SHORT SWINGS!
CALIFORNIA
Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows won USA Today’s 2017 Readers’ Choice Poll for ‘Best Ski Resort.’ The resort secured top spot in the 2016 poll, as well.
IDAHO
McCall, ID is near from Brundage Mountain, the 2000′ vertical resort advertising the “best snow in Idaho. About 10 minutes from the mountain is Shore Lodge, with luxury accommodations and a spa built around natural hot springs. McCall’s annual Winter Carnival with many motor- and non-motorized activities will happen January 27-February 5, 2017.
NEW YORK
The Spa at the Mirror Lake Inn Resort in Lake Placid, has undergone a $1 million makeover. Always a terrific location, Mirror Lake Inn Resort has just become even better.
PENNSYLVANNIA
At least 18 of the state’s ski areas are now open. Check local details before going.
QUEBEC
Mont-Sainte-Anne and Stoneham Mountain Resort have a lot planned for Christmas and New Years. Learn about Santa’s visits, treats, kids activities, music, banquets, races, fireworks at: Stoneham / Mont-Sainte-Anne
UTAH
Deer Valley published a You Tube tribute to Stein Eriksen. It is lovely and will bring back memories.
OTHER
Clean Trails is establishing a national network of trail stewards for the country’s pristine wild places, collective community spaces, and access points to its natural wonders. It’s mission is to keep trail systems litter-free. The group’s slogan, Love the Land. Lose the Litter. says it all. To participate visit http://cleantrails.org
Orsden is a new line of extremely good looking and reasonably priced high quality 4-way stretch ski parkas. Features are comparable to much more expensive brands. Orsden parkas (on-line, direct-to-consumer, only): $330, with free shipping.
GetSkiTickets.com, the online lift ticket seller, is offering a free trip for two to Taos with three nights lodging, three days of skiing, ski and/or board rentals, and two pairs of hand crafted mittens.
Anti-Freeze Face Tape reduces risk of frostbite for people playing in the cold. Each package contains four pre-cut pieces to cover nose and cheeks or to cut your own. Haven’t tried it yet, but unlike masks and tubes, this won’t fog your goggles. Available in flesh, blue and pink. $4.99 per pack. Available at select x-country ski centers and online.
Powder Mountain: The Cuba of Utah Ski Areas
Visit Soon, It’s About to Change.
Before the end of this season, Powder Mountain, Utah’s slightly out of the way ski area will become the largest in all of North America with 8464 acres, surpassing in size Park City (7300 acres), Whistler Blackcomb (8171 acres) and Big Sky (8000 acres).

School bus picks up on road on right.
Even without the 1000 new acres that will be available with the completion of two new chairs, the place is vast and under skied. One reason is limited day and season pass sales; another is because of its distance. It takes a little over an hour to get there from Salt Lake City, much less if you’re travelling from Ogden, about 30 miles north of SLC.
Powder Mountain is one of the places I head for after a classic Utah deep powder dump. Even days after a dump, fresh, untracked areas are waiting to be explored.
The new owners are planning a new village that will give the place more of a resort feel. Currently condos are available on the mountain. Other lodging and restaurant options require a short drive.
Much of Powder Mountain’s acreage is gentle, but know where to look, and you’ll find ample steeps to keep you well entertained. The area also offers a variety of guided and unguided cat and heli experiences.

Skiing trees at Utah’s Powder Mountain
I’m not sure how the new village and lifts will change the feel of the place. In many ways the current Powder Mountain reminds me of skiing as a kid in Vermont. The lodges aren’t fancy, but they serve up tasty and reasonably priced food. There’s a genuinely friendly and helpful vibe. I don’t know if its unique to Powder Mountain, but old-fashioned school busses help convey skiers from one part of the area up a canyon and back to the lifts.
Seniors (65-74) pay $60 for a day pass. Free skiing if you’re 75 or older!!!!
Powder Mountain might be like Cuba. It’s old fashioned in a highly appealing way. There’s a tremendous amount to enjoy. I recommend visiting before too much changes. It will change for the better, but for now, Powder Mountain should be high on every skier’s Utah list.
10 Reasons To Go Skiing This Winter: John Christie’s Last Article
[Editor Note: We are honored to publish one of John Christie’s last articles about skiing, snow, and the outdoors. John was one of snow sports most ardent supporters, from his days as a college racer to the development and management of major ski resorts in Maine and Vermont. He passed away in the spring, and to us, he was an original ski hero. This article first appeared in Maine Seniors Magazine and re-publish here in its entirety with permission.]

John Christie as a young ski instructor.
With apologies to late night comedians (or, more precisely, to their stable of imaginative writers) I’ve been ruminating recently about all the reasons I love to get out on the slopes, and in the hopes that some of mine might resonate with you, here are my Top Ten, in random sequence:
#10 It’s good for you. Damn good, I’d suggest because it’s one of the handful of ways that you can actually get out and genuinely enjoy cold winter days. Your heart’ll pump a little harder, your skin’ll tingle, and you’ll come in after a chilly day on the slopes and really feel rejuvenated. At least that’s what happens to me. Good for both the body and the soul.
#9 It’s fun. Not to mention, although of course I will, exciting, exhilarating…even mood-altering. I see a lot more smiles than frowns on the lift and even in the line than I see virtually anywhere else in a crowd of a thousand people or more.
#8 It opens up a world of choices and opportunities, pretty close to home for most of us, for a variety of terrain, alpine and Nordic options, big mountain or community area. And the choices include not just the recreational ones. Some of the best brew pubs and dining spots are located at or in close proximity to Maine’s ski facilities, so the variety of ski and apres- ski options are practically limitless.
#7 It’s a great way to spend time, and even reconnect with, your spouse, kids, grandkids and loved ones. Some of the biggest smiles I see behind winter face masks are proud parents and grandparents watching their Bubble Cuffers progress, and kids realizing just how much fun this sport of ours can be. Family ski trips are the stuff of which life-long memories are made, and for good reason.
#6 Conversely, there are times in our stressful and hectic lives that it’s good to just get out in nature alone, on fresh corduroy on the side of a mountain or on a quiet cross country trail through evergreens bowed down by a recent snow. Leave the cell at home and just listen to the sounds of silence.
#5 It’s the perfect way to reconnect with old, like-minded friends with whom you don’t even have to exchange a word as you stop at the bottom of an epic run together. You all know what you’re thinking: “It doesn’t get any better than this!” Somehow, it seems to me, the bond between friends strengthens on a ski slope. I haven’t figured out why… and I don’t need to.
#4 And there’s no better place in Maine in the winter, I’d submit, to make new friends. To begin with, anyone you meet is a kindred spirit, binding the two of you together instantaneously because you share a very important secret: We’re the lucky ones who’ve figured out how to make winter not just tolerable but the best season of the year. The closest, most enduring friendships I enjoy either originated or were strengthened on a ski slope.
#3 It’s a chance to explore a new place, or even a new sport (snowboarding, for example) and broaden your experiential horizon. Maybe this is the year to head north to Quebec for the first time, or try out the new trails and lifts at the Camden Snow Bowl, or trek on skis or snowshoes for an overnight at one of the luxurious huts in the Maine Huts and Trails system.
#2 If you’ve never skied before, this could well be the year that you give it a shot. Trust me, you’re never too old to start. Recent dumps of snow have created some darn fine skiing, with even better to follow in February and March, and modern grooming machinery and techniques have given us surfaces unlike anything we’ve seen in recent memory. Improvements in snowmaking equipment have enabled operators to make more of the white stuff more quickly, and the snow that for years seemed somewhat unnatural, now feels exactly like God intended it.
#1 You’ll be helping Maine’s recreation-based economy. In a state where summer recreation was the elephant in the room, contributing the vast majority of tourism revenues during just a few short summer months, and much of it in the coastal counties, expenditures by skiers like us have helped even out the heretofore seasonal and geographic disparity. Many rural economies depend on us and deserve our support.

John Christie, 1937-2016. Credit: Jamie Walter
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