On February 6, 2010 a wide swath of the mid-Atlantic region of the United States was hit with one of its biggest snowstorms ever. The reported snow tallies for local airports were: Reagan National 17.8”, BWI 24.8”, and Dulles 32.4”. Many ski areas in Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and southern Pennsylvania received upwards of two feet of snow.
|
I spent February 6 and 7 shoveling snow around my home in northern Virginia, but by February 8th I was ready to venture out. The regional road conditions had improved and my office was still closed. That clinched it. I agreed to rendezvous with three friends at Blue Knob ski area in southwestern Pennsylvania. Once I cleared the DC metro area the roads were surprisingly good for the 160 mile trip to Blue Knob.
|
February 8, 2010 at Blue Knob will go down in my personal annals as one of the best days of local skiing in my 43 continuous seasons of downhill action in the mid-Atlantic. Blue Knob reported 27-28” inches of snow on the 6th and ski conditions remained superb, ranging from packed powder on the groomers, to big soft bumps on many of the steeper slopes, and cut-up knee-high snow in the glades. It wasn’t cold smoke/blower snow, but the four of us agreed it was pretty dang awesome considering we had not flown in an airplane to get it.
|
We skied a good sample of Blue Knob’s terrain. Jack Rabbit and the easier glades dropping from its right edge were in great shape. Mambo Alley, Upper 66 and Expressway were the nearest things they had to groomed runs. Deer Run and Richey’s Run, normally steep groomers, were bumped-up big time.
|
Stembogan Bowl/Trail was loaded with tons of snow, extremely variable bumps, mounds, and cut-up old powder. It was as wild as I’ve ever seen it, like skiing whitewater on a raging river. Extrovert was prime, with huge bumps, and the occasional patch of underlying hardpack to keep you on your toes. Edgeset and Lower High Hopes were totally bumped-up. Both were challenging, yet forgiving because of the softness of the moguls.
|
We found good natural snow coverage in the following glades: Ditch, D-Trail, Skyline, Triple, and Forever. East Wall Glades was roped off, but appeared to have been tracked-up the day before. Bottom line: Glade skiing is alive and well in the mid-Atlantic!
|
|
We’re having a pretty special ski season in the mid-Atlantic, big storms just ahead of the Christmas Holidays and President’s Weekend. If you’ve been sitting on the fence about when to ski next, I recommend you get to Blue Knob or any ski area in the region NOW. Strike while the iron is cold and snowy, provided you can get out of your own driveway!
Home video by Jim and Vince Kenney
Husband, father and retired civilian employee of the Department of Navy, Jim Kenney is a D.C. area native and has been skiing recreationally since 1967. Jim's ski reporting garnered the 2009 West Virginia Division of Tourism's Stars of the Industry Award for Best Web/Internet/E-Magazine Article.
Join the conversation by logging in.
Don't have an account? Create one here.