To keep you abreast of the latest conditions at our lodge and in the Badshot Range we have provided a live link to theweathernetwork.com reports for Revelstoke and area. Also included are figures for the current snow fall, snow accumulation and average temperatures in our areas of operation. We have also posted the latest weather details for you to enjoy in our Snow Report.
| Snow Pack | 72 hour Snow |
This Week's Snow |
Total Snowfall |
Average Temps |
|
| 245 cm 96.5 in |
9 cm 3.5 in |
18 cm 7.1 in |
969 cm 381.5 in |
-3C 26.6°F |
WHERE DID IT GO?!! (Total snowfall: 969 cm (381.5 in)
Yeah, another ski season has come and gone, too quickly as always! Looking back on a winter gripped by El Nino’s classic pattern of lower snowfall and warmer weather, we nonetheless managed to lay down plenty of sweet powder turns and had so much fun it’s hard to believe it’s legal. After a bit of a lean snow year, next winter should be back to normal (meaning DEEP), and we’ll be keeping our shoveling arms tuned up in anticipation of snow clearing of epic proportions! As we shut down the lodge, tune & polish the cats, and tie up all the loose ends, we’re already counting the days until ski season rolls around again for another dose of the sheer life-affirming enjoyment we call skiing. Our necks keep craning upwards, where there’s still a fresh snowline on the trees, proof that after a sunny week or so, the last few days of rain down here turned to snow not too far above our heads. It’s warm in the valley though, and summer beckons, so whether you’re dusting off mountain bikes, kayaks, sail boats or beach chairs, soak up the sunshine for all it’s worth, and we’ll see you again when the snow flies! 
Thanks for sharing another winter of powder goodness with us --- we can’t wait to do it all over again….....
Please give Tanya at Great Northern Headquarters a call for our 2010 seating availability and booking incentives. She loves to hear from you!!!
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“…snow that was so light and dry that it just hung in the air, crystals sparkling, in the the wake of what appeared to be
half skiers in the bottomless snow…”
Phil Worthington, TORONTO STAR