How to find the closest snow to you?

If you live in Pamiers near Toulouse, France, where is the snow-covered place that is the fastest accessible by car or by bike?

There is a beautiful snow map of the Pyrenees mountains near Pamiers from a Sentinel-2 image that was acquired yesterday (at the time of writing) [link to the data].

Theia snow cover map on 19 Nov 2019

In QGIS with the OpenRouteService API it is possible to calculate isochrones for a car trip from Pamiers:

This map shows the areas accessible by car from Pamiers in a given period of time (yellow 30-40 min, orange 40-50 min, red 50-60 min)

Finally if we make a spatial join between this map and the vertices of the snow polygons, we obtain the following map:

You can see in yellow the snow-covered places that are the fastest accessible according to OpenRouteService. Here is a zoom near Foix, there is a small road to reach the snow half an hour from Pamiers!

There are other APIs like OpenRouteService, for example that of Google enables to integrate traffic density in the calculation, but this service is not free. Beware that the time to mount the chains on the tires of the car is not taken into account …

You can even change the mode of transportation to calculate the travel time! Here the travel time is calculated for a cyclist from the city center of Foix.

Plus d'actualités

Autumn snow drought on Mount Damavand

« We are currently experiencing the driest autumn the country has experienced in 50 years » said Iran’s meteorological organisation. Near Tehran, Mount Damavand, the highest peak in Iran (5609 m) was reported to be « unusually bare of snow ». I checked this statement using my MODIS snow cover data processing algorithm implemented in Google Earth Engine (Gascoin […]

IOTA2 software mailing list

Hello everyone, We have just created a mailing list for users of the IOTA2 software (iota2 — iota2 documentation). The tool will undergo significant developments in the coming months, and the purpose of this list is to communicate with the community to support these changes and to maintain the processing workflows needed by the users. […]

Evolution des glaciers du Vignemale sous l’œil des satellites Pléiades (2013-2025)

Grâce à DINAMIS, un couple d’images stéréoscopiques a été acquis par Pléiades 1B le 14 septembre 2025. Le modèle numérique de surface (MNS) produit à partir de ces images peut être comparé à un autre MNS de septembre 2013 produit à partir des images Pléiades 1A commandées par Marti et al. (2014). Le glacier d’Ossoue […]

Rechercher