A terrific season for snow sports in the Northeast is winding down quickly, with nearby ski areas closing this coming Sunday and few in the state projected to stay open past mid-April.

Pats Peak in Henniker, Crotched Mountain in Francestown and Tenney Mountain in Plymouth are slated to shut this Sunday, March 29, with Sunapee, Gunstock and Ragged Mountain set to close the following Sunday, April 5. Other resorts will shut in the following week or two although Black Mountain in Jackson claims it will keep at least one run open until June 1.

These closing dates are not unusual, triggered not just by warmer weather but by the annual decline of people going skiing or snowboarding as spring-like temperatures turn their mind to other outdoor pursuits.

They come after one of the best Northeast ski winters in years, featuring solid snowfall that began in mid-November, long cold spells that allowed consistent snowmaking, and a lack of the mid-winter warming that waylaid the two previous winters. A number of Vermont ski areas reported more than 300 inches of total snowfall, with 150 inches or more reported at many New Hampshire resorts.

This was in sharp contrast to conditions in much of the West, which normally has far more snow than East Coast ski areas. Much of the Rockies and Sierras have seen record or near-record low snowfall totals, with some ski areas already shut for the season.

David Brooks can be reached at dbrooks@cmonitor.com. Sign up for his Granite Geek weekly email newsletter at granitegeek.org.