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5#

楼主 |
发表于 2012-1-12 14:10:59
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只看该作者
#1: South Lake Tahoe, CA (Sierra)
Snow Stats (through Jan. 10, 2012)
Snowfall
| Trace | | Average-to-date | 57.5" | | Snow deficit | -57.5" | % of typical snow season remaining
| 60% |
 | Paltry Sierra snowpack (left) and photo from Lake Tahoe, looking toward relatively snowless peaks.
Credits: NOAA/NOHRSC, iWitnessWeather contributor Tahoe Bobsledbob
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One of TWC's Twitter followers (follow us ) nailed our question of the day...
The Weather Channel @weatherchannel
11 Jan 12
Do you live in the most #snow starved location in the U.S.? Tweet us your nomination, with pictures, if you'd like. We may use your tweet.
Bob Harmon @nvgrowler
@weatherchannel Have you guys checked Lake Tahoe/Sierra? Talk about snow-starved. Looks like we'll be taking short showers this summer!
11 Jan 12
Put simply, the lack of snowfall in the Sierra this winter has been stunning. As of this writing, snowpack in the Sierra was a mere 8-13% of average for mid-January.
According to Rob Katz, chief executive of Vail Resorts, Inc., operator of the Tahoe resorts of Heavenly and North Star, for the first time since the last 1800s it did not snow at all in the Tahoe region in December!
On January 5, Homewood Mountain Resort announced it would be closed Mondays through Thursdays "until snow conditions permit full operations or further notice."
Check ski conditions: California | Nevada
With that said, the season is far from a loss. Climatologically speaking, the snowiest months, March (36.2") and February (27.1") lie ahead.
The Sierra are notorious for being buried under feet of snow from one single storm, or have a Pacific plume of moisture wring out heavy snow for days.
Case in point, last March one of those "Pacific plumes" pummeled the Sierra. (see photos) An incredible 14.5 feet of snow (174") was measured at Kirkwood over 7 days. This epic event sent Squaw Valley to a record snow season (510" at base, 810" at High Camp).
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