Wasatch Daily

Utah Ski Conditions Today (Feb 21): Early-Corduroy Window, Cold Temps, and Canyon Access Notes

Published February 21, 2026 5:34 am · 3 min read
Actionable timing Snow quality first Wind impact guidance

Utah Ski Conditions for Saturday, February 21, 2026

Clear, cold morning with light-to-moderate ridge wind and only a small refresh overnight in the Cottonwoods. If you are chasing the best turns, your timing is simple: get up early for smooth cord and sheltered chalk, then expect firmer, faster skiing to build as traffic and sun work the surface through late morning.

Overall Day Quality

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Good visibility and manageable wind help, but new snow is limited and access/logistics are the bigger differentiator today.

What the mountains are showing this morning

  • Alta: 24-hour snow is 4 inches, base depth is 95 inches, and season total is 208.5 inches. Around report time, temps were roughly 2–5°F from mid to upper mountain with top winds around 10 mph from the WNW. Alta road status shows open, with parking reservations required Friday–Sunday (8 a.m.–1 p.m.). Alta weather & snow report
  • NOAA/NWS (central Wasatch mountain forecast point): early-morning temperatures near 5–7°F rising into the mid-20s°F this afternoon, with mostly sunny skies and generally 7–10 mph west-to-southwest winds. NWS point forecast data
  • Solitude: operations note indicates Ikon Pass First Tracks at 7:30 a.m. on Link, Apex Express, and Moonbeam Express today. Solitude conditions
  • Snowbird: resort status says open for skiing/riding, while uphill travel is closed. Snowbird current conditions
  • Deer Valley: mountain report alert indicates single-day lift tickets and Ikon reservations are sold out for Feb 21. Deer Valley mountain report

Canyon access and timing takeaways

  • Best window: first-chair through mid-morning for the smoothest surface quality and easiest visibility.
  • Wind impact: present but not extreme in current mountain/forecast data; still expect occasional exposed ridgeline texture.
  • Access friction: parking controls and sold-out products matter more than storm chaos today, so lock logistics early.

Local chatter to keep in mind

Practical Daily Gear Guide

What to wear

  • Base layer: midweight merino or synthetic.
  • Mid layer: light fleece or active-insulation piece for cold start.
  • Shell: full windproof/waterproof shell still makes sense with exposed ridge breeze.
  • Gloves: bring your warmer pair for the first laps; if your fingertips run cold below ~10°F, pack hand warmers.

Ski choice today

  • Best bet: all-mountain setup (roughly high-80s to low-100s underfoot) for mixed groomed + chalk pockets.
  • Powder skis: not the priority unless you specifically find sheltered leftovers.
  • Firm-snow option: if you expect mostly groomers after mid-morning, narrower frontside skis will feel quick and precise.

Goggle lens tint

  • Morning: low-light to mid-VLT lens works well for cold early light and occasional cloud bands.
  • Late morning/afternoon: switch to a sunnier lens (lower VLT) if skies stay clear and glare builds.

Bottom line: this is a logistics-and-timing day more than a deep-storm day. If you get out early, stay flexible on terrain, and manage access plans up front, you can still stack a very good Saturday.