Snowmaking: Tahoe’s ‘insurance policy’

Snowmaking on Squaw Valley's upper mountain. The practice has come in handy the past couple winters at Lake Tahoe, which saw little snow, and is coming in handy again this winter, which is off to a slow start.

Snowmaking on Squaw Valley's upper mountain. The practice has come in handy the past couple winters at Lake Tahoe, which saw little snow, and is coming in handy again this winter, which is off to a slow start.

Share this: Email | Facebook | X

Editor’s note: This story originally appeared in the 2013-14 winter edition of Tahoe Magazine, which is available at newsstands around the Truckee/Tahoe region Thursday. The magazine is a joint publication of the Sierra Sun, North Lake Tahoe Bonanza, Tahoe Daily Tribune and Lake Tahoe Action.

TAHOE/TRUCKEE — When Mother Nature is stingy with the snow, Tahoe ski resorts can turn to their backup plan. Using water and compressed air, local resorts create their own snow-covered runs to ensure winter success.

“Snowmaking is a form of an insurance policy,” explains Amelia Richmond, senior public relations manager for Squaw Valley and Alpine Meadows.

It ensures that resorts can open in time for the holiday season — be it Thanksgiving or Christmas — fill in areas with subpar snow coverage and provide good skiing and riding until the end of the season.

“It’s a guest service piece,” said Jim Larmore, director of mountain operations for Northstar California. “It’s a piece we provide our guests so they can make planned vacations and provide a better ski experience than if they just relied on Mother Nature’s natural snow.”

Yet to make snow, resorts still rely on Mother Nature — to a degree.

THE ‘ART AND SCIENCE’ OF SNOWMAKING

To make snow, resorts need freezing temperatures and low relative humidity.

“The humidity is huge — probably the single biggest factor,” said Dave Hahl, snowmaking and grooming manager of Mt. Rose Ski Tahoe.

He added that low humidity allows the atmosphere to be saturated with water to create “that much more snow.” If humidity is high, however, the atmosphere is too saturated to produce significant amounts of snow.

Secondary snowmaking factors are winds and cloud-cover.

“When you’re making snow in the Sierra, you’ve got to catch every window you can,” said Jack Coughlin, slope maintenance manager for Diamond Peak. “I used to make snow back East, and back East, you know you can make snow four, five days a week.

“Here, when it’s cold, you grab it, and then you’re going to get the beautiful warm weather after that.”

When conditions are right, resorts pump water — stored in ponds, reservoirs or other sources — through pumphouses, up pipes running up the mountain to specific snow guns. Depending on the guns in a resort’s fleet, compressed air must also be pumped to the gun.

Together — air and water — under the right conditions, form snow.

“You don’t want to pick it up and squeeze it, and you’ve got slush coming out,” explained Coughlin, who’s looking for a hard snowball at the end of the process. “So you really have to pay attention to what you’re doing.”

Once made, the snow is left to cure, perking out some of the excess water, before groomers move and flatten the snow into a favorable skiing and riding surface.

“(Making snow) it’s a science and an art,” Hahl said. “… The science part of it, it’s the technology — the technology improves like anything else. Yet it still takes the guy on the ground to get it right. You can’t overestimate the human link.”

HOW SNOWMAKING SAVED WINTER BUSINESS

With two consecutive mild winters at Lake Tahoe, resorts have had to heavily rely on their snowmaking systems.

According to Squaw Valley’s snowfall tracker, it snowed 183 inches at 6,200 feet and 326 inches at 8,200 feet in 2012-13. For 2011-12, it snowed 182.5 inches and 355 inches, respectively.

The average snowfall for the Lake Tahoe region is 430 inches.

“Two years ago when there was a complete lack of snow, we still did great business through the Christmas period with snowmaking. … (People are) just realizing that even if there hasn’t been many natural storms, they can still book a vacation and still come up and get good skiing,” Hahl said.

COST OF DOING BUSINESS

The ability to make snow when Mother Nature fails to comes at a cost.

“It’s extremely expensive to make snow,” Coughlin said. “… We’re running up electric bills running our water pumps and running out air compressors.”

The cost to make snow varies, based on weather conditions and equipment.

For the past two years, significant investments in Squaw’s and Alpine’s snowmaking systems have been made. In 2012, $2.6 million was invested in Squaw’s system, with $600,000 at Alpine, Richmond said. In 2013, a total of $2 million was invested into both resorts’ systems.

“The game in snowmaking now is everybody’s got their systems at the size they more or less need,” Couglin said. “Now, it’s how can we do it less expensively? Where can we find more energy-efficient ways to do it?”

Comments

Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.

Sign in to comment