Whistler blows away November snowfall record
Last Updated: Thursday, November 19, 2009 | 1:55 PM PT
CBC News
The unrelenting series of storms pounding the West Coast has brought good news for skiers, dumping a record snowfall on at least one coastal ski resort.
On Thursday, the Whistler-Blackcomb resort broke its previous record for all of November when it received 418 centimetres of snow, with 11 days still left to go in the month.
'We're only 87 centimetres from reaching the half-way point of our annual average.'—Anton Horvath, Whistler Mountain's weather forecaster
"This is an unprecedented start to the season," said Anton Horvath, Whistler Mountain's weather forecaster, who is expecting another 65 to 95 centimetres over the weekend
The previous record for the entire month was set in 2006 at 416 centimetres, based on snowfall records dating back to 1979.
The annual average snowfall at Whistler-Blackcomb is just over 10 metres, said Horvath.
"The fact that we're only 87 centimetres from reaching the half-way point of our annual average snowfall shows how incredible the start of this season really is," said Horvath.
The snow is also good news for organizers of the 2010 Winter Olympics, who are counting on the resort to have enough snow to host the Alpine ski events for the Games in February.
Whistler is not the only ski resort benefiting from the cool, wet storms that have lowered the normal freezing elevation in the mountains by about 700 metres, turning precipitation that might have been rain into snow.
Last weekend, several B.C. ski resorts opened up to two weeks early for the season, including those on the North Shore of Vancouver and others in the Southern Interior.
Rain for lower elevations
But at lower elevations, all the precipitation has been falling as rain, raising river levels and flooding at least one Vancouver Island town earlier this week,
Perhaps surprisingly, the amount of rain falling is only slightly above normal in a few areas.
On the Northern tip of Vancouver Island, Port Hardy has already received more than 300 mm of rain this month, just above the seasonal normal of 284 mm.
Meanwhile, normally rainy Tofino has received only 360 mm of rain, well below the seasonal average of 471 mm for this time in November.
Share Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- Beating inquiry sought again by B.C. watchdog
- B.C.'s police complaint commissioner is appealing a B.C. Supreme Court ruling that prevented an inquiry into the beating of a man by two Vancouver police officers. more »
- Cause of fatal B.C. crash may never be known
- RCMP say they may never know what caused an SUV carrying five people from Prince George, B.C., to crash head-on into a semi-trailer five kilometres outside McLeese Lake on Thursday. more »
- B.C. killer whale habitat protection ruled a legal duty
- The federal minister of fisheries has no discretion when it comes to protecting the critical habitat of B.C.'s southern resident killer whales, the Federal Court of Appeal has ruled. more »
- Crane drops section of Port Mann bridge into B.C. river
- A crane tipped off its tracks on the Port Mann bridge construction project east of Vancouver on Friday morning and dropped a segment of the bridge into the Fraser River. more »
Top News Headlines
- Old Age Security untouched until 2020, Flaherty says
- Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says Canadians should expect no changes to Old Age Security benefits before 2020 or 2025, and details about reform would be outlined over more than one budget. more »
- Emailed rave rape pictures earn teen probation
- A teen convicted of emailing pictures of an alleged rape at a rave in Pitt Meadows, B.C., that were eventually posted by others on Facebook has been sentenced to 12 months probation for distributing obscene material. more »
- Prayer service held for Ontario van crash victims
- More than 300 people gather at a church in Stratford, Ont., to remember and support those affected by the collision that killed 11 people in Hampstead, Ont., earlier this week. more »
- SNC-Lavalin probe sought by Vanier's parents
- The parents of Cyndy Vanier — an Ontario woman jailed in Mexico amid allegations she tried to smuggle in members of Libya's Gadhafi family — want the RCMP to probe the actions of SNC-Lavalin, the company she was working for at the time of her arrest. more »
- Crane drops section of Port Mann bridge into B.C. river
- Emailed rave rape pictures earn teen probation
- Family of 4 and friend killed in fiery B.C. crash
- Sex in police car costs RCMP officer 10 days pay
- Cause of fatal B.C. crash may never be known
- Mexico hopes to woo wary B.C. tourists
- Vander Zalm found liable in defamation case
- Richmond plane crash pilot lost control says report
- Missing B.C. man found living under new identity

