I could've posted this in the previous thread but figured it was worthy of a stand-alone note in passing. Marc's article on the Kmart closing hit the nail on the head re ASC cost cutting, but (unlike Mt Snow at Easter) they didn't exactly end up closing with the stated "seamless cover"! <BR> <BR> In short, it went fast! I was last there Thurs 5/6 and it looked just like Marc's pix from two days later, Sat 5/8. Today however, barely 48 hours later, the middle section was melted into multiple pieces with significant walking sections. I didn't take any pics but similar conditions can be seen in that mega 140-post Kmart thread from last spring. As last week, we had to hike down over the lip of the headwall, although it hadn't receded much since then. At the bottom of the headwall the snow was broken but only by a few feet, then there was a couple of hundred feet of nice bumps, but then it got ugly. The bumps petered out into a connect-the-dots section, then 50' or so of bare ground that could be carefully walked over w/o removing skis (or skied faster if you really didn't care about the boards). Another 50-100' patch of bumped snow led to a similar patch of bare ground, then another very short patch of white, then just above the bottom pitch (the 'footwall' as it were), where it was the thinnest last week, was a long unambiguous walking section. The bottom pitch was beautiful with one narrow connection as the snow doglegs to skiers left then plenty of snow all the way down to the lift (or within 10 feet anyway). True they've stayed open with more walking...but not much. <BR> <BR> The only onsite clue to it being last day was a small hand-lettered sign in the lift house at the top, easily missed and I only looked for it after a chance conversation had someone telling me about it. I hadn't even checked the website before heading up since they've hardly been mentioning the skiing lately, so one wonders if others will be showing up this week w/o knowing it's over. <BR> <BR> It certainly was a visual shock on rounding the bend on the access road and seeing the meltdown, but it wasn't too surprising really. I guess it's morbidly fitting that Kmart should follow the latest opening in over a quarter century with the earliest closing in about the same. They would probably have us believe it was nature's roll of the dice, but that's only a small part of the story. No, the main reasons the snow ran out early was a) the new corporate spec of making only 15' or so on Superstar rather than the "blow snow whenever possible" 20-25' of the past and b) the even newer apparent policy of grooming Superstar almost nightly. The latter was the death sentence more than anything, since disturbing the snowpack and its natural thermal mass greatly hastens the melt. This has the potential to act as a control for the end of the season just as choosing when to make snow does the beginning. One insider told me last week that the party line was that the grooming was to cover the bare spots, but at that point not much patching was evident, nor even neccesary. Besides, if they were really concerned about it they would've made more snow in the first place and/or stockpiled some extra 'whales' in the trouble spots. Anyone who's even casually observed the late season rhythms of Superstar knows *exactly* where the patches would be needed first. This year they didn't even do the huge glacier at the top. Ironic that such thick cover that was left to rot on the vine at Mt Snow after the door abruptly slammed there on Easter, while Superstar was scraped down to nothing before our eyes. <BR> <BR> Anyway, that's all just observation and ASC's modus operandi is a pretty open book at this point. Sign of the times, but it was fun while it lasted. For anyone interested, the bottom pitch will be a very nice and easily accessible hike-up for another week or so and the upper headwall maybe a little longer, tho the June (and even July) visits of years past are pretty unlikely.