Spring’s arrival on the West Coast this year has caught everyone off guard. With temperatures nearly 20 degrees above average, skiers are left wondering if winter slipped away before it truly began. But on Mount Shasta, the story is different: the early warmth has ushered in an unexpected delight—corn skiing season has started ahead of schedule.
A Silver Lining to a Warm Winter
While lower elevations feel like late April, Mount Shasta’s upper slopes still hold a solid snowpack. Warm days and cool nights are already transforming the snow into legendary spring corn.
Corn snow forms when the sun melts the snow’s top layer by day, then refreezes overnight. By mid-morning, the surface softens into a layer of small, velvety crystals. It’s predictable, forgiving, and fast—and is appearing across much of the mountain.
Corn snow is abundant, especially higher up above 10,000 feet.
From the broad volcanic slopes above Bunny Flat to the sweeping runs descending from Avalanche Gulch, the conditions have been lining up for classic Shasta Spring skiing. Unlike resort skiing, skiing on Mount Shasta is all about timing. The perfect corn window usually opens mid-morning as the sun softens the overnight crust. Hit it right, and the mountain becomes a giant, silky playground—thousands of vertical feet of smooth turns with the Cascade Range stretching to the horizon. Miss the window, and you’re skiing either frozen concrete or afternoon slush. But when you nail it, there’s nothing quite like it.
Long Days, Big Lines
Spring skiing on Shasta means big descents—the mountain rises over 14,000 feet, offering long, sweeping runs.
Ski mountaineers start before sunrise, climbing in the cool hours of the morning. As the sun rises, the snow turns to perfect corn for the descent. The reward is thousands of feet of smooth, rhythmic turns back to the trailhead. This cycle is already happening with the early warmth.
The Early Season Advantage
Many people think warm weather means the season ends, but for spring mountaineers, it’s just starting.
Early corn cycles mean:
- More stable snow conditions
- Longer daylight hours for big missions
- Smoother, more predictable skiing surfaces
- Fewer storms and clearer views
Powder gets all the attention. But seasoned backcountry skiers know that corn is king. Right now, on Mount Shasta, the early warmth hasn’t shut the season down—it’s simply shifted it into one of the most enjoyable forms of skiing the mountain offers. While the West Coast may be running warmer than usual, the slopes of Shasta are reminding us of something important: Spring skiing isn’t a consolation prize. Sometimes, it’s the best skiing of the year. Have fun out there and be safe.
Written by Timothy Keating