T360 Late Eve. Apres Ski @ 11:23 P.M.
This is 33.333% of what you need to know:
Only the coolest, driest, lightest pure winter snow
can make these wind shaped desert sand-like waves.
This is primo performance snow, for everyone from
Beginners up. It grooms to a high density, and it
has low friction. In the Sous Bois, light and dry is
everything you want for easy navigation.
3.4.22.Nord.North.Expo.Quad.Sector.Peak.Views.Snow.Conditions.To.Duncan.Quad.Summit.c.jpg
This is 33.333 % more of what you need to know:
On the steeper pitches, if you have tuned skis, fantastic
carving grip is reliable from Summit to base. Fast, fun
and dependable surfaces are very responsive to almost
any amount of turning force you can apply.
3.4.22.Sud.South.McCulloch.Summit.Pitch.Performance.c.jpg
This is the last 33.333% of what you need to know:
For Beginners and Intermediates, one look at the smoothness
you see below tells you all you need to know about easy learning
on surfaces with excellent forgiveness that easily absorb little
errors without any harshness or unpredictable rebound.
3.4.22.Fuddle.Duddle.Bas.Lower.At.La.Griffe.Fabulous.Learning.Zone.d.jpg
The summary is that all skill levels, all open terrain
is exceptionally fine genuine, authentic, all winter,
light dry, fast cool snow and we expect that to
extend to tomorrow.
---------------- 6:39 A.M Orig. Post ------------------
100/102(*) Open Trails On All 4 Sectors At #Tremblant .
This Is The Reason For The Excellence At Tremblant.
T360 Proof Of Snow.
This is real, this is Tremblant today.
3.4.22.T360.Proof.Of.Snow.Lowell.Thomas.Sous.Bois.Sector.PB31.c.jpg
Above:
Quality of conditions at a Ski Resort can be directly proportional
to “Raw Materials”, so when there’s this much to work with,
processing and refining all become so much easier and more
effective. You get all of that today.
We can take you to this exact spot, and if you step off your
skis you will sink into snow up to your waist but your feet
will not be touching the ground because you will be “Floating”
in the snow that will support you with its density. It is possible
that especially considering the potential dampness of the Sunday
weather, this could be the seasonal peak of the “Loft” in the
natural snowpack that has had very little thermal influence
for almost 3 complete months.
We could have pushed both the ski tip and the pole well below
the surface, but we left them visible for the sake of the illustration
that there’s a lot of snow that is both available in open Sous Bois,
and fully integrated into the Groomed trail network base.
Below:
The best way to illustrate the part about integrated into the groomed
trail network base is with the following comparison.
3.2.22.Summit.Level.Upper.Ptit.Bonheur.Trail.Grooming.Cross.Section.Below.La.Crete.c.jpg
This pic above is where the Summit level entrance to P’tit Bonheur
runs parallel, but just below the pathway of La Crete near the top
of Beauvallon and the entrance to Nansen. Trail # 2, La Crete, is
running down to Nansen right behind the fence you see above.
We monitor this zone because it clearly demonstrates wind driven
backfill drifting over the Summit from the prevailing winter Sou-Westerly
wind direction that is directly behind the peak in this POV. This is the
exact reason the “Proof Of Snow” has so much undisturbed depth, it is
also within the same “Lee Side” zone that gets the very same drifting.
In a rough format, what you see here is a vertical cross-section of the
“Proof Of Snow”, but it has been compressed down to the level of the ski
tails in the groomed trails. That groomed compaction of the entire depth
of cross-section into the trails is why we have such an exceptional base.
While the pic above gives you a background locational context, the
pic below provides an insight into the strata generated by each and
every recent snowfall and freezing rain event. You can clearly see
the individual snow storm layers, as well as the 2 freezing rain sheets.
Basically, we can look at snowfall strata the same way Geologists look
at rock strata, the difference is that we’re examining 4 months instead
of 4 billion Precambrian Geological years here at Tremblant.
3.2.22.Summit.Level.Upper.Ptit.Bonheur.Trail.Grooming.Cross.Section.Below.La.Crete.Strata.Detail.b.jpg
It should be noted that the strata shown here are
not the actual depths of free-fallen snow that occurred
for each event because the snow gets compressed by
its own weight, i.e., the lower layers are compacted by
the total weight of the top layers sitting on them.
Secondarily the weight of each strata is dependant on the
humidity at the time it fell. Warmer, damper snow weighs a
lot more per cubic unit than cold, dry powder snow so that
also needs to be factored in examinations as wet snow can
compress under its own weight to a higher degree as it
falls. Additionally there’s the added depth of the groomed
base that we can’t see the exact thickness of below these shots.
Weather Notes:
This is an extremely important weather forecast for at least
2 specific reasons.
The first is that the immediate projections for the Sunday
hot and rainy potential have reverted back to a less rainy
and more snowy possible precipitation profile. This could be
hugely significant at cooler Mountain elevations where even
tiny degrees of difference can make totally different results
than those that happen at ground levels.
Secondly, March is the first month of the year that statistically
sees the day-time high temps with a 30 year average above
Zero C/32 F, so the big, big benefit potential seen below is the
forecast showing the daily high temps floating just below normal.
Will it actually happen that way??? No one knows for sure, but
that’s where “Probability” becomes meaningful in anticipation.
The overall thermal influences currently look small, but they are
still there. What this means is if you are planning Tremblant visits
throughout the balance of March...
Get your Ski/Board edges tuned up now because future
warm afternoons followed by cold overnights means
you could experience common Spring Skiing icy bit
mornings and you want to come to the Mountain
ready for that.
Environment Canada Special Weather Statement:
Sunday Travel Conditions Advisory.
The Big Picture March Forecast:
Conditions Notes:
For today...
Cool But Clinically “Fantastic"!!!
The main point of all of todays analysis is that there’s a very
abundant amount of genuine undisturbed winter snow at
Tremblant that has completely escaped any rainy bits for months,
it's beauty is surreal, and it’s performance is excellent.
Take all that undisturbed “Raw Material”, pack it groom it, pack it,
groom it, every single day for weeks and months on end and you can...
"Look Forward" To This!
3.4.22.Sud.South.Johannsen.Groomed.Performance.Observations.Sample.PB224.d.jpg
Ski Conditions Summary:
The qualities of skiing excellence extend universally to
all categories of trail classifications and skill levels.
100/102(*) Open Trails on the Archival Copy of Official Open Trails,
Grooming, Snowmaking, Lift Status and Mountain Conditions
for March 4, 2022, Courtesy of Tremblant.ca
Thanks for your visit!
Please Note:
A Covid-19 Vaccination Passport As Well As An Advanced On-Line Lift
Reservation, Or Seasons Pass, are Required To Access The Mountain.
11.5.21.Ski.Season.2021.22.Covid.19.Vaccination.Passport.Requirements.a.jpg
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