Heavenly's Midwinter Magic: Carving Groomers, Tackling Steeps, and Soaking Up the Tahoe Vibes episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 10, 2026 · 4 MIN

Heavenly's Midwinter Magic: Carving Groomers, Tackling Steeps, and Soaking Up the Tahoe Vibes

from Heavenly Mountain Resort, California/Nevada Ski Report · host Inception Point AI

Ski Report for Heavenly Mountain Resort Daily Ski Conditions for Heavenly Mountain Resort If you’re itching to point your tips toward Lake Tahoe blue and rip some laps at Heavenly right now, you’re in luck: the mountain is very much in winter mode, with plenty of terrain open and a healthy refresh of recent snow setting things up for a fun, mixed-bag kind of week. Let’s start with the meat and potatoes: the snow. Heavenly is reporting a base depth in the ballpark of 24 to 47 inches across the mountain, enough to cover things well on the main pistes while still leaving a few sharks lurking off the beaten path in rockier zones. Snocountry lists the resort as open for snow sports with that 24–47" base and a season snowfall total of 112 inches so far, plus a hefty 24 inches in just the past six days, so you’re skiing on fairly fresh snow rather than dusty leftovers from early season. Recent storm cycles have been kind: a Tahoe snow update notes Heavenly picked up about 43 cm (around 17") in the last 48 hours, and terrain followed suit, jumping up to roughly 98 out of 111 trails open. That lines up with Heavenly’s own terrain page showing essentially the whole mountain online: about 108 of 111 trails and 21 of 27 lifts spinning, which is roughly 97% of the terrain available. Translation for your legs: you can chase sun laps from California to Nevada, hit groomer zoomers off Sky and Dipper, and still sneak off to the steeps in Mott and Killebrew when patrol says go. On-piste, expect classic midwinter “variable conditions.” That phrase usually means you’ll find everything from smooth, grippy man-made corduroy on the high-traffic blues to softer, chalky patches and a few firm spots where the wind has done some sculpting. Heavenly’s snowmaking covers about three-quarters of the marked trails, so coverage on the groomers is generally solid with good edge hold in the morning and a bit of push-around snow later in the day. Off-piste is where you’ll want to think like a local: hit north-facing shots and tree lines early for the best preserved snow from the recent storm, but stay alert for hidden obstacles since the base, while decent, isn’t yet spring-deep. Steeper chutes in Mott Canyon and the more adventurous lines near Killebrew can be great after a storm, but they turn “technical” quickly if you wander onto scraped entrances or rock bands, so follow patrol openings and don’t drop in blind. Weather-wise, it’s a cold-but-cruisy pattern that’s perfect for keeping the snow quality nice without freezing your toes off. OnTheSnow reports clear skies right now with temperatures in the mid to upper 20s Fahrenheit at the base and low teens to mid-teens up top, with only light winds around 5 mph; that’s prime carve-all-day weather, especially if you like ripping fast without slush slowing you down. Looking ahead over the next five days, the forecast stays mostly dry and friendly: Snocountry calls for clear to partly cloudy skies with daytime highs in the low 30 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Ski Report for Heavenly Mountain Resort Daily Ski Conditions for Heavenly Mountain Resort If you’re itching to point your tips toward Lake Tahoe blue and rip some laps at Heavenly right now, you’re in luck: the mountain is very much in winter mode, with plenty of terrain open and a healthy refresh of recent snow setting things up for a fun, mixed-bag kind of week. Let’s start with the meat and potatoes: the snow. Heavenly is reporting a base depth in the ballpark of 24 to 47 inches across the mountain, enough to cover things well on the main pistes while still leaving a few sharks lurking off the beaten path in rockier zones. Snocountry lists the resort as open for snow sports with that 24–47" base and a season snowfall total of 112 inches so far, plus a hefty 24 inches in just the past six days, so you’re skiing on fairly fresh snow rather than dusty leftovers from early season. Recent storm cycles have been kind: a Tahoe snow update notes Heavenly picked up about 43 cm (around 17") in the last 48 hours, and terrain followed suit, jumping up to roughly 98 out of 111 trails open. That lines up with Heavenly’s own terrain page showing essentially the whole mountain online: about 108 of 111 trails and 21 of 27 lifts spinning, which is roughly 97% of the terrain available. Translation for your legs: you can chase sun laps from California to Nevada, hit groomer zoomers off Sky and Dipper, and still sneak off to the steeps in Mott and Killebrew when patrol says go. On-piste, expect classic midwinter “variable conditions.” That phrase usually means you’ll find everything from smooth, grippy man-made corduroy on the high-traffic blues to softer, chalky patches and a few firm spots where the wind has done some sculpting. Heavenly’s snowmaking covers about three-quarters of the marked trails, so coverage on the groomers is generally solid with good edge hold in the morning and a bit of push-around snow later in the day. Off-piste is where you’ll want to think like a local: hit north-facing shots and tree lines early for the best preserved snow from the recent storm, but stay alert for hidden obstacles since the base, while decent, isn’t yet spring-deep. Steeper chutes in Mott Canyon and the more adventurous lines near Killebrew can be great after a storm, but they turn “technical” quickly if you wander onto scraped entrances or rock bands, so follow patrol openings and don’t drop in blind. Weather-wise, it’s a cold-but-cruisy pattern that’s perfect for keeping the snow quality nice without freezing your toes off. OnTheSnow reports clear skies right now with temperatures in the mid to upper 20s Fahrenheit at the base and low teens to mid-teens up top, with only light winds around 5 mph; that’s prime carve-all-day weather, especially if you like ripping fast without slush slowing you down. Looking ahead over the next five days, the forecast stays mostly dry and friendly: Snocountry calls for clear to partly cloudy skies with daytime highs in the low 30 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Heavenly's Midwinter Magic: Carving Groomers, Tackling Steeps, and Soaking Up the Tahoe Vibes

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This episode is 4 minutes long.

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This episode was published on January 10, 2026.

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Ski Report for Heavenly Mountain Resort Daily Ski Conditions for Heavenly Mountain Resort If you’re itching to point your tips toward Lake Tahoe blue and rip some laps at Heavenly right now, you’re in luck: the mountain is very much in winter...

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