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Vail: ‘Every day was a powder day’

Edward Stoner
Vail, CO Colorado
Kristin Anderson/Vail DailyPortland resident Nicholas Shelton grabs his board after flying off a jump that he built Tuesday in Vail.
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VAIL, Colorado ” Without hesitation, Tom Calvin declared this year’s snow the best he’s seen in five seasons.

“It’s just endless powder,” said Calvin, who has skied about 60 days this year so far. “I love it.”

Not only has the amount of snow been stellar, it’s been consistent, too, coming in storm after storm, said Calvin, who works at Carl’s World Class Ski Tuning in Avon.



“The first week in January, I skied eight days straight, and every day was a powder day,” Calvin said. “I lost 11 pounds, and I’m not a big guy.”

After a warm and dry start to the season, Vail and Beaver Creek have racked up two months of prolific snowfall.

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At Vail Mountain, it snowed most days ” 24 of 31 ” in January. December and January ” with 98 inches each ” tied for the snowiest month at Vail in seven years.

Beaver Creek had its snowiest December and January since 1996.

The season started off warm and dry, with Vail and Beaver Creek both delaying their openings. Long-range forecasters, such as Klaus Wolter, a Boulder-based climatologist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, predicted lower-than-average snow, but they’ve been proven wrong ” so far.

“This was a tough forecast for me,” Wolter said. “I’m glad it turned out the way it did. It’s always better to predict dry and be wet than the other way around.”

But Wolter said he still predicts a dry February and March.

Vail has seen a steady stream of storms, but a weather pattern usually does not last the whole winter, said Nolan Doesken, Colorado’s state climatologist

“The next question is ‘What about the spring?'” he said.

Businesses are enjoying the big crowds that snow brings. Tom Ludwig, an owner of Montauk Seafood Grill, said the Lionshead restaurant is having a good year.

“Our numbers are definitely up, and I’d like to believe it’s the snow,” he said.

Vail’s snowplow drivers have been working overtime to clear the streets, and additional contract workers were brought recently to help, too, said spokeswoman Kris Friel. The town’s 60,000-cubic-yard snow dump is about two-thirds full, she said.

Lou Meskimen, whose Thank You Masked Man Services plows driveways, said he’s plowed more this year than he has in the last eight years. And the prolific snowfall has made finding space for the white stuff more difficult, he said.

“We’ve just had to stack it a little neater and push it back farther into the yards,” he said.

Meskimen said he’s been getting up at 4 in the morning and working till 8 at night. That’s meant no time for skiing ” especially unfortunate for this year.

“I’m still trying to get up there,” he said. “What’s getting me flustered is here it is great snow year and I haven’t been able to get up.”

Staff Writer Edward Stoner can be reached at 748-2929 or estoner@vaildaily.com.


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