With the winter sports season melting fast, organizers of the World Cup cross-country ski race say they have enough snow stockpiled to keep the course frozen through mid-March.
It's the first race of its kind in the United States in almost 20 years, expected to bring up to 20,000 people to Theodore Wirth Park in Minneapolis. Many of the spectators will likely be there rooting for Olympic gold medalist and Afton's own Jessie Diggins to win.
The international event begins March 14, culminating with the sprint finals March 17, days before the vernal equinox.
Knowing the unpredictability of Minnesota winters, John Munger, executive director of the Loppet Foundation, which is hosting the race, oversaw a massive snow-making effort.
"We're not naive: It's March in Minnesota," Munger said last week. "You can get all kinds of different weather. So we've been planning since the beginning for the very real possibility of warm weather in March."
How warm, exactly? Enough to melt snow on the ground since Thanksgiving down to the brown grass, according to the National Weather Service.
That's not exactly rare for the tail end of the season; in 2017 at this time there was no snow on the ground at all, according to the Weather Service. The forecasts show temperatures will be hovering to the mid-40s later this week.
That's why the snow guns have been firing all winter. Since November, the Loppet's trails crew has made about 720,000 cubic feet of snow — with almost 5 million gallons of water — to make sure there is enough on the ground come race day. Most of it is spread out on the course already, groomed in a crisp corduroy pattern.