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Making Connections: Ski Utah's Backcountry Tour Links Resorts

27 December, 2010

Newcomers to Utah’s winter resorts may find it a tough choice to decide where in the Wasatch Mountains above Salt Lake City to hit the slopes.

So the Ski Utah Interconnect Adventure Tour may be just the ticket. The state's ski industry organization has put together this guided, one-day tour of six mountains that show not only how close skiing is to Salt Lake City, but also how near these resorts are to each other. The tour also gets skiers under the ropes to link some turns in the backcountry, as well as traverse across some of the highest ground in the Wasatch.

The Interconnect Adventure Tour costs $295 per person for a day and includes guide service, lunch, lift access, transportation back to point of origin and a finisher's pin. Participants must be 16 years or older, and those 18 or younger must go with a parent or legal guardian.

Snowboarders are not permitted on the tour, and only advanced or expert skiers can go on the tour, due in part to the amount of walking and traversing necessary.

One tour takes off from Deer Valley Resort on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. That tour touches six ski areas, including Park City Mountain, Solitude, Brighton, Snowbird and Alta before returning to the home base. The second tour runs Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays from Snowbird and takes runs on Alta, Brighton, Solitude, and Snowbird.
source: www.onthesnow.com



Snow report for the Pyrenees ski resorts - 27 Dec 2010

27 December 2010 -


Snow reports from Pyrenees Mountain ski resorts

It seems everywhere is getting plenty of snow except the Pyrenees! The east coast of America is in the grip of a serious winter storm and the UK has been under snow for the past few weeks.

Some resorts in the Pyrenees have reasonable cover, notably Cuaterets and Gavarnie/Gedre in France with well over a metre, plus Astun, Boi Taull, Candanchu, and Cerler in Spain.

Very little snow is forecast for the coming days, although it is due to remain cold, giving the resorts a chance of preserving the snow they already have.

Check the weather forecast here.

Pyrenees ski resorts snow report

Resorts marked (S) are in Spain

Resorts marked (A) are in Andorre

Snow depth - cm

Resort

Top

Base

Last snow

% open

Date opening

(predicted)

Arcalis-Ordino (A)

60

30

3 Dec

74

Open

Arinsal-Pal (A)

60

40

2 Dec

88

Open

Artouste

35

10

25 Dec

74

Open

Ascou-Pailhères

30

40

25 Dec

30

Open

Astun (S)

115

25

25 Dec

70

Open

Ax-les-Thermes

65

45

26 Dec

50

Open

Baqueira – Beret (S)

90

50

25 Dec

88

Open

Beille

20

15

25 Dec

24

Open

Boi Taull (S)

120

60

22 Dec

91

Open

Campan Payolle

0

0

-

0

Closed

Camurac

0

0

-

0

Closed

Candanchu (S)

105

20

25 Dec

80

Open

Cauterets

130

90

24 Dec

95

Open

Cerler (S)

115

50

22 Dec

63

Open

Chioula

10

5

25 Dec

30

Open

Tourmalet - La Mongie / Bareges

80

40

24 Dec

50

Open

Espot Esqui (S)

80

35

22 Dec

61

Open

Etang de Lers

10

2

24 Dec

0

Closed

Font-Romeu/Pyrenees2000

60

40

21 Dec

80

Open

Formigal (S)

90

30

23 Dec

66

Open

Formigueres

30

25

23 Dec

64

Open

Gavarnie Gèdre

140

70

25 Dec

82

Open

Goulier

15

10

24 Dec

0

Closed

Gourette

60

30

24 Dec

55

Open

Guzet

20

15

24 Dec

12

Open

Hautacam

25

10

17 Dec

0

Closed

La Molina (S)

50

25

25 Dec

30

Open

La Pierre St Martin

70

50

24 Dec

90

Open

Le Mourtis

60

50

24 Dec

-

Open

Les Angles

40

30

23 Dec

70

Open

Les Monts d Olmes

40

30

17 Dec

39

Open

Luchon Superbagnères

55

40

24 Dec

39

Open

Luz Ardiden

80

50

24 Dec

82

Open

Masella (S)

50

20

25 Dec

56

Open

Mijanes Donezan

20

15

25 Dec

27

Open

Nistos

40

20

25 Dec

100

Open

Panticosa (S)

40

15

3 Dec

71

Open

Pas de la Casa (A)

60

30

24 Dec

63

Open

Peyragudes

60

25

24 Dec

45

Open

Piau Engaly

60

25

25 Dec

65

Open

Pont d’Espagne

10

5

24 Dec

50

Open

Port Aine (S)

80

35

22 Dec

53

Open

Port Del Comte (S)

35

30

23 Dec

50

Open

Porte Puymorens

80

40

24 Dec

70

Open

Puigmal

50

40

-

50

Open

Saint Lary Soulan

70

30

24 Dec

63

Open

Soldeu (A)

60

30

24 Dec

63

Open

Val d’Azun

20

10

24 Dec

60

Open

Vall de Nuria (S)

50

40

23Dec

88

Open

Val Louron

25

80

24 Dec

35

Open

Vallter 2000 (S)

25

10

23 Dec

36

Open


source: www.guide2midipyrenees.com



Lake Tahoe snow report: More snow at resorts; Sugar Bowl gets foot of new snow

An abundance of snow has the Lake Tahoe ski resorts crowded with skiers and snowboarders during the holiday period.

On Christmas Day, all the Tahoe resorts received additional snow, with Sugar Bowl leading the way with nearly a foot of reported snow at the summit.

More snow is expected today (Dec. 26), while Monday is supposed to be mostly cloudy but snow is not anticipated. More snow should arrive on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Nearly all of Lake Tahoe’s ski resorts are now reporting over 100 inches of snow; great totals for this time of year.

Below is a look at the snow report as of Dec. 26.

ALPINE MEADOWS

New snow: 6-8"

Snow totals: 78-146"

Location: Highway 89, six miles west of Tahoe City

Web site: skialpine.com

BOREAL

New Snow: 6-10"

Snow totals: 82-125"

Location: Interstate 80 at Donner Summit

Web site: borealski.com

DIAMOND PEAK

New Snow: 1"

Snow totals: 64-95"

Location: Highway 431, Incline Village

Web site: diamondpeak.com

HEAVENLY

New Snow: 4"

Snow totals: 69-90"

Location: Ski Run Boulevard in South Lake Tahoe

Web site: skiheavenly.com

HOMEWOOD

New Snow: 6-10"

Snow totals: 75-126"

Location: Highway 89, six miles south of Tahoe City

Web site: skihomewood.com

KIRKWOOD

New Snow: 10"

Snow totals: TBA

Location: Highway 88 in Kirkwood

Web site: kirkwood.com

MOUNT ROSE

New Snow: 3-4"

Snow totals: 73-112"

Location: Mt. Rose Highway in Reno

Web site: skirose.com

NORTHSTAR-AT-TAHOE

New Snow: 8-11"

Snow totals: 58-101"

Location: Highway 267 near Truckee

Web site: skinorthstar.com

SIERRA-AT-TAHOE

New Snow: 5-8"

Snow totals: 40-106"

Location: Highway 50, 12 miles west of South Lake Tahoe

Web Site: sierraattahoe.com

SQUAW VALLEY

New Snow: 4-9"

Snow totals: 52-128"

Location: Highway 89, six miles from Tahoe City

Web site: squaw.com

SUGAR BOWL

New Snow: 7-12"

Snow totals: 65-128"

Location: Interstate 80, Norden exit

Web site: sugarbowl.com



Bulgarian ski resorts opened the season

27 December 2010 - Pamporovo and Borovec - two ski resorts in Bulgaria on December 18, 2010 opened its slopes for skiing. Skiing in Bulgaria - now this type of vacation has found additional benefits of new tracks and upgraded infrastructure.

Tourist authorities in Bulgaria are hoping that the current winter season for the country to be successful than the previous one. Experts estimate the potential growth of 20%. The bulk of the guests in Pamporovo and Borovec are expected to be foreigners.

Bulgarian travel agencies are seeing an increase in demand for tours in Pamporovo and Borovec among the Russians, as well as tourists from Serbia, Macedonia and Greece, reported by Sofia Echo.

What improvements await tourists on the slopes of Pamporovo and Borovec? Thus, the main operator of the ski resort of Pamporovo - Pamporovo AD - offers a new route between Snezanka and Studenec peaks. In total this season to prepare the slopes in Pamporovo were spent about 1 million levs.

In Borovec this season the bulk of investment was aimed at the acquisition of new snow guns on the slopes of Yastrebec and Sitniakovo. Also, the resort will open a new parking lot for 150 places.

Discounts in Bulgaria in winter is another nice addition, on which may count those who come to vacation in Pamporovo and Borovec. In Pamporovo will be reduced prices for seasonal ski passes. Their cost will be 950 levs comparing with 1450 levs last year. Discounts will also be offered to those, who purchase two-day lift passes. As for Borovec, the discounts are offered here only on its first weekend after the opening.

It is worth noting that a week ago, on December 11, Bulgaria has opened another ski resort - Bansko. Here the cost of a day ski pass is 55 levs in high season (December 27 - January 14) and 50 levs - in usual.source: www.skiurlaub-infos.com



Balkan Insight Ski Guide 2010/11

27 December 2010 - Brezovica is definitely a little rough around the edges, but it, nonetheless, offers amazing value-for-money skiing.

As you stare across the mountainsides around the Brezovica ski station, the immense potential of the place is all too obvious, even to the untrained eye.It will, undoubtedly, become a major skiing destination at some point in the future, but even today it is a great place to catch some, cheap ski action and revel in some après-ski fun.



The most important ski resort in Kosovo is the Brezovica Ski Centre, located in the far south of Kosovo, in the northwest part of the Shar Mountains, between Kosovo and Macedonia.

The resort covers altitudes between 900 and 2,500 metres and claims to have the best snow record in the Balkans.

A popular skiing destination in the former Yugoslavia, it was chosen as an alternative site for the Sarajevo Winter Olympics of 1984.Slopes for slalom and giant slalom have been officially registered by the Federation Internationale de Ski.

But the resort has seen little investment since the conflict of the late 90s and a series of privatization bids have been held up because of inter-ethnic politics.Brezovica and the surrounding municipality of Strpce are a Serb-majority area and attempts by the Pristina authorities to sell the resort have been blocked.

Skiers will find five chairlifts and five ski lifts, which are connected to 16 kilometres of slopes with an average length of 3,000 metres.

But a lack of investment means that just two chairlifts and one t-bar lift are actually working.But the pistes are wide, pleasant and varied and you can still enjoy some great skiing and this bargain basement resort.And if you can make it up on a sunny weekday, you will have the place virtually to yourself.

The resort boasts snow cover for almost 128 days per year, from December until the end of April, and offers good off-piste action.The seasons here tends to start a little later than other stations in the Balkans as extra snow is needed for the slightly rough slopes to be in good condition for skiing.

Ski passes cost from 10 euro for a one day pass to 400 euro for the whole season.The ski season is expected to start imminently with the arrival of heavy snow this week.Keep your eyes pealed on www.njeri.net or www.brezovica-ski.com or information.

And, if you want to check out the snow or whether the lifts are working, it is worth visiting the IPKO webcam at www.ipko.net Where to Eat, Drink and Rest Your HeadRestaurantPizzeria Tina Tel. +381 63 61 39/86, igor_nikolcevic@ yagoo.com.

A Brezovica institution, combining great food and extremely friendly staff. It offers a very wide selection of dough-based delicacies, with just about every imaginable topping, and excellent salads.

Soak up the sun at its pleasant outdoor area, which is usually buzzing on sunny days. It’s just a shame that the view is the concrete base of a ski lift.

The pizzeria is a great source of information and help to find flats or houses to rent in Brezovica. Signposted from the main road, up a steep and often treacherously slippery path. Open 09:00 - 24:00.

Hotels

The Mountain Motel Tel. +381 638 16 52 56/+381 638 57 68 41.

The best budget option in Brezovica offers small, modern, clean rooms and suites equipped with a kitchen.

The restaurant is one of the best in Brezovica, serving up typical, hearty mountain fare from the Strpce region, strong local brandy and some of the best vistas in the resort.

Don’t be put off by the owner’s curmudgeonly demeanour - Ivan is a very affable and helpful chap.Find it just beyond the chair lifts. 9 rooms (6 doubles 20 euro, 3 suites).

Woodlands Hotel Tel. +377 44 44 44 48/+386 49 44 44 48, info@woodlandhotel-ks.com, www.woodlandhotel- ks.com. The new Woodlands Hotel is by far the most comfortable and stylish option, although the prices are relatively steep.

All rooms include modern bathrooms, flatscreen televisions and comfortable beds; apartments have a jacuzzi and sleep up to four people. The hotel is just a few paces from the slopes.

Your bags are delivered to the rooms by snowmobile. The restaurant has more of the trendy urban feel than rustic mountain lodge and serves Balkan specialities as well some international dishes, a rarity in this part of Kosovo. 21 rooms (12 doubles 70 euro, 3 triples 90 euro, 4 quads 120 euro, 2 apartments 150 euro).BarFox Pub Tel. +377 44 98 08 36/+377 44 38 11 11.

This venue is by far the coolest place to hang out in Brezovica. With a selection of card games, Connect 4, snacks, decent cocktails and even a pet iguana, there’s not much missing for après-ski fun.

At the weekend it gets smoky and packed, as the young and cool listen to DJs or warble out karaoke numbers. It also serves the best macchiato in town. Next to Pizzeria Tina.

Open 08:00 - 02:00.These reviews are courtesy of the Prizren in Your Pocket guide, providing the best run-down of skiing in Brezovica. Released earlier this year, it is available online at www.prizren.inyourpocket.com, as a free PDF download and as an iPhone app too. Hard copies are on sale for 2 euro at Dukagjini bookstore, Dit e Nat, the airport and street kiosks. Companies, institutions and hotels can order complimentary copies for staff and visitors via prizren@inyourpocket.com.

Kosovo’s ‘Alternative’ Outdoor Sport Destination – Boge

Nestled between the mountains of the Rugova Valley, at 1,400 metres above sea level, the village of Boge is one of the best places in Kosovo to enjoy the snow.

Although it doesn’t offer quite as spectacular views as Kosovo’s main skiing destination, Brezovica, Boge has a friendlier feel and almost all its facilities are handily gathered around the ski lifts.

It also has a better range of accommodation close to the lifts, including two venues which offer beautiful log cabins, perfect for a weekend retreat with a group of friends.

A ski pass will set you back 10euro a day, giving you access to the village’s sole lift and around 1km of slopes, with three different paths.The options aren’t particularly varied or challenging for competent skiers, but it’s a great place for learners and those wanting to practice their rusty descent skills before braving the more difficult terrain at Brezovica.

The lift is open from 9am to 4pm every day.Good quality equipment can be hired at Rudi Group and lessons can also be organized from this outfit and a few others around the lift.The slopes also offer good sledging opportunities, although you have to negotiate the often crowded foot of the hill, which is usually swarming with people enjoying a barbeque, even in the freezing weather.

This area is lit up at night, so you can enjoy nocturnal sledging, if it takes your fancy.

The cabins offered by Rudi Group and Relax Rugova book up well in advance for weekends, so plan ahead.They offer great accommodation in fourto-six people cabins, which include small gardens, kitchens and living rooms. The Relax Rugova cabins are a couple of minutes drive from the village, whereas those of Rudi Group are a few feet from the ski slopes, in the middle of the village.

If you can’t secure a log cabin, the hotels are mostly basic but comfortable. Hotel Burri, for example, offers small but clean rooms for 25euro a night with good views across the valley, 24-hour electricity and shared bathrooms.The food at Burri is a bit hit-and-miss, although this is made up for by the cozy feel of the place. It’s an excellent venue for some warming glasses of Raki after a bracing day on the pistes.

The restaurant attached to the Rudi Group is right next to the ski centre and offers cheap, tasty food, and a healthy dose of mountain spirit.Boge is around a 45 minute drive from Peja, although travel times can vary widely depending on the weather.

The road which snakes through the Rugova Valley is often snowy at this time of year, but is pretty well asphalted and cleared regularly.Some 22km along the route from Peja you will reach a T-junction, with one road leading steeply up to the very pleasant summer resort of Guri i Kuq and the other to Boge.The road to Boge is unpaved and becomes very slippery at this time of year, so a fourby- four is recommended.

If you don’t have one, snow chains are a must, although some attempt the route in regular saloon cars. This invariable ends with numerous stops as the cars or minibuses become stuck in the snow.It’s worth trying to arrive early, as there are few passing places along the route and it gets very busy on good ski weekends.

Altitude of the resort -1,400mTotal number of lifts – 1

Kopaonik, Serbia

At just a two hours drive from Pristina, if you have the correct stamp, Kopaonik offers great skiing at decent pricesSerbia’s biggest ski resort, Kopaonik, offers tourists everything they could expect from a perfect skiing holiday.

A range of improvements have been made to the ski centre over the summer, including increased capacity of the lifts and the opening of two new pistes.The resort is surrounded by a beautiful national park and the area is renowned for its stunning Flora in Fauna, as well as its 200 days of sunshine which have earned it the nickname of the mountain of the sun.

You’ll be hoping however that most of the flora is underneath the snow and with around 160 days snow cover each year, you should be in luck.Kopaonik has been the top destination for Serbs for some time but since 2004, when the last landmines were removed, foreign tourists have returned too.

In the 70s and 80s this was a popular budget skiing destination and in the last few years has been trying to catch up with the foreign competition. The resort lacks nothing that its French or Italian counterparts – from the quality of the well groomed slopes to, these days, the fairly stiff prices.

Although your ski pass at 15 euro a day (10 euro for kids) compares favourably to the French Alps, where a day in Chamonix would cost you 40 euro (30 euro for kids), Serbia’s biggest ski centre is an expensive option because of the price and standard of accommodation.

If you don’t mind staying in an apartment or hotel room that looks exactly the same as it did in its 70s heyday and you are not the type of person that cares an awful lot about a dedicated service team, then there are certainly options in Kopaonik.There is a wide variety of hotels and apartments available for rent, at prices starting around 40 euro per night per person, but quality is often variable.

Take a recommendation from a friend or do some thorough research before accepting a budget deal.This season many European travel agencies have dropped Kopaonik from their skiing catalogue, so perhaps this will have freed up some space and you may just find a bargain.

One of the most popular destinations for locals remains the Grand Hotel, (036 71037), located just a few metres away from the beginning of one the main lifts up the slopes and with it’s own ski-rent facility and ski shop.

The hotel offers an indoor swimming pool (accessible to non-residents), jacuzzi, sauna and fitness centre.Prices start at about 40 euro per person per night in a shared room for 3 people, but will be much higher at peak times.

The resort will not impress experienced thrill-seekers but provides enough of a range to keep intermediate skiers and beginners happy.If you are in for adding a bit of excitement and still have the energy after a long day of skiing, then night skiing on the Malo Jezero slope will be just the right thing for you.

The slope is open between 7pm and 10pm and costs around 10 euro.One of the newer additions to the resort is the snowboard park where boarding fans can build their own jumps.

In a sign that Kopaonik is trying to become more ‘hip’, it has started hosting a snowboard and music festival staged by the organisers of the infamous EXIT festival.Ski rental is available widely and costs about 50 euro for a week or around 8 euro per day, with discounts available for children.

Mavrovo, Macedonia

The northwest of Macedonia is home to one of the most beautiful mountain valleys in the region, Mavrovo.

It is just one hour’s drive from the capital, Skopje, on motorways and well maintained roads. Drive time from Prishtina is likely to be in the region of 3 hours.

The Zare Lazarevski ski centre in Mavrovo has been recently renovated, increasing the capacity of the ski lifts, and offers good quality accommodation and great views.

The ski trails start at 1960m and end some 700 metres or so down in the town.

The 5,000 metres of pistes provide opportunities for beginners and advanced skiers alike and a short section of the trails is lit up some evenings, making night-time skiing possible.Skiing is cheap with around 17 euro securing a day pass and 100 euro a weekly ticket.

Close to the slopes, the Hotels Bistra, (www.bistra.com) with 42 rooms, is a good option. It has a rustic feel and offers a restaurant, serving up hearty fare, a heated, indoor swimming pool, sauna and jacuzzi.

The same group also owns two other nearby hotels. The Hotel Makpetrol (+389 23146273) is a short walk from the pistes.The pick of the bunch if you are looking for luxury is the Hotel Radika (www.radika.com.mk).This five-star resort is about as trendy as you get and also offers a full-range of spa options to soothe your aching calves.

Rooms start at 39 euro a night (see advert).One downside of the station is it sits at just 1,250metres, meaning that the quality of the snow at low levels can sometimes be patchy. The ski season opens on December 18.

Popova Sapka, Macedonia

Popova Sapka is located in the northwestern part of Macedonia, and is one of the most popular winter ski resorts in the country.

It is situated in the beautiful Shar Mountain at 1,780 metres above sea level, just 35 kilometres from the capital Skopje. On average, Popova Sapka sees 135 days of snow.

The resort is a little more run down than its neighbour Mavrovo, but has a pleasant, friendlier feel to it.The view from Popova Sapka is superb and opens out towards the neighboring mountains Jakupica and Solunska Glava (2540m), and also towards the Polog valley.

The skiing village includes around 250 to 300 chalets to rent and a smattering of independent restaurants. Ski-schools and equipment hire can be arranged at hotels and in the village.Decent Italian food is served up at Casa Leone in the village, which has amazing views from its terrace.

The none too imaginatively named Hotel Popova Sapka (+389 44361020) is the biggest hotel in the resort with 140 rooms, but the Hotel Slavija, above the Popova Sapka hotel, is perhaps better appointed and has an indoor swimming pool. Rooms in both these hotels are around 20 euro per person per night.

The ski region’s website (www.popovasapka.mk) will be of no use unless you speak Macedonian and read Cyrillic but the site of the Mountain House Granit www.popovashapka13.com.mk, coincidentally a great value place to stay at 15.50 euro per person per night, has some resort information and also, curiously, pictures of all the other hotels in town.

At 11.50 euro a day, the ski passes are a bargain too.

Montenegro

Montenegro's ski resorts might not live up in size to some European destinations, but quantity and quality is not the same thing.

The rugged mountains of Montenegro conceal the deepest canyon in Europe, and they also hide away Moraca, and Kolasin.Kolasin, with its ski centre Jerzerine, is a small resort compared to developments in Switzerland, France or Austria but when you are standing on the top of the mountain, with the white powder snow stretching out below you, you will begin to ask yourself why you have not come here before.

The slopes are perhaps not the most demanding, but the stunning scenery will more than compensate for that.The really rather lovely Bianca Resort, (www.biancaresort.com), is the place to stay here but with prices over 100 euro per person per night for bed and breakfast in peak season, it's not a budget option.If you are up for an adventure and looking for more demanding slopes, make your way over to Zabljak in the Durmitor National Park.Zabljak has everything that you could wish for in a ski resort.

Located deep in a forest with 20 peaks looming up around it, and 18 fairytale crystal clear lakes nearby it is a truly breathtaking sight.The town sits at an altitude of 1456m and if you take yourself up to the top of the pistes at 2,313 then you can enjoy a whole 3.5km of 'black run' downhill skiing.

However, in what must be one of the frankest pieces of PR writing, the Visit-Montenegro website speaks of the appallingly low standard of provision for tourists.So perhaps you may not live in the lap of luxury in Zabljak (athough to be honest our opinion is more positive than the Visit Montenegro website), but the skiing and the scenery are unmatchable.The Montenegro resorts can be difficult to reach from Kosovo in the winter as the Rozaje pass is often closed.

If you have a Serbian stamp or passport, however, it is best to reach the centre passing through Zubin Potok and Serbia.

source: www.balkaninsight.com



White Pine ‘goes downhill’ fast

White Pine Ski Resort opened its doors – and slopes – for the season on Thursday, Dec. 9 after receiving Bridger-Teton National Forest officials’ approval for its conditional-use permit.

According to Jim Sullivan, the new general manager at White Pine, both the lower and upper mountain trails are groomed and ready for skiers and

snowboarders.

“This morning and about 11 a.m. it was just perfect; there was four to six inches of new snow,” Sullivan said Friday. “It’s just what we needed.”


He said conditions are excellent for skiing and snowboarding and that the snowboarders seem to be gliding on the snow.

At White Pine there is about 22 inches on average of unpacked snow at the middle of the mountain and Sullivan expects a busy weekend for the ski

resort.

For its first weeks White Pine is open Thursday through Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. As of Thursday, Dec. 16, White Pine will be open seven days a week.

Sullivan said the resort has to hire more employees to run lifts and serve food, and is also looking to fill positions for the ski school and on the ski patrol.

White Pine owners wanted to open last Thursday but were still awaiting approval for their permit.

Back in mid October, the owners formed the group “Citizens to Save White Pine” to buy the resort with the goal of keeping it open for the public.

Ken Konicek, one investor in the venture, told the Sublette Examiner that the public could expect the ticket prices at White Pine to be lower than in the past.

The White Pine Ski Resort also received a liquor license from the county this week – the new owners are planning a more casual bar and grill for skiers, snowboarders and visitors.

Rex Poulson, another investor, told the Examiner the new owners’ main focus is making sure White Pine’s ski lifts are running and the public can come to ski and snowboard.

For more information about White Pine Ski Resort, call 307-367-6606 or visit www.whitepineski.comsource: www.subletteexaminer.com



Skiing in Switzerland, far off the beaten track

By CHRISTOPHER SOLOMON
New York Times


In the early 1990s, Powder magazine, the proudly die-hard ski rag that has weaned countless future ski bums, published an article in which the author spoke of a mystical ski area of unprecedented off-piste challenge. So paranoid was the writer that this mountain's pristine slopes and elevator-shaft chutes would soon be overrun by, well, the rest of us, that he wouldn't even name the place. He would only call it — tantalizingly — Valley X.

Secrets are hard to keep in the ski world. People pieced together the clues, and word got out that Valley X was La Grave, France. La Grave became famous.

A few winters later Powder ran a piece about another unknown ski kingdom — a Valley Y — where off-piste runs stretched for a vertical mile or more. The place was revealed as Alagna, Italy. "So many Swedish ski bums" — those shock troops of great skiing — "showed up there and were so rowdy, Alagna had to hire a cop for the first time in its 800-year history," recalled Powder's former editor, Steve Casimiro.

The pattern has played out again and again in subsequent years in places like Engelberg and Andermatt, Switzerland. The arc is always the same: from rumor, to Swedes, to pictures in ski magazines, to appearances in ski movies, until finally your secret slopes become a play land crowded with powder seekers.

As a former ski bum, I've always chafed at not knowing about the next great place — at being the guy who has to buy his secrets secondhand with beers at the bar, then jockey for powder turns with everybody else who's come late to the party. Why couldn't I be the first to know about the next hidden gem?

Then one day a mountain guide I'd been talking to about the Alps let slip that there was a place tucked away in Switzerland's more remote and quirky Graubuenden canton. He said that it had the vertical terrain of a Whistler-Blackcomb in Canada yet none of a big resort's neon or crowds. What's more, most of the skiing was ungroomed and wild — a ski area served by lifts yet untamed by them. I searched but could find almost nothing written about it. That only excited me more.

Then came the clincher: Some Swedes had recently opened a bar there.

Clearly it was time to visit, and fast, before my Valley Z got away.

I won't make you hunt for clues. Valley Z goes by another name, Disentis. And fittingly, everything about it adds to the sense that it's a place apart, a half-step removed from the rest of the world — or even the rest of Switzerland. The town of 2,100 people sits on a high step of the Rhine Valley where snow closes off the main roads over the Oberalp and Lukmanier passes each winter, reducing access. (You can still drive in from the east, or — more likely for tourists — take the Glacier Express train route from points west over the Oberalp. You can also load your car onto a train that travels over the same pass.) Here in this isolated nook of the Graubuenden, even the language is different: This is the beating heart of the ethnic minority who speak a Latin-based language all their own called Romansch. Most of the inhabitants of this valley speak a dialect of Romansch called Sursilvan — expect to be greeted with "Bien di!" instead of a Swiss-German "Gruezi!"

The people make up in warmth for what the small village lacks in typical Swiss coziness. For better or worse, the Twee Police haven't yet arrived here in this part of the more rough-and-ready Graubuenden. Eight hotels — only a few of them of any size — sit along the valley's two-lane road, as do a dozen or so restaurants serving up specialties like capuns, a regional dumpling dish. (Public bus service along that road takes skiers to and from the nearby ski gondola on the edge of town.)

There are few stores, and little to see save the ancient local abbey on the hillside and a beautiful little town church. In short, Disentis feels less like a traditional ski town than a working town in which winter tourism is something that happens for several months a year.

A feeling that Disentis is also home to a different kind of ski area was apparent even on the train into town last March. As near as I could tell, I was nowhere near the slopes and still miles from town when the train stopped high in the valley. Yet a dozen skiers boarded my incoming train. Noticeably absent were those twiggy little skis still favored by many Europeans for squiggling down the groomed runs. Almost everybody carried chubby powder boards. Moreover, half the crowd was wearing ski-touring boots. Where had they come from? Answer: They'd started at Disentis 3000, the decent-size ski resort that rises above town, but they did not confine themselves to it.

Go for the powder

Disentis has nine ski lifts and 37 miles of marked runs. But if you come to ski the pistes, you've made a terrible mistake. They're narrow, poorly groomed and off-kilter — certainly not what an American expects from groomers. What's more, the pistes are where the few crowds are likely to be found. I tried them on my first run and scarcely returned to them again during my four-day stay.

This place is worth visiting only for the powdery off-piste ridges and valleys — accessible from the lifts — often requiring little or no hiking to reach.

And for a little while longer at least, it's all yours.

"When we came here in 2008, there were not many freeriders at all," said a 27-year-old Swede with a deep goggle tan named Anders Floden, referring to off-piste skiers. "We could get up at two o'clock in the afternoon and still get first tracks." Floden is one of four owners of a bar near the base of the ski hill. (It's appropriately named Nangijala after a fantasy world in a children's story.) Now, as word leaks out about Disentis, Floden and his friends might get up a little earlier. But not much.

"I've got some professional freerider friends and it's their favorite place," he said of Disentis. "It's not really steep, but there are so many options."

The best and safest way to experience Disentis is to join a "freeride" group led by a mountain guide, who leads skiers to the best wild snow while keeping them safe from avalanches. (In standard European fashion, there is no apparent ski patrol here to bail you out; when you venture away from the pistes, you're on your own.)

The valley's few guides had been booked up weeks in advance — a worrisome sign of the growing buzz about the place — and so a few mornings after arriving I headed out (at a leisurely hour, naturally) with my friend Tim, an expat living in Switzerland, along with Floden, who'd offered to show us around.

Disentis' size and its possibilities aren't apparent from the valley floor, nor even from the foggy windows of the tram that sweeps you from the village skyward. It is only higher, from the seat of the second chairlift, that the broad-shouldered peaks fully reveal themselves, spilling into high white valleys far above the trees.

"First run, I think we'll go over there, to Bostg, because it's north-facing and the snow is pretty good," Floden said. He pointed to a ridge seemingly miles away that arched upward like the back of some beast sunning itself in March's strong sunshine. We traversed for 10 minutes, tossed skis over our shoulders and hiked for five more, and were suddenly there, atop the ridge called Bostg. Beneath our ski tips was a 2,000-foot ski run blanketed with nearly untouched powder even though the last storm had swept through nine days earlier. And we were alone. Not bad at all.

Unfortunately, not every run would be so tasty: Sunshine followed by a cold snap over the previous few days had refrozen the warmed snow elsewhere on the mountain and rendered it unpleasantly crunchy, bringing the delicious mystery I'd built up as Valley Z down to earth. Absent great conditions, we had to imagine the potential of the terrain, even as we scratched our way down slopes rough and chunked with ice.

That afternoon we took the chairlift as high as possible again but this time we crossed to the other side of the ski area. We stood atop a ridge and looked into the empty Val Gronda (Romansch for Big Valley) and gaped at a yawning, treeless space peppered with boulders. "Gronda" was right — this valley could have been a ski area in itself.

Empty backcountry

The scene brought to mind an inflated version of Mineral Basin at Snowbird, or a steeper version of Vail's back bowls. But Val Gronda reminded me of no place so much as Silverton — Colorado's no-frills backcountry ski area where a single lift deposits skiers atop nearly 2,000 acres of tilted bowls, scare-your-mother cliffs and avalanche-prone gullies.

"This is incredible," Tim said. "What's the longest hike we've done — five minutes?" And then there was the silence: Again, we were alone save for two specks moving far across the valley. For a country that has so many lifts, and so many ways of getting people into the mountains, this kind of isolation is really unusual. As Tim put it: "It almost doesn't feel like you're in Switzerland."

If only the snow conditions had been up to the scenery. The skiing was, frankly, dismal due to the ricocheting temperatures. But we dove in anyway, our disappointment softened by the rare enjoyment of nearly a vertical mile of skiing. Down we plunged until the creek bed ushered us back to the main valley and the awaiting, nearly empty, tram.

After our runs — and even though the skiing wasn't grand — I felt weirdly privileged to drink a cold beer with the Swedes at Nangijala; the place was filled with Disentis' small hardcore ski crowd and with mountain guides, and for once I was here with them, instead of chasing them. After the sun dropped below the sun deck, we headed back to the comfortable, 157-room Disentiserhof, the village's largest hotel, to scrub up for a stroll about town. We needn't have scrubbed too hard: seeing little Disentis took all of about 20 minutes. We then ducked into the country rococo dining room of Die Stiva Grischuna for a heaping helping of gemuetlichkeit with our Romansch fare like polenta alla nonna — granny's polenta with baked pears, veal and cream.

Our own private ski hut

My last day in Disentis, a frigid morning tossed with wind and snow, I snagged an empty spot in a large "freeride" group of Germans led by two mountain guides who'd grown up in the valley. At the top lift, one guide, Iso Giossi, checked to make sure our avalanche beacons were working. Then we shouldered skis or strapped on climbing skins and began a 30-minute trudge into the clouds. Eventually, out of the whiteness, two dozen iron rungs bolted to a mountainside materialized before us. There was no rope. No safety line. Just our own frozen grip and good sense to keep us safe. We handed up the skis, then climbed the rungs to the ridge top. "Lean back and relax a little bit," said the other guide, David Berther. It was unclear if he was joking.

A patch of blue sky briefly opened, and for a moment we could glimpse the top of 10,919-foot Oberalpstock, which looms over this area. But we weren't headed that way. On the ridge we clicked into skis for the 5,200-vertical-foot run down Val Strem.

I'm told the valley is beautiful, but the visibility that day was milk-jug white, and we felt our way through the soft new snow. As we dropped, a stream joined us, gurgling some happy commentary to our descent. The clouds lifted just enough for us to see an ibex posing on a promontory. How long was the ski run? Four miles? Five? Six? We didn't know. Nor did we worry that there wasn't a lift waiting at the bottom to sweep us back up, and that it might take half the afternoon and a train hop to get back to the resort. The lingering runs, the lingering lunches, the lingering returns — it's all part of the unhurried way that Europeans do adventure. Fittingly, we skied right into the neighboring town of Sedrun and practically right into a steaming plate of capuns to warm up.

That afternoon after a taxi ride back to Disentis, we were the only ones taking the gondola back up the mountain. There was time for one more run, and the guides led us to Val Pintga (Small Valley). They had plans for us.

As we skied down to where the valley merged with another, one of the guides, Berther, skied ahead. He stopped near a giant snow-covered rock, then ducked behind it. We followed, and found him unhitching the door of a mountain hut, smothered under four feet of snow. I had heard of that famous Romansch friendliness; now Berther was throwing open the shutters of this cabin and inviting us inside.

It was a former cheese-making hut with chamois antlers on the wall, a pair of old wooden skis on the ceiling, a black-and-white picture of a crusty old mountain guide scowling across the chilly space at a pinup girl lounging in a bathing suit. Then the guides put the coffee on. Somebody popped the top on a Calanda Edelbrau beer and handed it to me. A bottle of schnapps started to circle the room.

And it occurred to me then: Isn't this what we're really after, those of us who talk about finding The Next Great Place? We babble like statisticians about snowfall and feet of vertical drop. But in the end, aren't we really just looking for a place that's genuine, and that genuinely embraces us — where we don't feel like just another tourist banging out turns?

We sat, all 14 of us, sipping schnapps and laughing in our secret mountain hut, our breath puffing like smoke, the warmest we'd been all week.
source: seattletimes.nwsource.com



Vt.'s Bolton Valley ski area for sale

8 Disember, 2010


Vermont's Bolton Valley ski area is for sale.

Co-owner Doug Nedde says he and partner Larry Williams also are open to a joint venture that would add revenue to the resort.

Nedde did not name the asking price for the resort, the closest ski resort to Burlington.

Nedde says projects that could be developed as part of a joint venture include a mountain coaster, a snow tubing park and a canopy tour that would take people through the treetops at the 750-acre resort.

The Burlington Free Press says Nedde and Williams have owned the resort for four years.

Bolton hosts about 1,500 schoolchildren each week in after-school ski programs.

Nedde says Bolton will open for the season on Friday.
source: www.necn.com



Beautiful Black Jack opening day


December 09, 2010 9:00 AM

Black Jack Cross Country Ski Club has started the season and they couldn’t have picked a better day, opening the tracks on Dec. 4 to brilliant sunshine and fresh snow.

“Conditions are fantastic at Black Jack,” said the club’s president, Wannes Luppens. “[It was] great to see the parking lot so full this whole weekend!”

“With the recent snow, the club’s new snow cat has set some great trails, both skating and classic,” said Luppens, keen to thank everyone who contributed to the purchase of the new vehicle, “especially the members of the Nelson & District Credit Union [$10,000] and Teck [$20,000] for getting us across the finish line and allowing us to secure the $50,000 matching grant [from the Southern Interior Development Initiative Trust.]”

The club is now busily engaged getting memberships for the year.

To get skiers in the mood, the club will host Free Ski Day on Dec. 12, sponsored by Gericks Cycle and Sport. There will also be free beginner lessons and rentals while supplies last.

As part of the club’s membership drive, the big “Vancouver Getaway” prize, valued at $1,360, is still up for grabs.

“The chances of winning are currently one in 60,” Luppens reported on Dec. 3. “The contest goes until Christmas Eve.”

“The more new or ex-members you convince to join the club, the higher your chances of winning,” Luppens explained. “The prize is return airfare for two courtesy of Pacific Coastal Airlines and two nights stay courtesy of the Fairmont Waterfront in downtown Vancouver.”

The club recently announced its early-bird winners, drawn from members who got their passes before Dec. 1.

Sarah Adamson took the top prize, a ski package from Kootenay Nordic Sports valued at $500, and Jonah Houlden won a cat skiing trip with Big Red Cats valued at $360.

Paul Heikkila, Tracey Billett, Chantal Hoilund, and Jill Spearn each won $50 gift certificates from Gerick Cycle and Sport, and Sierra Gibson won an adult season pass at Black Jack.

Christine Baillie won ski lessons with Kootenay Nordic Ventures and Blaise Swain won ski lessons with Lesley Beatson.

“Thank you to all the sponsors that donated a prize and contributed to a very successfull membership drive,” Luppens said.

The club will offer some great skiing and coaching courses this month.

Both beginner and advanced skate and classic skiing courses are also offered by Andy Morel from Kootenay Nordic Ventures. The skate program began on Tuesday and the classic program began today, both at 6:30 p.m. at Black Jack.

For people who missed out this time, Luppens noted that “the Rossland Winter Recreation Guide will be out very shortly with both 2010 and 2011 nordic ski programs that are being offered by Kootenay Nordic Ventures.”

Less formal but lots of fun are two weekly group skiing events. All abilities are welcome for the Sunday group cross country ski. The group meets at Kootenay Nordic Sports at 9 a.m. and carpools from there.

On Wednesday evenings, a group meets at 6:30 p.m. for skate skiing with Gerald Klassen of Gericks Cycle and Sport.

From Dec. 10 to 12, a course in Community Coaching is offered. “The majority takes place on snow and allows you to develop your own personal skills as well as learning to teach kids and beginner skiers,” Luppens said, noting that both classic and skate skiing will be covered.

For more information on Black Jack, visit www.skiblackjack.ca.

Regarding lessons, call Rossland Recreation at 362-2327 or Andy Morel at 362-5042.

For more about coaching courses, contact Jacqui Richards at 362-9595 or jmrichards2@gmail.com.

To learn more about the Sunday group ski, contact Tammy Gibson at 362-7071 or info@kootenaynordicsports.com.
source: www.bclocalnews.com



Happy Healthy Holidays!

Let it snow! Let it snow! Let it snow? Whether you're a fan of the white stuff or not, it'll be hard for many of us to avoid the snow this winter. Rather than hibernating until spring, embrace the fun, festive, seasonal spirit and take part in some winter fitness.

You could gather your family and friends and make winter fitness a group thing. Or you could head out into the snow with only yourself and a playful, adventurous attitude. Either way, find a place for fitness in your holiday schedule. Physical activity can help relieve stress and burn off some of those holiday indulgences. It doesn't have to take a lot of time, or even be particularly strenuous. Evidence shows that even low-intensity exercise has health benefits.

Keep in mind that while physical activity offers a range of health rewards, everyone should proceed at their own pace. If you have been habitually physically inactive, start slowly and gradually add on daily to the amount of exercise you do. If you have health concerns, speak to your health professional about the level or type of activity that is right for you. For extra information on physical fitness, read "Canada's Physical Activity Guide to Healthy Active Living" at www.phac-aspc.gc.ca.

Try the following activities. Winter has much to offer - get out there and enjoy the season!

Strap on those skates. Whether you're skating on a rink, a lake, or canal, make the most of the outdoor skating season. It's part of the Canadian winter landscape! If you do skate on lakes, canals, or other natural bodies of water, remember that ice can be unpredictable and that you should always check with local authorities in advance about the safety of the ice you'd like to skate on.

Hit the slopes. Snowboarding, downhill skiing, tobogganing... slopes of varying grades provide hours of fun. Ski hills offer ski and snowboard lessons for everyone from beginner level onwards, so the whole family can get involved. And an afternoon of tobogganing can get the heart pumping and the laughter roaring. What better way to top off the holidays?

Ski cross-country. Whether you live in an urban or rural setting, Canada has a wealth of nearby parks and trails just waiting to be explored. Before you venture out, familiarize yourself with appropriate safety precautions. Contact your local cross-country ski organization for more details.

Walk in a winter wonderland. Or, better yet, put on the snowshoes. "Snowshoeing in a winter wonderland" doesn't have the same ring, but it may be just the way to slow down the holiday pace and appreciate the beauty that the season has to offer - and get some good exercise too!

source: chealth.canoe.ca



Waterville Valley Resort Announces December Ski + Stay Deals

December 2, 2010 - Located in New Hampshire’s White Mountains, Waterville Valley Resort seeks to provide affordable skiing to families with a variety of packages, along with children’s activities and events. New this winter is their ‘Wicked Long Ski Weekends’ package. This package offers guests the option of checking in as early as 12:30 p.m. on Friday, with a 3 p.m. checkout on Sunday. Free skiing on Friday afternoon is included. From just $89 pp/night, double occupancy, in December, and $158 pp/night, double occupancy, in January, February and March, these two-night Ski & Stay deals are offered most weekends throughout the winter month. Being just a 2-hour drive from Boston, a mini vacation is closer than you think.

December Kick-Off
Skiers can get an early start on the season with this ski & stay package of two nights lodging and two days of lift tickets. Waterville Valley Resort hosts Cookies & Snow on December 11. Add on a semi-private tune-up ski lesson for $45 per person. From $89 pp/night, double occupancy, valid Nov.– Dec. 19, 2010.

Family Holiday Tree & Ski
Kids ski free with this weekend package. The package includes two nights lodging and a Saturday or Sunday lift ticket for each person. A holiday tree for the family is also provided and each lodge adds its own holiday remembrance to the package. Stay Nov. 26–28, from $87 pp/for the whole weekend, quad occupancy. Or the whole weekend from $64 pp, quad occupancy valid the weekends of Dec. 3–5, Dec. 10–12, Dec. 17–19, 2010.

Ring in 2011
Kids ski free with this New Year’s package from $211 pp/for the whole weekend, double occupancy valid the weekends of Jan. 7–10, 21–23, and 28–30. Packages includes two nights lodging, two adults minimum/per room, two adult lift tickets for Saturday and Sunday, valet parking on Sunday, 50% off rentals, group lessons, all day Kids Venture Kamps and Child Care on Saturday and Sunday.

Cookies & Snow and Fairy Tales
Winter comes early to Waterville Valley Resort in New Hampshire’s White Mountains with the Cookies & Snow and Fairytales Festival on Saturday December 11th. (Small fee)

Cookies baked fresh by local restaurants are distributed throughout the businesses in Town Square. Guests can stroll through the decorated shops and sample one of each cookie creation with their purchase of a “Cookie Coupon Book”. Explore the Town Square and see the hand-painted panels depicting the Russian fairy tale of the “Snow Maiden” who is the daughter of Father Frost and Mother Spring.

And, cookies are not the only treat. Curious George story time is at 11:00 a.m.. A Holiday ice-skating party is scheduled from 1-2 p.m. with free skating and rentals! Kids can decorate a gingerbread house at the annual Candy Cottage workshop hosted by the Recreation Department.

Santa Claus will stroll through the Town Square courtyard around 2 pm, and then will cozy up in the Bookmonger to read a children’s story. Other festivities include a coffee tasting, balloon twisting by Mo the Balloon Baffoon, ornament-making, and astronomy at the Rey Center.

New Hampshire has many towns that naturally grew around the state's travel and tourism industry--particularly around its many ski mountains. But only one, Waterville Valley, was designed and planned specifically as a self-contained, four seasons resort. In addition to its world-class ski area, Waterville Valley Resort has award-winning tennis courts, golf, hiking, biking, lodging, cultural activities and summer theater, an indoor ice rink, boating, a skate park, and a host of outdoor activities. Dining options include traditional favorites and elegant dining. For more information, call 1-800-GO-VALLEY or visit http://www.visitwatervillevalley.com.
source: www.prweb.com



First Person: Buffalo's First Snow Like Shoveling Wet Concrete


LOCKPORT, N.Y. -- In the Buffalo, area we expect snow as December starts to come up on the calendar. We also expect that first real snowfall to be a bad one. The rest of the country sees us on television and wonders why or how we do it. To be honest, there is really nothing better than a Buffalo snow storm once you get the mess cleared out. The area looks beautiful after a snow storm, but during the storm things can get dicey.

On Tuesday night, Buffalo-area residents went to bed with what is known as a "lake effect snow warning." To those that are unfamiliar,
lake effect snow is a heavier kind of snow that happens when Lake Erie and Lake Ontario are still warm from summer, but the wind is extremely cold. The cold air meets with the warm air over the lakes, and then blows a lot of snow on western New York. We deal with these every year, and they can be challenging.

The snow hit in the early morning hours of Dec. 1, and it was all over the Buffalo area. The further south you get from downtown Buffalo, the worse the snow gets. That is OK because the southern part of the Buffalo area is ski country. So they love it when it snows like this. The ski areas got over a foot of snow by noon, and the slopes were open the next day.

The city of Buffalo itself did not get hit as hard as the southern and northern suburbs did. In what is known as the Southern Tier of western New York, there were six inches of snow on people's cars by the time the rush hour started, and the snow was still falling. It was falling so hard and so fast that the plows did not even bother to venture out until the next morning. Traffic was snarled and many of the freeway routes around Buffalo were closed.

In the northern suburbs, the story was much different. I live just 20 minutes north of Buffalo in a little suburb called Lockport. We were getting the same big, fluffy snow flakes that the Southern Tier was getting, but it was still fairly warm up here. The ground was also still kind of warm, which creates pretty treacherous conditions. What happens is that the first couple of hours of snow fall melt when it hits the ground. The next hour or so turns to slush on top of the wet snow that just fell, and then the next couple of hours are real snow accumulation. That means you have an inch or two of heavy slush covered with four or five inches of heavy snow.

The snow kept falling all morning and then started to taper off around the middle of the afternoon. I decided to head out and shovel my driveway for two reasons: First, so that my son and my wife could park their cars when they got home. Second, colder air was coming, and if those two inches of slush are allowed to freeze then you have real problems on your hands.

It is always odd to shovel the first real snowfall of the year in the Buffalo area because the air tends to be warmer than you would expect. I bundled myself up expecting to brave the elements, only to be met by 35 to 40 degree temperatures. But, even with those temperatures, the snow was not melting.

I reached down with my snow shovel and began to move the snow from my sidewalks and driveway. It is exactly like shoveling wet concrete. The consistency is the same, and the weight is the same. You also find yourself shoveling water some of the time as not all of the melted snow gets covered with slush and regular snow. The whole scene was extremely bizarre.

It took about an hour, but I finally got everything cleared out. It was just in time too because the snow started again and the temperatures started to drop. Everything that was not shoveled would be a sheet of ice by morning.

But, like I said, we are used to these things around here. So when you see news stories on the television about Buffalo braving another snow storm, don't feel sorry for us. To be honest, we feel sorry for you because most people in the country do not realize how little work it really is to enjoy the beauty of winter.
source: news.yahoo.com



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