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Skiers can expect six more weeks on North Shore slopes, say resorts

The North Shore ski season may have as much as six weeks left in it thanks to a second year of unusually heavy snowfall, according to the communitys ski resorts.

The North Shore ski season may have as much as six weeks left in it thanks to a second year of unusually heavy snowfall, according to the communitys ski resorts.

Grouse Mountain, which has seen more than 1,100 centimetres of snow since the fall, has made it to April with a base of about 5.6 metres at the peak, said spokeswoman Sarah Lusk, meaning the mountain will likely stay open until the end of May.

Weve just been getting continuous snow for the past few weeks, she said. Conditions are amazing. . . . When its raining in the city, its dumping snow on the mountain.

The season is on track to be the snowiest since the record-setting 1998-1999 ski season, said Lusk, although she noted it might not beat last years in terms of duration, when an especially robust base kept the resort open into the second week of June.

West Vancouvers Cypress Mountain has seen a similar bumper year, with 1,156 cm falling since it opened in November. As of Wednesday, the ski hill had a 535 cm base, which should sustain it to the end of April, according to director of sales and marketing Joffrey Koeman.

The total isnt as high as it was last year, when the resort got about 14 metres, said Koeman, but that fell throughout the year, whereas this seasons heaviest snowfalls have been focused in February and March, leaving the mountain better placed for spring skiing.

That, together with the early Nov. 8 opening, mean Cypress will likely have its longest ski season ever this year, he said.

North Vancouvers Mount Seymour, meanwhile, although it has seen a total snowfall similar to its neighbours and has started the month with an approximately six-metre base, will be forced to close April 15 to begin work on a new chairlift.

The resort plans to start dismantling its aging double fixed-grip chair the following day and replace it with a $5-million quad, which Seymour says will cut trips to its peak from nine minutes to four. The closure will be worthwhile, said spokeswoman Anna Rowinska.

Its a lot faster, she said. It goes at about five metre per second, and it doubles our capacity. . . . Were always looking to improve the experience for our guests.

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