On Wednesday, I went up to Mt. Mansfield to get some turns in the snow before it started to disappear. A nice cold snap had dropped over a foot of new snow on some of the mountains, with snowfall reaching even down to Burlington. Traveling on I-89, I first saw snow on the Robbin's Mountain power line, up around 2000'. It was very patchy and hardly noticeable, so I was worried about how the lower elevations would be on Mt. Mansfield. Things looked up as I entered Waterbury (~520') and found traces of snow on the ground. At the base of Mt. Mansfield (~1600') there was an inch or two of snow on the grassy surfaces. I hiked up in the region of the triple, looking for slopes that had nicely mowed grass for the trip down. A map of my route can be found at the link associated with this file below. At around 2500', the snow was over 6 inches deep so I threw on my snowshoes to make the going easier. I stopped my hike at around 2920' (see map) since it was time to head to <BR>work, but the snow depth had increased to about 8-10 inches. The snow was fairly heavy (~11% H2O or so), but light enough to make powder turns. I'm sure it was even better up at 4000' and above. The first half of the run had the best snow, with much stickier stuff lower down, but I was still able to ski right back to the base of the triple and make a quick departure for Burlington. <BR> <BR>Images associated with this report (3 images) can be viewed at the following address: <BR> <BR><A HREF="http://www.uvm.edu/~jsilveir/11OCT00.html" TARGET="_top">http://www.uvm.edu/~jsilveir/11OCT00.html</A> <BR> <BR> <BR>J.Spin