https://ccin.ca/ccw/snow/current Northern hemisphere snow as at 12th AprilEurasia SCE and SWE is well-behaved, still melting in accordance with the models (in itself unusual). i.e. steady decline with SCE at 1 SD below average and SWE 1 SD above average.
North America stays really interesting. Two storms affected North America over the next week, the second being a monster - Storm Wesley. This dumped loads of snow especially on the high plains (see first image). As a result SWE (snow mass) is now well above +1SD (standard deviation) for the time of year, and SCE (snow cover extent) approaching +1 SD. (2nd and third images)
However, Spring has sprung. The last image shows typical late afternoon temperatures in North America over the next 10 days. So, my little prediction that belongs to me is that apart from some snow in the high mountains, there will be no snow on the ground south of 60 degrees North in North America well before the end of the month.
The real legacy of the extreme snow fall in North America seems to me to be the floods expected to roll down the Mississippi / Missouri river basin over the next two months. Wesley can only have worsened that outlook.