Snowboarding
fromSnowBrains
3 hours agoBanff Sunshine Opens for Summer Skiing 2026
Banff Sunshine will reopen for summer skiing from June 20 to July 5, 2026, due to an exceptionally snowy winter.
From Monday evening into early Thursday, the individual models converge on intermittent snowfall rather than one clean, intense storm. The main focus is Tuesday and Wednesday, with upper mountain snow levels generally 2,400-2,850 meters and SLRs near 15-20 on the highest peaks, making the snow light there.
Confidence is highest from Sunday afternoon through Monday evening, when the individual models line up best on timing and on a colder snow-level drop. They converge on snow reaching all elevations across Alberta and staying below base at Kicking Horse and Big White.
The Mount Hotham Airport station recorded a temperature of 0.9°C on Thursday, with a feels-like temperature of -5.1°C and strong south-southwest winds gusting over 30 km/h. The resort's weather station also recorded the coldest reading in the state, at -2.2°C at a nearby monitoring point.
The National Weather Service predicted Monday morning that heavy snowfall rates and gusty winds will keep battering the Northeast and spread into New England. The governors of New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey and several other eastern states declared states of emergency and urged residents to stay home. Winter storm forecast The NWS said very heavy snowfall rates of at least 2 to 3 inches per hour would persist Monday, along with 40 to 70 mile-per-hour winds.
Blizzard conditions are now expected as a nor'easter races toward the metropolitan area Sunday and threatens to drop as much as 18 inches in some spots, according to the latest projections from the National Weather Service. Forecasters say snow will begin moving into New York and North Jersey Sunday morning, with conditions deteriorating through the afternoon. Whiteouts and wind gusts topping 50 miles per hour are expected Sunday night into Monday morning.
Tirol police said five off-piste skiers were caught up in a nearly 450-metre-wide avalanche on Friday afternoon in the St Anton am Arlberg area at an altitude of about 2,000 metres. An American and a Pole were among the five dead whose bodies were recovered after the avalanche, and a 21-year-old Austrian died of injuries after being taken to hospital, police said.
Last week alone, parts of western Switzerland were buried under 1 to 1.5 meters (3 to 5 feet) of snow. Another meter fell this week in some regions, pushing fresh storm totals to as much as 2.5 meters (8 feet). The new snow has helped erase what had been a snow-poor winter in the west, with snow depths in some areas now well above seasonal averages.