EPISODE · Jan 10, 2026 · 6 MIN
Carving Corduroy and Seeking Soft Stashes at Park City's Resurgent Snow Scene
from Park City Mountain Resort, Utah Ski Report · host Inception Point AI
Ski Report for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah Daily Ski Conditions for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah If you like to chase corduroy by morning and soft bumps by afternoon, Park City Mountain is in a pretty sweet mid‑season groove right now. The resort’s fully open for the 2025–26 winter, with snow coverage that finally looks like “real Utah” after a slow start and then a big reset from early‑January storms across the state that put ski season properly into gear. Resorts statewide are reporting much better coverage and packed‑powder conditions after those back‑to‑back systems, and Park City is very much riding that wave of improvement. Let’s talk numbers like a local checking the report over coffee. As of the latest public snow report on January 9, Park City is sitting on roughly a mid‑mountain base of about 54 inches, with 24 of 41 lifts spinning at that time and terrain continuing to open through the weekend as patrol signs off on more runs. That same snapshot had just over 100 trails open, and local reports expect that number to keep climbing quickly as snowmaking and recent natural snow fill in the gaps. Given the recent storm cycle and continued cold temperatures, assume coverage is solid on groomers and improving fast in bowls, trees, and steeper faces. What about fresh snow? Early January brought multiple storm pulses to northern Utah, with 4–5 feet falling at some Wasatch resorts since New Year’s. Park City didn’t see quite the Cottonwood Canyon jackpot totals, but it benefitted from the same cold, snowy pattern, which is why the resort has been able to ramp up terrain and open high‑alpine lifts like Jupiter and McConkey’s. Day‑to‑day new‑snow figures will vary, but the overall feel right now is packed powder on most aspects with pockets of softer stashes lingering on north‑facing slopes, especially if you’re willing to poke around off the beaten path between the marked runs. On the hill, piste conditions are very “January Park City”: firm, smooth corduroy for the first couple of hours, then a nice softening on sun‑exposed aspects by late morning and early afternoon. Expect hero grooming off lifts like Payday, Silverlode, and King Con on the Mountain Village side and off Orange Bubble and Tombstone around Canyons. Intermediates are spoiled at the moment; you can lap medium‑pitch blues all day and never get bored. Steeper groomers will feel a bit more hard‑packed first thing, so grab a sharp edge if you’re after early‑morning speed. Off‑piste, it’s game on but with caveats. Coverage is much better than it was around Christmas, but this is still mid‑January, not April: you’ll find good chalk and packed powder off Jupiter, McConkey’s, 9990, and Peak 5, but you may still tap a shark fin here and there on rocky lines and tight entrances. Think “confident advanced” for those zones, not “casual cruiser.” If you’re ducking into trees, stick to established lines and be mindful of stumps and downed timber that aren’t fully buried yet. Avalan This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
What this episode covers
Ski Report for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah Daily Ski Conditions for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah If you like to chase corduroy by morning and soft bumps by afternoon, Park City Mountain is in a pretty sweet mid‑season groove right now. The resort’s fully open for the 2025–26 winter, with snow coverage that finally looks like “real Utah” after a slow start and then a big reset from early‑January storms across the state that put ski season properly into gear. Resorts statewide are reporting much better coverage and packed‑powder conditions after those back‑to‑back systems, and Park City is very much riding that wave of improvement. Let’s talk numbers like a local checking the report over coffee. As of the latest public snow report on January 9, Park City is sitting on roughly a mid‑mountain base of about 54 inches, with 24 of 41 lifts spinning at that time and terrain continuing to open through the weekend as patrol signs off on more runs. That same snapshot had just over 100 trails open, and local reports expect that number to keep climbing quickly as snowmaking and recent natural snow fill in the gaps. Given the recent storm cycle and continued cold temperatures, assume coverage is solid on groomers and improving fast in bowls, trees, and steeper faces. What about fresh snow? Early January brought multiple storm pulses to northern Utah, with 4–5 feet falling at some Wasatch resorts since New Year’s. Park City didn’t see quite the Cottonwood Canyon jackpot totals, but it benefitted from the same cold, snowy pattern, which is why the resort has been able to ramp up terrain and open high‑alpine lifts like Jupiter and McConkey’s. Day‑to‑day new‑snow figures will vary, but the overall feel right now is packed powder on most aspects with pockets of softer stashes lingering on north‑facing slopes, especially if you’re willing to poke around off the beaten path between the marked runs. On the hill, piste conditions are very “January Park City”: firm, smooth corduroy for the first couple of hours, then a nice softening on sun‑exposed aspects by late morning and early afternoon. Expect hero grooming off lifts like Payday, Silverlode, and King Con on the Mountain Village side and off Orange Bubble and Tombstone around Canyons. Intermediates are spoiled at the moment; you can lap medium‑pitch blues all day and never get bored. Steeper groomers will feel a bit more hard‑packed first thing, so grab a sharp edge if you’re after early‑morning speed. Off‑piste, it’s game on but with caveats. Coverage is much better than it was around Christmas, but this is still mid‑January, not April: you’ll find good chalk and packed powder off Jupiter, McConkey’s, 9990, and Peak 5, but you may still tap a shark fin here and there on rocky lines and tight entrances. Think “confident advanced” for those zones, not “casual cruiser.” If you’re ducking into trees, stick to established lines and be mindful of stumps and downed timber that aren’t fully buried yet. Avalan This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
NOW PLAYING
Carving Corduroy and Seeking Soft Stashes at Park City's Resurgent Snow Scene
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
No similar episodes found.