Okemo Mountain Resort reported about 40 inches of snow Thursday. Courtesy photo

RUTLAND โ€” Nick Grandchamp took one look at the snowy pile covering his car Thursday morning and walked to work instead. 

There, at the Rutland Area Food Co-op, it was an unusually quiet day. The store, which usually closes at 7 p.m., closed at 4 p.m., he said. Most people in the area were snowed in after Winter Storm Gail dropped between 12 and 18 inches throughout the region. 

In some locations, particularly in a stretch from Albany, New York, to Vermontโ€™s Windsor County, that inch count was even higher. Gov. Andrew Cuomo declared a state of emergency in 18 New York counties because of the storm, and a record 41 inches fell in Binghamton, according to the New York Times.

โ€œThis is definitely a historical storm because of the snowfall,โ€ said Roger Hill, meteorologist based in Worcester.

Several locations in Vermont reported total snowfall of more than 40 inches, too, Hill said.

Road conditions are rated โ€œdifficultโ€ in Bennington, Rutland and Windsor counties, as well as throughout the entirety of New Hampshire and Maine. 

Conditions donโ€™t appear to have caused major power outages in the region. Thursday afternoon, Green Mountain Powerโ€™s outage center was only reporting one affected customer in the state.

โ€œAs forecasted, the snow is light/lesser density which means itโ€™s less likely to cause outages, compared to heavy wet snow or ice,โ€ said Kristin Kelly, the utility companyโ€™s director of communications. 

The utility directed customers to focus on travel safety and refrain from driving if possible. 

Hill said northern Vermont didnโ€™t see much snow. Snow totals dropped off significantly starting just south of Barre. But in the southern Green Mountains, the storm left behind light, fluffy snow that is particularly good news for ski resorts, Hill said, adding that โ€œthey’re going to be swimming in snow for a long time.โ€

In the midst of a season made difficult by both the pandemic and warmer-than-average temperatures, ski resorts are saying the snow was a well timed gift before the holidays.

Snowy car
Nick Grandchamp of Rutland, faced with the task of digging out his car Thursday, decided to walk to work instead. Courtesy photo

Bonnie MacPherson, communications manager for Okemo Mountain Resort in Ludlow, was baffled by the snow totals. 

โ€œIn my whole life, I’ve never seen anything like this,โ€ she said. โ€œI live 10 miles from the mountain, and I’m just amazed. It just kept coming.โ€

All day staff at Okemo watched a stake used to measure snow, which is wiped clean at 6 a.m. every day. 

โ€œThe measuring stick only goes to 24 inches,โ€ she said. โ€œThat just got buried by mid afternoon. I’m confident that we got 40 inches based on our guy on the mountain who was out there reporting all day, but we don’t have anything that measures that much snow.โ€

Killington Ski Resort was able to open seven additional trails on Thursday, bringing the total to around 30 open trails, and plans to expand to 50 by the weekend. The resort’s sister mountain, Pico, will also open this weekend as planned. 

Courtney DiFiore, communications manager for Killington, said there werenโ€™t more people than usual on the mountain Thursday. Because of the pandemic, the resort is restricting the number of skiers and riders on the mountain regardless of powdery conditions. 

In terms of the โ€œvibe,โ€ DiFiore said the general mood was elevated.

โ€œStoke is very high on the mountain,โ€ DiFiore said. โ€œEverybody’s super thrilled to be out there.โ€

MacPherson said the snow is an operational setback, but itโ€™s worth it.

โ€œWe have to dig out, you know, because there’s so much of it,โ€ MacPherson said. โ€œIt’s going to be slow-going for us to groom and get ready for tomorrow, but oh my god, tomorrow’s gonna be an awesome day.โ€

VTDigger's senior editor.