
"Sierra resorts stay in spring mode, with Tahoe and the central Sierra generally running from the upper 50s to mid 60s through Friday, Mammoth near the upper 50s to low 60s, and Mount Baldy pushing the upper 60s while it remains temporarily closed. Nights stay mild too, mostly in the 40s and 50s at the open Sierra resorts, so overnight recovery looks limited and surfaces should soften fast each day."
"Wednesday through Friday are the hottest days of the period. All guidance is tightly clustered on a dry ridge over California, so the near-term message is straightforward: no snowfall, very warm afternoons, and barely any overnight reset. Tahoe-area resorts are mostly topping out in the low to mid 60s, Bear Valley reaches the mid 60s, and Mammoth still gets into the upper 50s to low 60s."
"Saturday through Monday stay dry, but the ridge weakens enough to trim the heat and bring back a more typical west breeze. This is still not a storm setup. The model suite remains well aligned on zero snowfall and a gradual step down in temperatures, taking Tahoe and the central Sierra back to the low to mid 50s by Sunday and Monday."
California ski resorts are entering an extended warm and dry period with no fresh snow expected through at least early next week. Daytime temperatures across Sierra resorts range from upper 50s to mid 60s, with Mount Baldy reaching upper 60s despite temporary closure. Nights remain mild in the 40s and 50s, preventing significant overnight surface recovery. A west-wind increase occurs Tuesday and Wednesday near Tahoe ridgelines, but remains moisture-starved. Wednesday through Friday represent the hottest days, with all weather models aligned on a dry ridge over California. By Saturday through Monday, temperatures gradually decline to low to mid 50s as the ridge weakens, though conditions remain dry with no storm development expected.
Read at SnowBrains
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