Here are snow totals from 20 New England ski areas
The latest storm added up to a foot of new snow in some places.
New Englanders who enjoy snow sports were happy to see the latest winter storm roll in, as the region’s ski areas totaled some fresh powder.
The Boston area received just 2.4 inches of snow before the precipitation changed to freezing rain. In the mountains to the north, however, the storm remained snow throughout. This has been a pattern in the 2018-2019 winter so far: Snowfall totals at ski areas like Stowe (218 inches) and Jay Peak (288 inches) have outpaced Boston’s 4.7 inches to an even greater extent than normal.
Around noon Wednesday, Sugarloaf Mountain in Maine was still seeing snowfall on top of 14 inches of accumulation:
It’s really piling up out there, just ask these moose – 14″ and counting #theloaf pic.twitter.com/OPh4zt00ol
— Sugarloaf Mountain (@SugarloafMaine) February 13, 2019
Loon Mountain in New Hampshire registered 9 inches at the summit prior to opening:
Powder day! Today’s stats:
❄️9″ at summit, 6″ at base
✔️53 trails
🚡7 lifts. Gondi is currently on wind hold. Take 7 Brothers Triple to East Basin Double for summit access.https://t.co/ToXu2J4HVu— Loon Mountain Resort (@loonmtn) February 13, 2019
And Vermont’s Mad River Glen reported up to 8 inches of snow at 6 a.m. as the storm continued to move through the area:
7-8″ of fine snow has piled up so far and it continues to fall at an impressive rate. Mountain operations is reporting light winds on the summit. Call out sick, it’s a powder day!
— Mad River Glen (@MadRiverGlen) February 13, 2019
Here are a few other ski area snowfall totals from around New England:
Bolton Valley, Vermont: 12 inches
Sugarbush, Vermont: 12 inches
Sunday River, Maine: 12 inches
Wildcat, New Hampshire: 11 inches
Jay Peak, Vermont: 8-10 inches
Attitash, New Hampshire: 8 inches
Mount Snow, Vermont: 8 inches
Waterville Valley, New Hampshire: 8 inches
Cannon Mountain, New Hampshire: 6-8 inches
Okemo, Vermont: 6-8 inches
Mount Sunapee, New Hampshire: 6-8 inches
Stowe, Vermont: 7 inches
Killington, Vermont: 7 inches
Stratton, Vermont: 6 inches
Bretton Woods, New Hampshire: 5 inches
Wachusett Mountain, Massachusetts: 5 inches