That''s my car at about 7:30 am at about 200 feet elevation above the Pickle Barrel. It kept snowing for another six or so hours after that. So, it ended up being about 13 inches or more. Never r*ined while I was on the slopes until about 1 pm.
Seems everybody has their own definition of a full-on POW experience. I call it full-on pow when skiing in as little as 4 inches of it results in a coating of snow all over my pants above my knees. This stuff skied really nice and fast, and packed under the skis, but it did not get kicked up by my fatty's tips. The wonderful stuff we had this morning was not light and fluffy, but rather dense and it had a lot of cohesion. When it was removed from my car it came off in chunks like cake and not like light fluff. It was not wet, but by my defintion it was not exactly full-on POW.
On most of the open trails they had groomed down the fresh snow sometime in the night before an additional 4 or 5 inches fell. So it was a nice base of packed dense "powder" with the dense "powder" on top.
In any care it was the best of the seven days I have skied this season and a great break for NE skiers. The chance to ski T2B was a real Thanksgiving treat.
Happy Thanksgiving!