Alternatively, strong winds sometimes redistribute powder snow enough to cover old tracks, or it may simply be that the ski area was not fully open for some period after the snow fell, so fresh snow that fell a while ago has remained un-tracked until this report. At crowded ski resorts, off-piste new snow will be tracked out within hours of a fresh fall but wherever crowds are light in relation to the accessible terrain, it will be possible to stay fresh much later, perhaps several days later. If you see a report of powder or fresh snow conditions several days after snow last fell, there is usually a good reason. You will be able to predict whether to expect off-piste powder, slush, spring snow, ice or wind crust. It shows how much snow we think fell then, and the way freezing level, wind and weather have varied through time. The hindcast shows when our weather model last predicted snowfall at Wolf Creek Ski Area. This detailed weather log makes it easy to predict snow conditions at Wolf Creek Ski Area, even when the snow report is too old to be useful. Members can check the hindcast for a timeline of Wolf Creek Ski Area weather conditions. If these details are missing from the Wolf Creek Ski Area snow report, you can predict off-piste conditions using the snow depth, the date of the most recent snowfall at Wolf Creek Ski Area, the Wolf Creek Ski Area weather report and the forecast. Piste and off-piste are often different so we ask snow reporters to describe Wolf Creek Ski Area piste and off-piste conditions separately. You can submit an updated snow report here. The snow report describes the piste and off-piste ski conditions at Wolf Creek Ski Area.
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