#Colorado ski resorts open amid one of the driest starts in years — The #Durango Herald

Westwide snowpack basin-filled map November 16, 2025 via the NRCS.

Click the link to read the article on The Durango Herald website (Molly Cruse). Here’s an excerpt:

As Colorado’s ski resorts gear up for opening season, forecasters say the state’s snowpack is lagging behind seasonal averages, even as six resorts have already welcomed their first skiers and snowboarders. Three of those six resorts – Breckenridge, Copper Mountain and Loveland Ski Area – all opened their chairlifts last weekend despite one of the driest starts to the snowy season in almost a decade. Statewide, this year’s mountain snowpack ranks as the second lowest since the 1980s; the lowest was 2016. But ski resorts are staying hopeful…And to [Dustin] Schaeffer’s point, forecasters say there’s still plenty of time for conditions to turn around. November marks only the beginning of Colorado’s snowpack season, which typically builds from October through late April.

“Anytime you get off to a slow start to the winter, it’s always a little bit concerning to see,” said Zach Hiris, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. “But importantly, we’re very early into the snowpack season across the mountains.”

Snowpack is more than just good news for skiers. It also acts as Colorado’s largest natural reservoir, feeding rivers that supply water to millions of people across the West. When snowfall lags early in the season, it can raise concerns about spring runoff, drought conditions and water levels in major basins like the Colorado River.

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