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Sierra Skiers Rejoice After Storm Dumps 2 Feet, With More Expected

RENO (CBS/AP) -- The early winter storm that has Sierra skiers' spirits soaring blew across Nevada early Tuesday, dumping nearly 2 feet of snow on the northeast corner of the state, downing trees and power lines and temporarily closing a stretch of Interstate 80.

The storm that brought more than a foot of snow to the Sierra and record rainfall to Reno and Winnemucca on Monday was expected to bring up to another 4 inches of snow to the valleys around Elko by Tuesday night and up to 8 inches in the mountains there about 90 miles from the Utah line.

Winds gusting in excess of 50 mph accompanied the storm that already had left 22 inches of snow at the Wildhorse Reservoir 25 miles south of Owyhee at the Idaho line, the National Weather Service said Tuesday. Tuscarora had 18 inches of snow, Jarbidge 17 inches and Austin 12 inches.

Six inches of snow fell in Carlin. School was canceled Tuesday, and most residents were without power for more than eight hours after trees fell on power lines in winds gusting in excess of 50 mph along Interstate 80 about 12 miles west of Elko. Several vehicles slid off I-80 west of Carlin before the Nevada Highway Patrol closed the westbound lanes across the 6,114-foot Emigrant Pass shortly after midnight until midday Tuesday.

Multiple accidents also were reported south of Elko in Spring Creek, where 4 inches of snow fell, the patrol said. There were reports throughout rural Elko County of tree limbs on cars, homes and roadways, but no immediate injuries or serious damage.

Isolated power outages were reported after heavy snow snapped four power poles in the Ruby Valley east of Elko, where the low temperature is forecast to dip to 12 degrees by Wednesday night.

Snow fell early Tuesday as far south as Mt. Charleston west of Las Vegas, where 2 inches was reported at the Lee Canyon ski area, elevation 9,200 feet. A 70-mph wind gust also was recorded near there at the Spring Mountain Youth Camp, elevation 8,380 feet. A winter weather advisory remained in effect for that area through 4 p.m. Wednesday.

The back end of the storm churned strong winds from north of Las Vegas into Lincoln County, where a winter advisory was in effect until 4 p.m. Wednesday above 5,500 feet, and in White Pine County, where a wind gust reached 58 mph at Baker near the Utah line.

Reno's forecast calls for a chance of rain or snow continuing into Wednesday, when the Mount Rose Ski Resort plans to open three weeks ahead of the scheduled openings of most Sierra resorts. Several skiers took to the mountainsides neighboring the resort between Reno and Tahoe as soon as the flurries started falling early Monday.

"I couldn't even sleep last night I was so excited," Connor Clayton of Incline Village told Reno's KTVN-TV when he and two fellow students at Sierra Nevada College showed up for a few runs at 7 a.m.

"It was like Christmas morning for us," added Jeremy Landy.

Mostly rain fell in Reno on Monday—a record 1.04 inches that smashed the previous 1940 mark of 0.43 -- but more than 4 inches of snow was reported just north of the city in Cold Springs. To the east, Fernley reported 1.75 inches of rain, and Winnemucca totaled 0.91 inch, double its old record of 0.46, also set in 1940.

© Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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