David Goldsmith Wrote:
I remain far from convinced that making snow on the margins of the snow-line (not to mention below it) is viable. Lack of snow on Scottish mountains is more the product of thaw than lack of precipitation. The problem is that if the precipitation is rain (as often the case) ... then all the expensively generated artificial snow gets washed away.
I can only presume that you are referencing my projections referenced in the Scotsman newspaper for snow-making on the Coire Cas to Glenmore stretch? Lack of snow on Scottish mountains is more the product of factors which do not arrest ablation in particular areas. I think what you are missing out on, David, is that daily ablation has been calculated.
Where would you say the natural snow line is? Bob Clyde reckoned (1981) the 'minimum reliable' base-elevation on Cairn Gorm was 760m, and 'completely reliable' at 850m. We know that 600-630m is the base elevation of most ski developments in Scotland, and Clyde reckoned that this would see skiable cover for 50% of the average season. This is on open slope, and he pointed towards factors such as gully storage as decreasing the base elevation of skiable snow cover.
But gully storage is not the only factor that can promote snow longevity in this country. Look to Clashindarroch Forest at Huntly, where the Nordic ski trails are between elevations of 360m and 510m, with the site varying from dense plantation to thinned mature larch plantation to open moorland. The base elevation of 360m is similar to Glenmores, and far beneath where you consider the snow-line to be. However, in the years that have been recorded (from 2003 to present) an annual average of approximately 45 ski days have been possible at the Clash each winter (with a minimum of ~21 in 2007, and a maximum of ~108 in 2010). Here the positive effect of different micro-climates, primarily through provision of a sheltering biomass promoting snow-longevity, can be seen. I noted extraordinary snow longevity on a site visit in mid-March this year: despite south-facing tree-lined trails experiencing full exposure to the midday sun, a cover of firm snow continued to endure in these locations. This was in stark contrast to areas which were only lined on one side, or not at all, where no snow endured - regardless of aspect.
My recent university thesis used the failed 1960s Mar Lodge Ski Centre by Braemar as a case study upon which I examined the influence of snow-making equipment towards ski area viability both at its time of operation (1960s) and now. Within each scenario was a comparison between different standards of snow-making equipment (the primitive equipment they used in the 1960s, and modern equipment), between different exposures (open slope and forested), and between different aspects and elevations.
Using degree-day modelling techniques calibrated in the Mar Lodge catchment of the Cairngorms (as published primarily by Dunn and Colohan in various peer-reviewed journals in the late 1990s and early 2000s) I was able to predict daily snow ablation based on a series of variables: temperature, solar radiation, rain, aspect, slope openness... Most of these factors alter daily, while the latter two are kept constant throughout each scenario.
Doug Bryce mentioned on the Glenmore Gondola topic that I did not include wind as a variable in my calculations, and this is correct, and was done for a number of reasons: to begin with, there is a peer-reviewed hydrological paper (I will look up the name) which considers that on Cairn Gorm snow drifting is minimal beneath the 2000ft contour (my area of study was beneath this elevation band). Add in factors of a tree-lined and north-facing slope (considerable shelter from prevailing winds), as well as high density snow produced by snow cannons (more resistant to wind-drift, both in air and on the ground), as well as the mobility of snow guns (i.e., angle of production can be altered, guns can be moved backwards into the wind), and I consider it entirely reasonable to exclude wind drift from low-elevation snow-making calculations such as for the Coire Cas to Glenmore stretch. Please note that it is a factor which would absolutely have to be included in the production of any snow-modelling calculations above the 2000ft contour, and hence while my study has certain parallels to the present Cairn Gorm ski resort, parameters would have to be altered before direct parallels could be drawn.
The snow-making equipment I chose in my modern study was the Ratnik Sky Giant IV which starts up at -1.3°C wet-bulb. This has already been superseded by the Sky Giant VI which can start up at -1.1°C wet-bulb. Snow accumulation is calculated based on the number of hours per day for which the temperature was beneath the snow-guns start-up temperature (-1.3°C wet-bulb for Ratnik Sky Giant IV). I know how much water each gun can output, and the area requiring covered, so therefore (based on the industry standard snow density of 407kg/m^3) can build up the snow pack depth based on that. For info, in a single Sky Giant IV can produce 31.1m^3 of snow every hour at a middle-of-the-road pressure setting in marginal snow-making temperatures. The predicted daily snow depth is therefore simple the daily accumulation minus the daily ablation, and compiled over the course of a season.
What I expected to find was that modern snow-making equipment would have made the south-facing and low elevation (335m - 505m) Mar Lodge Ski Centre just viable at the time of its operation (in the 1960s), but certainly not in modern years. My requirements for a viable development borrowed the Alpine standard of 100 ski days and a minimum snow depth of 30cms for skiing to be possible. What my results found was that with 10 middle-of-the-road modern guns the development would likely be borderline viable today. If that slope was instead north-facing, and forested, I project well over 100 ski days per winter, even in the worst of modern winters, with just 10 guns. Note the parallels here to Clashindarroch and Glenmore.
To give this some perspective, Thredbo in Australia receive an average of around 200 snow-making hours at village level per season, and their snow-making plant has increased ski days to the village from an average of 19 days to just over 100 days (5 fold increase, and that's a fact - not a prediction!). To put that in perspective, in recent years Mar Lodge would have had the following numbers of snow-making hours - at an elevation of 335m (using Sky Giant IV - so the number of hours between November and April where the wet-bulb temperature is beneath -1.3°C):
2006/07: 270 hrs
2007/08: 703 hrs
2008/09: 737 hrs
2009/10: 1196 hrs
Extending the study to the Coire Cas to Glenmore stretch, using the assumption of 10 guns (for the length of the ski road, which is 3.9km):
Assuming piste width = 20m:
2006/07: 110 days (average snow depth = 48cm)
2007/08: 143 days (average snow depth = 95cm) - still open at end of April when my chart stops!
2008/09: 155 days (average snow depth = 102cm) - still open at end of April when my chart stops!
2009/10: 144 days (average snow depth = 127cm) - still open at end of April when my chart stops!
To be even more pessimistic, to a width of 25m (the standard piste width I used throughout my thesis):
2006/07: 100 days (36cm average)
2007/08: 137 days (89cm average) - still open end of April.
2008/09: 154 days (88cm average) - still open end of April. Just!
2009/10: 142 days (119cm average) - still open end of April.
My graphs demonstrating altering snow depth throughout the course of a season have shown me that the key is in being able to produce sufficient volume of snow to withstand any periodic thaw events - at present, Glenshee and the Lecht make 'just enough' to cover the brown patches, so it is no surprise that their artificial snow is washed away by the next thaw.
You will be aware that it is widely considered in peer-reviewed journals that North-East Scotland is expected to warm least out of anywhere in the UK. You will also be aware of the UKCIP09 climate projections where, based on their mean warming projections, 2007 can be considered to have been a warmer year than what they predict the mean 2080s average to be (their mean projection for the 2080s is +2.2°C with respect to 1961-1991).
It was considered at an international conference on winter tourism in 2003 that the most important for a ski resort to being technically viable is not so much in traditional factors such as climate, aspect or elevation, but rather in that ski resorts ability to adequately produce artificial snow.
With 2007 being a year considered to be out of the ordinary - both now and probably in the 2080s, it is because of the UKCIP09 climate projections that modelling snow-making capabilities in the past 5 year period can be considered so significant. If snow-making can be shown to produce 100+ ski days in 2007, would it be unreasonable to assume (referencing climate projections) that snow-making technology would continue to prove viable into the future? Also note that technological advances in the start-up temperatures of snow-making plant are presently far outstripping the rate of warming.
Two years ago I too was far from convinced about any of this, but following 1,600,000 cells of calculations it is now my absolute opinion that the old rules towards ski area viability have been thrown out the window. The idea of skiing beneath what you might consider to be the snow line can be seen on the ground as working due to protective biomasses at Clashindarroch, can be seen as working with provision of artificial snow-making at Thredbo, and it is my absolute opinion (backed by modelling) that with a combination of snow-making and a protective biomass we can see it work on the tree-covered north-facing slopes from Coire Cas to Glenmore.
Finally, I reference quotes attributed to CML employee Cathy Mordaunt in the book 'Snow Tourist' (2008):
Cathy, the mountain's ecologist, told me how the company planned to take lifts out at the bottom of the mountain and reinstall just a few of them at the top ... "We are losing infrastructure because we no longer use it - we no longer can
use it", she continued, "we will gradually retreat up the hill"
I believe there is another way.