Mammoth Mountain Weather Forecast & Discussion

December 29th, 2023 @ 6:30 AM – Today, expect more dry and warm mid-day temperatures with increasing  SW winds along with high clouds at times. If you’re going to be out on the hill, temperatures at the first chair will be in the low to mid-30s. Mid-day temperatures will be in the low to mid-40s.

It will be breezy today, with a southwest wind increasing to 15 to 20 mph later this morning with gusts to 35 mph around Main Lodge with gusts up in the 50-60 MPH range.

On Saturday, a weakening cold front will be moving into the area. The cold front will bring with it cooler temperatures along with light snow showers at times into Saturday evening. Snowfall amounts look to be in the 1-3 inch range around the Main Lodge, with 2-5 inches possible up top.

The next in a series of lows moving into the Southern California area will bring a 30% chance of snow showers to Mammoth Mountain later in the day on Sunday and into Monday. Snowfall amounts look to be a dusting to a couple of inches at most from the second low.

I see a pattern change around the 8th with a hybrid inside slider coming right down the east side of the Sierra. It’s not a big snow producer, but more than a dusting is possible in that scenario.

NWS Forecast Image for Main Lodge at the Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
NWS Forecast Image for Main Lodge at the Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
Morning Satellite Image for the West Coast @ Mammoth Mountain Weather
Morning Satellite Image for the West Coast @ Mammoth Mountain Weather
NBM Snowfall Forecast Image @ Mammoth Mountain Weather
NBM Snowfall Forecast Image @ Mammoth Mountain Weather
10 Day Outlook - 500mb Height & Anomaly @ MammothWeather
10 Day Outlook – 500mb Height & Anomaly @ MammothWeather

** Weather Disclaimer: The Fantasy Outlooks are “Outlooks, Not Forecasts.” Some years, the wet patterns that appear in these longer-range outlooks pan out; other times, the changes are always out in the fantasy period and never make it to the short-term forecast period. When all the ensemble models have agreement on wet or dry patterns, more often than not, they do seem to pan out more often than not.

Mammoth Snowman
— The Mammoth Snowman —

12-27-2023 @ 9:20 AM – Looking at the longer-range data the last few days, I still don’t see any significant pattern changes or one-hit miracle base storms in the offering over the next two weeks and beyond. 

Over the last few months, we’ve discussed a possible back-ended winter starting around the Christmas holiday. Models should be showing the signs of that starting change now. However, You still won’t find a strong southern El Niño Jet developing into California on long-range ensemble models.

So, where in the world do we find any weather hope for some base snow at this point?

Longer-range models bring several chances for possible moderate snowfall over the next month. The ECMWF Weekly Mean, our preferred ensemble model, has several feet of snowfall over the next 30-day period.  

Putting all the hype aside, the reality is we are now in a low-tide season. I have lived through many of these, and during almost all of them, at some point, we get a decent storm or storm cycle that lays down some decent base.

If you look at the closing days over the years, there is only one season that the Mountain closed in mid-May. During all the other low snowfall years, the Mountain still got enough snowfall to allow for skiing and riding until Memorial Day and often beyond.

While we wait for snow, Mammoth Mountain has done a great job with the 1-2 feet of natural snow that has fallen by supplementing with snowmaking. My advice is if you need to make some turns, get some of your old gear tuned up, then get out there. Ensure to keep in ski or ride shape for when the natural snowfall does appear.

Staying Forever Hope full for a big dump base snow and wind buff on Mammoth Mountain, 

The Snowman

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Below is the ECMWF Ensemble Mean going out 32 days.

ECMWF ENS Control - Mammoth Weather Data
ECMWF ENS Control – Mammoth Weather Data


32-Day Snowfall Chart from the ECMWF Ensemble Mean

32-Day Snowfall Chart from the ECMWF Ensemble Mean
32-Day Snowfall Chart from the ECMWF Ensemble Mean

Below is the GEFS Ensemble Mean going out 32 days

GEFS Ensemble Mean - Mammoth Weather Data
GEFS Ensemble Mean – Mammoth Weather Data

32-Day Snowfall Chart from the GEFS Ensemble Mean

30-Day Snowfall Chart from the GEFS Ensemble Mean
30-Day Snowfall Chart from the GEFS Ensemble Mean

The ECMWF Weekly Ensemble mean has the entire Sierra Range below-average precipitation for the next 30 days. That sure is a scary thought. Hopefully, there will be a flip in the long-range pattern soon.

Current Weather and Information Posts

Author – Steve Taylor – The Mammoth Snowman Over the last 30+ years, Snowman has spent countless hours studying and learning about Mammoth Mountain Weather and Snow Conditions first hand. He has been skiing around the hill with marked ski poles since March of 1991 so he can measure the fresh snowfall amounts out on the hill. 

Snowman started blogging this information back in 1990 on the old Mammoth BBS system, then the RSN Forums and then on to MammothSnowman.com in 2004 with Video & Photo Blog reports. (No YouTube back then). Facebook got added to the fold back in 2008 and then the Facebook Group in 2016. 

Reports, videos, and photos from the website have been featured on both local TV Stations here in Mammoth and Bishop, along with KTLA, AP, Fox, ABC, CBS, and NBC News.

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