Loon Mountain Community

A network for skiers & riders passionate about snow sports

We all grew up thinking there were four seasons each year , or should I say, everyone living north of the Mason-Dixon Line was raised with that understanding. But a relatively small group of us from the north know the real truth. There are only two season; snow season, which means skiing and riding, and whatever you want to call the remaining months of the year. I prefer to think of them as purgatory.

Sure, softball games, cookouts and the other family get-togethers are great, but considering the heat and humidity, the bugs and yard work, the exterior house maintenance projects, and the patience testing heavy traffic encountered if we do venture out for a summer trip (not to mention the higher gas prices), can you blame so many of us for yearning for the first snow flake? Summer is the time we put on our happy face, but deep down inside we’re several months away in a different world. Summer is a time when we tread water, whiling away the time reading last year’s ski and snowboard magazines and anxiously wait for the first issue of the new season’s editions. Summer is when we get our “short-timers calendars” out and start counting down the days until our favorite ski areas reopen.

November rolls around, and huge numbers of people honker down for what they perceive to be months and months of being holed up in their homes while nature turns the world into mammoth walk-in freezer. They all wish for a white Christmas and then hope the snow magically disappears. Snow sports fans on the other hand, come back to life. Ski areas begin to open, more and more terrain is opened as nature and snowmakers cover new trails almost daily, and finally all the mountains are “as good as it gets.” But then before you know it, let’s say towards the first or middle of March, Mother Nature turns her favor back on the folks holed up in their houses (or the refugees in Florida who abandoned the north country). The sun gets a little higher every day, days get longer and there’s a definite sense that the world is changing again. Snow depths begin to diminish, then bare spots begin to appear, and eventually April arrives and trail by trail, terrain is closed. All too soon entire mountains are closed and we’re faced with an other sentence to purgatory.

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Members

  • Stacy Lopes  /  Loon Mountain
  • Joey Bonang
  • Robert Butler
  • Suzanne
  • loonmtn
  • Molly Mahar/Loon Mountain
  • Carlos M.Sarmiento
  • Susan Watson / Loon Mountain
  • Loon Gators
  • Brenda Kneeland/Loon Mountain
  • Terri Walsh
  • Kerry Balassone

Season Pass Info

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Loon Snow Conditions RSS

Loon Mountain Current Conditions - March 20, 2010

Lifts Open: 11
Trails Open: 50
Miles Open: 24
Acres Open: 315
Superpipe Open: True
Minipipe Open: False
Surface Conditions: spring conditions
New Snow (last 24 hours): 0"
Temperature °F: 59°F
Today's Weather: One more day of sunshine. Clouds develop late afternoon. High of 59!
Forecast: Turning more like winter for Sunday. clouds, cooler temps in the 30s.
Comments: What a great start to Spring. Thank you to all who came out to support the Governor's Cup. It was a great race. Tomorrow will start out spring-like but then temps will cool off and clouds move in. If the speed of ski racing wasn't your thing today, come join us for tomorrow's Cardboard Box Race. Also- our 2010-2011 New England Passes are now on sale, so get your's today! Have a great rest of the day and see you in the morning! -Stacy

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