

km/h |
---|
Mapa de Nieve |
cm |
mm |
max°C |
min°C |
chill°C |
Humed.% |
Altura de Hielo (m) |
jueves 30 | viernes 31 | sábado 1 | domingo 2 | lunes 3 | martes 4 | miércoles 5 | ||||||||||||||
mañana | tarde | noche | mañana | tarde | noche | mañana | tarde | noche | mañana | tarde | noche | mañana | tarde | noche | mañana | tarde | noche | mañana | tarde | noche |
nieve ligera | nevadas | nieve mod. | nieve mod. | nevadas | nevadas | claro | semi nublado | nevadas | nevadas | nieve ligera | nieve ligera | mucha nieve | nieve mod. | nieve ligera | nieve ligera | nieve ligera | nevadas | nevadas | nieve ligera | semi nublado |
1.0 | 2 | 7 | 5 | 2 | — | — | — | — | 1.0 | — | 4 | 10 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 2 | — | — | 2 | — |
— | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
-10 | -11 | -10 | -10 | -9 | -6 | -4 | -2 | -2 | -6 | -4 | -4 | -9 | -10 | -11 | -16 | -15 | -15 | -14 | -13 | -13 |
-11 | -11 | -11 | -10 | -9 | -8 | -5 | -4 | -7 | -7 | -5 | -6 | -10 | -11 | -16 | -17 | -15 | -15 | -15 | -14 | -13 |
-18 | -19 | -21 | -20 | -18 | -15 | -13 | -13 | -15 | -15 | -13 | -13 | -16 | -19 | -26 | -29 | -26 | -25 | -22 | -21 | -18 |
90 | 93 | 95 | 95 | 94 | 71 | 50 | 52 | 65 | 93 | 83 | 94 | 92 | 94 | 90 | 97 | 89 | 74 | 68 | 79 | 61 |
1450 | 1650 | 1100 | 1550 | 1850 | 1050 | 1850 | 2450 | 2300 | 1950 | 2400 | 2250 | 1650 | 1650 | 950 | 700 | 1100 | 0 | 600 | 1400 | 0 |
7:13 | - | - | 7:11 | - | - | 7:09 | - | - | 7:07 | - | - | 7:05 | - | - | 7:05 | - | - | 7:03 | - | - |
- | 7:47 | - | - | 7:49 | - | - | 7:50 | - | - | 7:51 | - | - | 7:52 | - | - | 7:52 | - | - | 7:53 | - |
Caída moderada de nieve, más pesada el jueves por la noche. Temperaturas serán bajo cero (max -2°C el sábado por la tarde, min -11°C el jueves por la mañana). Vientos crecientes (Vientos ligeros desde el OSO el jueves por la mañana, casi tempestad desde el SO por la tarde de sábado).
Pesada caída de nieve, más pesada durante la mañana de lunes. Temperaturas serán bajo cero (max -4°C el domingo por la tarde, min -17°C el martes por la mañana). Vientos decreciente (vientos fuertes desde el SO el domingo por la noche, Vientos ligeros desde el OSO por la noche de martes).
Radar de nieve
Ultimo parte de nieve cerca Park City:
Condiciones de Nieve en Park City
Profundidad de nieve arriba: | 399 cm |
---|---|
Profundidad de nieve abajo: | 274 cm |
Profundidad de la nevada fresca: | 9 cm |
Última nevada: | 30 Mar 2023 |
Ski tracking in your boots
Historial de nevadas
Semana 4 of March tiene en promedio:
1.0 | Dias de Nieve en Polvo Nieve fresca, mayormente soleado, viento suave. |
---|---|
1.6 | Dias de nieve en polvo Nieve fresca, sol limitado, sin viento. |
2.1 | Dia perdecto para esquiar Nieve promedio, mayormente soleado, viento suave. |
Pronostico de nevada en Park City
Fotos de Park City
La tabla anterior muestra el pronóstico de tiempo para Park City en la altitud específica de 3047 m. Nuestros modelos meteorológicos sofisticados permiten prever pronósticos para la cumbre, la mitad y la base de Park City. Para aceder a los pronósticos de tiempo a otras alturas, pinche en la navegación en la parte superior de la tabla. Para una visión general, consulte el Mapa meteorológico de United States.
Pinche aquí para más información sobre niveles de congelación y sobre cómo pronosticamos las temperaturas.
Comentarios de Visitantes para Park City
Generalmente 4.6 En base a 7 votos y 5 comentarios
- Nieve segura
- Variedad de pistas
- Voto
- Colin de United States escribe:
I love Park City! The good: First of all, the convenience of the airport is second to none for a major resort town. Flying into SLC is a breeze, the rental car counter is right across from baggage claim (no shuttle bus!), and the resort is, no exaggeration, a thirty-five to forty minute drive. Lodging is reasonable. Ski-in ski-out places are expensive, but in-line with the good value of what you would pay at a world class resort. Plenty of affordable option as well, from places in town to VRBO condos. Parking is still convenient and free at the base of Park City or the Canyons Village (which has a gondola from parking to the lift). The mountain is awesome. It’s big, with plenty of skiable acreage for all ability levels. Plenty of blue groomers, and plenty of black runs, chutes, bumps, and tree skiing for the more advanced skiers. There is even really accessible back country skiing just through the gates. (Don’t let the easy accessibility of back country skiing lull you into complacency. There have been a few avalanche deaths in recent years, including one this year, in back country skiing just off property). The staff is insanely friendly (I was shocked to see the negative review on that front on this site). I’m Hispanic, but unlike the other reviewer have never felt uncomfortable. In fact, there are a huge number of Latin American workers at Park City, and I have found the PC staff, from the ticket kiosk attendants, to the chair operators, to the ski instructors, to be amongst the friendliest around. Park City’s Main Street is a blast. This isn’t a place where non-skiers are going to go stir crazy in the room or a hotel lobby. There is plenty of shopping on Main Street, and a lot of really good restaurants. Gorsuch has to be one of the best merchandised stores I’ve ever been in, although as you get in these resort towns, it is very high-end and I enjoy just browsing. Just outside town toward Salt Lake is a shopping complex with factory outlets. One of my guests last year forgot his ski pants, and inside twenty minutes we had replacements from the Columbia Outlet for $79. Tell me a ski town where you can get a pair of ski pants in town and not feel like you got bent over? The bad: Well, during the peak New Years week, and President’s Day weekend, you can be on the mountain with a lot of people. Shocker, I know. During the peak times, get up and get to the resort. The longest lines are at the base of the mountain, and things really get busy around 9:30 on. Being at the resort when the lifts open (they generally start loading before the official 9am open, especially on busy days) saves you from spending a frustrating first twenty minutes in line. The mountain is big, and once you get up (unless you are a beginner in the ski school section) the crowds quickly dissipate, and the phenomenal high-speed lifts make even seemingly long lines go quickly. The Canyons side is generally less crowded than the Park City side, especially if you have graduated past the high concentration of blue runs at mid-mountain. Food is expensive. When Vail bought Park City they brought it in line with all their resorts. So food on the mountain is really expensive. And lessons are very expensive. Shocker, I know.... Other than that, the only complaint could be**relatively** the Big Cottonwood Canyon resorts and Little Cottonwood Canyon resorts get more snow (just on the SLC side of the mountains). If PC gets 6”, Snowbird almost certainly got 8”. But once again, this is a relative item. This year (2020/2021) has been a poor year for snow all around, but when it does snow they get plenty. If you want epic skiing (no pun intended) with plenty of terrain, a wide variety of lodging and dining options, and plenty to keep everyone entertained, with flights that are reasonable (less expensive than Eagle or Aspen, maybe marginally more than Denver, but you're in your car in ten minutes and to the hotel in thirty five, instead of thirty to get your car and two hours to the hotel) Park City Utah is your place.
Comentarios de Visitantes para Park City
Colin de United States escribe:
I love Park City!
The good:
First of all, the convenience of the airport is second to none for a major resort town. Flying into SLC is a breeze, the rental car counter is right across from baggage claim (no shuttle bus!), and the resort is, no exaggeration, a thirty-five to forty minute drive.
Lodging is reasonable. Ski-in ski-out places are expensive, but in-line with the good value of what you would pay at a world class resort. Plenty of affordable option as well, from places in town to VRBO condos. Parking is still convenient and free at the base of Park City or the Canyons Village (which has a gondola from parking to the lift).
The mountain is awesome. It’s big, with plenty of skiable acreage for all ability levels. Plenty of blue groomers, and plenty of black runs, chutes, bumps, and tree skiing for the more advanced skiers. There is even really accessible back country skiing just through the gates. (Don’t let the easy accessibility of back country skiing lull you into complacency. There have been a few avalanche deaths in recent years, including one this year, in back country skiing just off property).
The staff is insanely friendly (I was shocked to see the negative review on that front on this site). I’m Hispanic, but unlike the other reviewer have never felt uncomfortable. In fact, there are a huge number of Latin American workers at Park City, and I have found the PC staff, from the ticket kiosk attendants, to the chair operators, to the ski instructors, to be amongst the friendliest around.
Park City’s Main Street is a blast. This isn’t a place where non-skiers are going to go stir crazy in the room or a hotel lobby. There is plenty of shopping on Main Street, and a lot of really good restaurants. Gorsuch has to be one of the best merchandised stores I’ve ever been in, although as you get in these resort towns, it is very high-end and I enjoy just browsing. Just outside town toward Salt Lake is a shopping complex with factory outlets. One of my guests last year forgot his ski pants, and inside twenty minutes we had replacements from the Columbia Outlet for $79. Tell me a ski town where you can get a pair of ski pants in town and not feel like you got bent over?
The bad:
Well, during the peak New Years week, and President’s Day weekend, you can be on the mountain with a lot of people. Shocker, I know. During the peak times, get up and get to the resort. The longest lines are at the base of the mountain, and things really get busy around 9:30 on. Being at the resort when the lifts open (they generally start loading before the official 9am open, especially on busy days) saves you from spending a frustrating first twenty minutes in line. The mountain is big, and once you get up (unless you are a beginner in the ski school section) the crowds quickly dissipate, and the phenomenal high-speed lifts make even seemingly long lines go quickly. The Canyons side is generally less crowded than the Park City side, especially if you have graduated past the high concentration of blue runs at mid-mountain.
Food is expensive. When Vail bought Park City they brought it in line with all their resorts. So food on the mountain is really expensive. And lessons are very expensive. Shocker, I know....
Other than that, the only complaint could be**relatively** the Big Cottonwood Canyon resorts and Little Cottonwood Canyon resorts get more snow (just on the SLC side of the mountains). If PC gets 6”, Snowbird almost certainly got 8”. But once again, this is a relative item. This year (2020/2021) has been a poor year for snow all around, but when it does snow they get plenty.
If you want epic skiing (no pun intended) with plenty of terrain, a wide variety of lodging and dining options, and plenty to keep everyone entertained, with flights that are reasonable (less expensive than Eagle or Aspen, maybe marginally more than Denver, but you're in your car in ten minutes and to the hotel in thirty five, instead of thirty to get your car and two hours to the hotel) Park City Utah is your place.
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