This Week In SeniorsSkiing.com (Jan. 27)
Mountains Of Snow, Ski Fashion Legend Obermeyer, Resort Reviews From BC, PA, NH, DIY Instruction Part 1, Old Style Freestyle Video.
The meteorological world and just about everyone else is in awe of what is happening in the West. Snowfalls are breaking records, and Bay Area-based correspondent Rose Marie Cleese reports on what’s going on out there. We have some simply amazing pics of big resorts just buried in mountains of snow. Terrific snow packs will go a long way in relieving California’s multi-year drought, too.
Co-publisher Jon Weisberg was lucky to catch up with Klaus Obermeyer, an outdoor fashionista and innovative entrepreneur who has left an indelible mark on ski clothing and gear starting in the way back days of the early 60s. His advice to senior skiers, “Never give up skiing as it keeps the legs in good shape and improves your walking.” Klaus is 97.
We have resort reviews of widely different areas from the Canadian West, Western PA and New Hampshire. John Nelson tells us about senior-easy Sun Peaks, BC, Pat McCloskey reports on an elegant, historic, cozy and number-one-rated resort in PA, a great hide-away for cross-country or snowshoeing, and Tamsin Venn shows us historic Bretton Woods with its magnificent views and the fantastic Omni Mt. Washington Hotel.
And thanks to our readers who contributed last month to Snowsports Industries America’s online survey on ski boots. We heard from SIA head of research Kelly Davis that she collected enough data from you guys to make senior-specific conclusions, based on your responses. We’ll report her findings as soon as they are published.
On to mid-season. Good luck out there. Eastern snowsports enthusiasts, the snow is up there; go and find out. Western folks, have fun.
Thank you so much for reading SeniorsSkiing.com. Tell your friends, please. And remember, there are more of us every day and we aren’t going away.
And here’s another reader submitted video. Steve Simons sent us this 1973 video showing a Freestyle event at Whistler. Old Style Freestyle. Thanks, Steve.
Short Swings!
CALIFORNIA
According to online ticket vendor GetSkiTickets.com, Mammoth Mountain has the deepest snow pack in the country. They’re currently at 20+ feet and more is on the way.
Ms. Nature has dumped 52″ on Mountain High. It’s the resort’s largest snowstorm in the last five years.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
Jackson Ski Touring Center, the largest in the northeast, features free, supervised 90-minute ski tours for kids 11-17 every Sunday. They run 10:00 AM – Noon and follow trails in wooded areas. A nice Sunday excursion for the grandkids.
NEW YORK
Reader Ellen Stone reports there is another ski area where seniors ski for free. It’s Mt. Peter, a small, seven-trail area in Warwick, NY. 70+ free all the time.
PENNSYLVANNIA
Grandparents take note: PA Ski offers free lift tickets to 4th and 5th Graders You don’t have to live in PA! Discounts for adults; free stuff for kids. Visit http://www.skipa.com
UTAH
Enjoy midweek skiing and snowboarding for free at Snowbasin Resort when you Fly Alaska Airlines into Salt Lake International Airport this season and get free midweek skiing at spectacular Snowbasin Resort. Go there even if you’re not flying Alaska. The place is BIG and beautiful and the facilities are about as luxe as they get. Seniors get a good deal there. 65-74 costs $79; 75+ costs $35.
VERMONT
For the fourth year in a row, Okemo Mountain Resort was named one of the 2017 Best Places to Work in Vermont. The resort was the first ski resort to make the list. The 2017 Best Places to Work in Vermont lists 45 companies.
The U.S. Ski Team selected Burke Mountain as an official U.S. Ski Team development site where members will train and hold elite skiing competitions while preparing for the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeong Chang, South Korea. Burke Mountain has 178 skiable acres. Over 40 years, Burke Mountain Academy has produced 33 Olympians, 138 national team athletes and 117 U.S. Ski Team members, including 2014 Olympic gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin.
OTHER
ZEAL Optics has introduced a nifty way to change goggle lenses without hassle. Its Rail Lock System (RLs) uses a dual sliding rail system to guide and lock the lens in place. We’ve tried it, and it works. It’s especially good for seniors because of the very wide peripheral vision.
For those into needlepoint and skiing, Tuckernuck has kits for wallets, belts and coasters. Their “ski tricks” designs are delightful.
One Warm Coat is a San Francisco-based non-profit committed to providing anyone in need with a free warm coat. The group accomplishes this by helping people and groups in local communities organize coat drives. We know what it feels like to be cold when playing. There are many who don’t have the means to stay warm. One Warm Coat. One worthy initiative.
Contemplating a retirement move? WalletHub, an online provider of financial guidance, published the best and worst states to retire in 2017.
Sierra Nevada Blowout!
Think Feet, Not Inches.
“Nevada” (Spanish for “covered in snow”) is back with a vengeance at the end of “Sierra” (“mountain range”) and California’s skiers and ski resorts are jubilant! Since January 1st, the Sierra Nevada has been
clobbered with one storm after another, and except for one spate of warmer temperatures that brought rain for a couple of days earlier in the month, it’s been nothing but fluffy white stuff ever since—feet of it! This week, it’s experiencing a nice long stretch of cold days and sunny skies that isn’t predicted to end until next Wednesday when another storm rolls in. Last year, many resorts were forced to close off and on because of no snow; this season nearly every Sierra ski area has had to close a couple of days here and there because of too much snow!
January has broken snowfall records across the mountain range.
The remarkable record-breaking snowfall statistics that Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows has tallied up in the first 23 days of January are typical of many Sierra Nevada ski areas. According to Public Relations Coordinator Sam Kieckhefer, the combined resorts have seen 276 inches (that’s 23 feet or an average of one foot a day!) fall since the month began, easily surpassing the previous record snowfall in a single month (241 inches in March of 2011) since record-keeping began 46 years ago. Its total snowfall since the 2016–17 ski season began—381 inches—is more than double the average for this point in the season.
This jubilant tale is being repeated throughout the Sierra, from Mt. Shasta in the north to Southern California’s cluster of Big Bear Mountain ski areas. Like Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows, many ski resorts in the northern and Central Sierra are reporting record-breaking total snowfall amounts to date averaging around 380 inches. Mt. Rose over the hill from Tahoe in Nevada has a season-to-date total at 412 inches and Sugar Bowl sitting atop Donner Summit back in California may be able to claim the highest total snowfall to date of 451 inches.
This latest storm that wrapped up this past Monday added tons of light, fluffy powder to an already impressive snowpack. Dodge Ridge in the Central Sierra, which has often found itself on the short end of the snow stick, had 10 feet of snow fall in just five days, bringing its total January snowfall to 19 feet! Other impressive storm totals were 97 inches at Kirkwood, 88 inches at Heavenly, 94 inches at Northstar, and up to 106 inches at Sugar Bowl. Most ski resorts in northern California currently have top-of-the-mountain snowpacks ranging from 150 to 185 inches. Mammoth Mountain in Central California has a upper base of 300 inches and even Homewood Mountain Resort, which sits near the shore of temperature-moderating Lake Tahoe, can lay claim to impressive base figures: lower and upper bases of 77 to 156 inches respectively.
Are the ski resorts happy that Easter—the weekend that most Sierra ski resorts traditionally close—is relatively late this year (April 15th)? You betcha. It’s likely that a good number of them will keep the lifts running well past that date. And, with the exception of 2015–16, which was the first respectable ski season in the Sierra after five years of sparsely covered slopes, thin layers of man-made snow, and some resorts not even opening, skiers and boarders are happy campers, too. Barring a barrage of warm “Pineapple Express” storms emanating from the Hawaiian Islands or the storm door slamming shut, 2016–17 is going to go down as one epic Sierra ski season!
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