EPISODE · Jun 8, 2026 · 2 MIN
Big Sky Resort Closed for Winter: Summer Operations Begin June 13
from Big Sky Resort, Montana Ski Report · host Inception Point AI
Big Sky Resort is **closed for the winter season right now**, so the live ski scene is more “summer chairlift scouting” than fresh powder chasing. Big Sky’s own current-conditions page says the resort is closed and notes summer operations beginning June 13, which means there are **0 open lifts and 0 open trails** at the moment.[4] Snow-report sites also show the mountain in a shut-down state, with no terrain open and current snow depth listed as essentially **0 at the base and summit** for the active ski area display.[1][3] For snowfall, there is **no meaningful new ski-day accumulation to report** because the resort is out of winter operating mode. The third-party snow report does note a trace of late-season snowfall in the archive, including **1 cm over 12 hours** on a recent update, but that is not a current winter base-building event.[3] Big Sky is also known for big winters, with its visitor information saying the resort averages **about 400 inches of snowfall a year**.[8] Weather-wise, the live ski-report snapshot shows temperatures around **-2°C to 11°C** at the mountain in the latest report, but because the resort is closed, those numbers are best treated as a general mountain-weather snapshot rather than ski-day conditions.[1] I could not verify a reliable five-day winter ski forecast from the supplied results, and Big Sky’s resort pages are currently focused on summer lift operations instead of ski forecasting.[4][5] If you were hoping for the classic Big Sky feel, the likely on-mountain experience would now be more about **firm, patchy lingering snow in shaded/high alpine pockets** than groomers or powder stashes, since the lifts and trails are not operating.[1][4] In a normal season, Big Sky’s high elevation and Lone Peak terrain help snow last late and can preserve quality well into spring, but that is a general mountain trait rather than a current open-snow report.[7][8] A few useful visitor notes: Big Sky says summer scenic and bike lift service is scheduled to start with the **Explorer Gondola and Ramcharger 8 on June 13**, with the **Lone Peak Tram** also listed for summer daily operation.[4] If you’re planning a trip for skiing or riding, the most important takeaway is that **winter skiing is over for now**, and the mountain has transitioned to summer activities.[4] For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
What this episode covers
Big Sky Resort is **closed for the winter season right now**, so the live ski scene is more “summer chairlift scouting” than fresh powder chasing. Big Sky’s own current-conditions page says the resort is closed and notes summer operations beginning June 13, which means there are **0 open lifts and 0 open trails** at the moment.[4] Snow-report sites also show the mountain in a shut-down state, with no terrain open and current snow depth listed as essentially **0 at the base and summit** for the active ski area display.[1][3] For snowfall, there is **no meaningful new ski-day accumulation to report** because the resort is out of winter operating mode. The third-party snow report does note a trace of late-season snowfall in the archive, including **1 cm over 12 hours** on a recent update, but that is not a current winter base-building event.[3] Big Sky is also known for big winters, with its visitor information saying the resort averages **about 400 inches of snowfall a year**.[8] Weather-wise, the live ski-report snapshot shows temperatures around **-2°C to 11°C** at the mountain in the latest report, but because the resort is closed, those numbers are best treated as a general mountain-weather snapshot rather than ski-day conditions.[1] I could not verify a reliable five-day winter ski forecast from the supplied results, and Big Sky’s resort pages are currently focused on summer lift operations instead of ski forecasting.[4][5] If you were hoping for the classic Big Sky feel, the likely on-mountain experience would now be more about **firm, patchy lingering snow in shaded/high alpine pockets** than groomers or powder stashes, since the lifts and trails are not operating.[1][4] In a normal season, Big Sky’s high elevation and Lone Peak terrain help snow last late and can preserve quality well into spring, but that is a general mountain trait rather than a current open-snow report.[7][8] A few useful visitor notes: Big Sky says summer scenic and bike lift service is scheduled to start with the **Explorer Gondola and Ramcharger 8 on June 13**, with the **Lone Peak Tram** also listed for summer daily operation.[4] If you’re planning a trip for skiing or riding, the most important takeaway is that **winter skiing is over for now**, and the mountain has transitioned to summer activities.[4] For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
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Big Sky Resort Closed for Winter: Summer Operations Begin June 13
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