's taken in the last few weeks. She has withdrawn from X Games competition, and Bright's sunny Vancouver forecast is now threatened by clouds of doubt.
Bright is hardly alone. The tight-knit snowboard community has been rocked by injuries during the march to next month's Games. U.S. halfpipe stars Kevin Pearce and Danny Davis both had their Olympic dreams shattered in the past few weeks. Pearce remains hospitalized after suffering a traumatic brain injury on Dec. 31, while Davis is recovering from a fractured spine and broken pelvis after being involved in an ATV accident Jan. 19.
Up until Thursday morning's qualifying round in Aspen, Bright was the only woman practicing the famed "double cork." The new move, a dizzying blend of off-axis flips and spins, is the buzz of the snowboarding world leading into the Olympics. Several men heading to Vancouver haven't perfected it yet. It's high-flying, risky, and it happens to be the same move that took out Pearce.
While Bright's concussion Thursday was not the result of a failed double cork, she has taken a few licks trying them. And whether or not she'll have the nerve to keep it into her Olympic routine is, at least for now, in doubt. That said, I still wouldn't bet against her.
But Thursday morning, Bright became the latest halfpipe star sidelined by injury when she suffered a concussion while training for the Winter X Games in Aspen, Colo. It's the latest in a series of hard knocks she's taken in the last few weeks. She has withdrawn from X Games competition, and Bright's sunny Vancouver forecast is now threatened by clouds of doubt.
Bright is hardly alone. The tight-knit snowboard community has been rocked by injuries during the march to next month's Games. U.S. halfpipe stars Kevin Pearce and Danny Davis both had their Olympic dreams shattered in the past few weeks. Pearce remains hospitalized after suffering a traumatic brain injury on Dec. 31, while Davis is recovering from a fractured spine and broken pelvis after being involved in an ATV accident Jan. 19.
Up until Thursday morning's qualifying round in Aspen, Bright was the only woman practicing the famed "double cork." The new move, a dizzying blend of off-axis flips and spins, is the buzz of the snowboarding world leading into the Olympics. Several men heading to Vancouver haven't perfected it yet. It's high-flying, risky, and it happens to be the same move that took out Pearce.
While Bright's concussion Thursday was not the result of a failed double cork, she has taken a few licks trying them. And whether or not she'll have the nerve to keep it into her Olympic routine is, at least for now, in doubt. That said, I still wouldn't bet against her.
Friday, January 29, 2010
Oh, snow! Ski areas exaggerate weekend snowfalls?
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Cottonwood Heights man swept away, killed in avalanche
Cottonwood Heights man swept away, killed in avalanche
January 27th, 2010 @ 9:19pm
BIG COTTONWOOD CANYON -- Avalanche forecasters say the slide danger is unusually high right now, and Wednesday marked the second deadly avalanche in less than a week. Rescuers had to cut down some trees to retrieve the body of the backcountry skier, who was swept more than 800 feet down a slope.
"I don't know if any area is really safe at this time. Obviously, when you hit the right slope in these conditions, any area where an avalanche could occur, it may occur," said Unified police Lt. Don Hutson. It started as a day enjoying the fresh powder in the backcountry area called The Meadows, which is just outside of Solitude Resort. Three friends, including 51-year-old Ricardo Presnell, were heading down the slope when police say they triggered a large avalanche, 800 feet long and 400 feet across.
‘They felt, essentially, the entire slope slough off; and then it was just a powder storm, and they ended up near the bottom of the slide," Hutson said.
When the snow settled, Presnell was completely buried. His two friends called emergency crews for help, pulled out a beacon and started searching. They found Presnell buried beneath 4 feet of snow, in a wooded area, not breathing and with no pulse.
"Not only is it just being buried in the snow, but this particular slide went through a grove of trees, and so there's significant injury as well as being trapped by snow," Hutson said.
Presnell was pronounced dead at the scene. He was buried for more than 15 minutes , but probably died of blunt-force trauma, Hutson said.
Presnell's death was the second in an avalanche in less than a week in Utah canyons. Over the weekend, a 42-year-old skier was killed when he got caught in an avalanche in the backcountry near Snowbasin Resort, known as Hell's Canyon.
Avalanche forecasters warn the conditions are particularly dangerous right now.
"In the past week we've had a lot of close calls. There have been dozens of unintentionally-triggered avalanches, and now two fatalities," Gordon says. "So, people who even have a lot of backcountry experience -- years of experience in the mountains -- are getting tricked by these conditions."
It is extremely high danger, and when that is the circumstance, regardless of your preparation and classes that you may have taken or equipment you may have with you, sometimes there's just nothing you can do when you're caught in an avalanche," Hutson said.
Presnell was a geologist for Kennecott for more than 20 years; he most recently worked as a consultant. Kennecott sends their condolences to his family.
Police say Presnell was married and lived in Cottonwood Heights.
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Story compiled with contributions from Jennifer Stagg, Marc Giauque and AP writer Paul Foy.
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Tuesday, January 26, 2010
snowboarder Kevin Pearce to be moved from critical care
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- Injured snowboarder Kevin Pearce was set to be transferred out of critical care at University of Utah hospital, a positive sign in his recovery from a severe head injury.
An update provided by his family Monday said Pearce, injured when he hit his head on the halfpipe during practice on Dec. 31 in Park City, would move from critical care to the Neuro Acute Care unit. The update said Pearce is making steady progress and that, quote, "his sense of humor and optimism are apparent as he begins his rehabilitation."
Considered a top contender for the Olympics, Pearce was practicing a double-cork move -- one of the toughest tricks in the halfpipe -- when he hurt himself.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Utah roads reopen after avalanches
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Utah roads reopen after avalanches
January 24th, 2010 @ 4:45pm
By Nicole Gonzales
SALT LAKE CITY -- The Utah Avalanche Center is still warning people of high danger in Utah's mountains. Several canyons were closed temporarily Sunday for cleanup and control.
An avalanche forced the closure of Logan Canyon for a little over an hour. Little Cottonwood Canyon was also closed for a short time due to snow on the road. Ryan Hunt saw the avalanche happen around 11 a.m. in Logan Canyon. "All the sudden we come around the corner and there was a truck that just stopped for the avalanche and there was some more snow sliding down behind him," he said.
Drivers didn't wait for help. They started digging out the snow themselves, anxious to make it up the canyon.
"They had sleds and snowboards and little shovels and everything they could think of. I even saw a pan out there," Hunt said.
The Utah Highway Patrol said no one was injured in that avalanche, which spread snow 20 feet wide and four feet deep across U.S. Route 89.
The Utah Department of Transportation closed the highway while crews cleaned up the mess. The road was back open by 12:30 p.m.
UDOT was also busy down in the Salt Lake Valley. Little Cottonwood Canyon was closed on and off for most of the morning.
It finally opened for good after three additional hours of avalanche control.
"We try to do it as quickly as possible. We want people to enjoy the ski resorts, after all we do have the greatest snow on earth, but we want to make sure we do it in a safe manner," said UDOT Spokesman Adan Carrillo.
UDOT does not make the decision to shut down a canyon alone. People from the town of Alta, along with the ski resorts, the U.S. Forest Service and the Unified Police Department have a say as well.
"Every time they see that there's a need to close a canyon it's a pretty hard decision. They have to coordinate with a lot of officials," Carrillo said.
The Utah Avalanche Center has all Utah mountains on high alert Sunday, especially after a man was buried by one on Friday. Luckily, he got out alive, but officials say it's a reminder to always be cautious.
"I can barely run to my car, much less out run an avalanche. So we'll stay down here where it's safe," said snowshoer Robin Knebel.
The Unified Police Department said there were no planned restrictions on either canyon Sunday night.
E-mail: ngonzales@ksl.com
Avalanche kills 1 near Snowbasin
WEBER COUNTY -- An avalanche killed one person near Snowbasin ski resort Sunday. The Weber County Sheriff's Office identified the victim as 42-year-old Todd Bell of South Weber.
Capt. Clint Anderson with the sheriff's office said Bell had been skiing with a friend around 1 p.m. The friend decided to go down a run in No Name Canyon and thought Bell would follow. Instead, Bell went down Hell's Canyon. Several snowboarders were behind Bell and saw the avalanche happen. When they got to the bottom of the avalanche run, they noticed a hand and a coat sleeve sticking out of the snow. They pulled Bell out, began CPR and called 911 around 1:20. Bell was unconscious and not breathing.
When rescue crews arrived, they took over resuscitation efforts. They worked on Bell for more than an hour, but were unsuccessful.
Deputies said Bell was found close to the surface of the snow, so an autopsy will be performed to see if he died from trauma caused by debris.
At the same time, five snowboarders were going down nearby Cold Water Canyon and triggered several small avalanches. When they realized they wouldn't be able to get out of the canyon, they called for help.
None of the snowboarders suffered any injuries.
The Utah Avalanche Center on Sunday said that heavy snowfall and high winds are making for dangerous avalanche conditions in mountain backcountry areas throughout the state. The center urged people to stay out of those areas.
"It's never been more dangerous in the area," Anderson said.
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