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Two more Colorado ski resorts delay openings because of a lack of snow

Beaver Creek, Telluride reschedule, but Aspen, Snowmass, Crested Butte and Granby Ranch are on track

Statewide, the snowpack is one of the lowest the Colorado has seen for the date in nearly three decades, but Arapahoe Basin received a welcome dose of fresh snow on Tuesday. (Lucas Herbert/Arapahoe Basin)
Statewide, the snowpack is one of the lowest the Colorado has seen for the date in nearly three decades, but Arapahoe Basin received a welcome dose of fresh snow on Tuesday. (Lucas Herbert/Arapahoe Basin)
DENVER, CO - JANUARY 13 : Denver Post's John Meyer on Monday, January 13, 2014.  (Photo By Cyrus McCrimmon/The Denver Post)
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Two more ski resorts are postponing their opening days because of below-normal natural snow and challenging snowmaking conditions, but five others open this week with limited terrain.

Crested Butte and Granby Ranch opened on Wednesday. Aspen and Snowmass will open on Thursday. Purgatory, which was scheduled to open last week, will open on Friday.

Beaver Creek and Telluride were slated to open this week, but both were forced to postpone. Telluride is now shooting for Dec. 6.

Crested Butte is running the Red Lady Express, a high-speed quad chair that serves the lower part of the main mountain. Granby Ranch is running two lifts, serving three trails.

Aspen will open select terrain on the upper mountain, including Dipsy Doodle and Silver Bell, accessed by the Silver Queen gondola. Skiers and riders will have to download via the gondola because top-to-bottom skiing is not available yet. Snowmass will open beginner terrain in the Meadows area.

Arapahoe Basin, which opened Oct. 26, received four inches from a storm that arrived on Tuesday. Spokeswoman Shayna Silverman said crews there are working hard to open terrain on the upper mountain served by the Lenawee Express from mid-mountain to the summit.

“This lift from Mother Nature helps a ton to get there,” Silverman said.

Colorado resorts are near the lowest snowpack seen in the state since the winter of 1986-1987, according to OpenSnow founding meteorologist Joel Gratz, but there is some good weather news. at Steamboat and six at Vail over the next five days, while six others — including A-Basin, Copper Mountain, Loveland and Winter Park —  can expect five inches.

On Tuesday, the International Ski Federation announced that there is enough manmade snow on the race course at Beaver Creek to host men’s World Cup downhill, super-G and giant slalom races next week. Copper Mountain is hosting four days of men’s and women’s World Cup racing this week, beginning Thursday.

CDOT will be running for the races on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, originating at Denver Union Station with intermediate stops at Denver Federal Center Station and the Wooly Mammoth park-and-ride. The round-trip fare is $25. Regular weekend Snowstang service to Copper, Arapahoe Basin, Loveland and Breckenridge begins Dec. 13.

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