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What’s New in Vermont for the 2024/25 Season

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Photo by Peter James Eisenhaure on Unsplash

While you were tanning on the beach in the Caribbean or throwing coins in the fountain in Rome this past summer, Vermont resorts were busy upgrading chairlifts, trails, snowmaking, dining and lodging.

Here’s what’s new in the state with some of the most popular ski/snowboard/Nordic destinations in the Northeast. 

In alphabetical order, since that’s the only fair way.  

Bromley Mountain

Bromley has invested in new and improved snowmaking on its lower mountain, to ensure more consistent conditions on such popular areas as Lower Thruway and Lower Boulevard.  Also, there will be live music on holidays and almost every weekend, adding a festive vibe to your ski day, weekend or week.

Killington Resort & Pico Mountain:

Under new local ownership, Killington and sister Pico are embarking on a $30 million investment spree over the next two seasons.  That includes 500 new low-energy snow guns will blanket both resorts, with four fully automated fan guns specifically targeting Superstar.

After this ski season, during summer 2025, Killington will replace the Superstar Express Quad with a high-speed six-pack, and replace more than 110 cabins on the iconic Skyeship Gondola with new ones.

Mad River Glen:

A new mid-station on the Single Chair will provide easier access to beginner and intermediate terrain in Birdland.  Also, the legendary skiers-only destination is speeding up the drive system for the Sunnyside Double to boost loading capacity.

Magic Mountain:

The resort has added 50 new snow guns, including mobile units for expert terrain, to provide more consistent conditions throughout the season.  Also, the  new Throwback Card offers 25% off online ticket prices and a free ski day on your second visit.

Mount Snow:

Celebrating 70 Years this season, Mount Snow marks the milestone with new on-mountain improvements to the most powerful snowmaking system in the East, and participation in the MyEpic premium ski/snowboard rental equipment program. 

Jay Peak:

Nothing new for this season, just a continuation of the reliable infrastructure and programs which have made Jay Peak a popular, family-friendly destination for decades.

Okemo Mountain Resort:

This family-favorite destination has 98% snowmaking coverage, and is also participating in the Epic Pass MyEpic gear rental program.

Saskadena Six:

There’s a new, revised unload zone on Chair One increases safety and flow and trail widening on Easy Mile and Porcupine to improve traffic flow. The area also has added low-energy eco-friendly snow guns.

Stowe Mountain Resort:

No new on-mountain enhancements this season, but new is that Stowe has joined the MyEpic gear program, offering a convenient and affordable way to access premium ski and snowboard equipment for EpicPass holders.

Stratton Mountain:

There are new snow guns on Mikey’s Way and 160 new high-efficiency hydrants throughout the mountain.

Sugarbush Resort:

The highly anticipated Heaven’s Gate Quad at Lincoln Peak opens, providing a faster and more reliable summit experience. Plus, there is improved snowmaking at Mount Ellen for a more consistent experience throughout the season.

If you somebody who loves challenges, koin the Sugarbush community in skiing a billion vertical feet to raise $50,000 for a local mental health non-profit.

What’s your favorite Vermont resort – and why?  www.skivermont.com

We want to hear from you.

See you on the slopes.

Fatal Collision: It’s Time to Act

One week before the end of the ski season in Jackson Hole, a 71-yr old veteran ski instructor, was hit and killed by another skier. Both were skiing the intermediate trail, “Rendezvous”. This should never have happened, especially in mid-April when the season is all but over and crowds have thinned.

The Teton County coroner has ruled it a homicide, because the uphill skier did not “maneuver around” the victim, who was downhill.

When I heard about this, I was shocked and angry but not surprised. It’s getting worse and worse out there – even in mid-April when no one can complain about “the crowds”.

Several years ago, a rogue skier or snowboarder hit me while I was stopped on the edge of a trail at Stratton Mtn. I must have been hit hard, because I blacked out momentarily. When I regained consciousness, I was in a sitting position, just off the trail. The skiers standing on the trail’s edge said the guy who hit me never stopped.  Something similar may have happened to you, too.

The incident was on one of my favorite black diamond trails in Vermont – a mostly very wide, well-groomed and perfect trail for cruising, practicing carved turns or any turns. I was between lessons, and wearing my instructor’s jacket, so I felt any fast skier would know to stay away from me, a resort employee! Stupid me.

Luckily, I was not hurt that day, but sadly the male skier hit at Jackson on April 14, 2023 by an uphill skier who did yield right of way is still dead.

Fellow senior skiers and snowboarders, enough is enough!

It’s time for us to complain to management: firmly, politely, and insistently. Our sons, daughters, and grandchildren are on the mountain now, and all of them are at risk, along with us seniors.   

Pretending the “Skiers Responsibility Code” is doing enough is a joke.

Here’s what we can do about out-of-control skiers and snowboarders –

  1. Speak to ski area management and request “NO FAST SKIING” signs and ropes at key places on GREEN and BLUE runs. If you can force the high-speed dangerous skiers to slow down, it’s a start toward sanity and greater safety.
  2. If you personally witness a dangerous incident, volunteer your name to victims involved. Encourage victims to speak to management.
  3. If you experience danger personally, attempt to get a photo of the person who caused the danger. (Might come in handy down the road.)

ALL the waivers we are required to sign, either when purchasing season passes like IKON or EPIC, or simply by buying a day lift ticket, contain language, upheld by courts going back to 1978. The language says: YOU ACCEPT 100% RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANYTHING BAD THAT HAPPENS TO YOU WHILE MOVING AROUND AT OUR SKI RESORT: SKIING, WALKING THRU CAFETERIA LINE, WALKING TO RESTROOM, WALKING TO/FROM PARKING LOT. The resort is not responsible.

I believe ski resort management should do more to crack down on the super-fast, out-of-control skiers. The time is now for sensible, long-time skiers to begin making noise at ski areas we visit. There’s no alternative, except for you and me to insist that mountain operations must do more to educate their skiing/riding public, and make Green and Blue trails safer with signage. It’s just sensible.

https://www.tetongravity.com/story/news/teton-county-coroner-jackson-hole-skier-collision-death-ruled-a-homicide-sheriffs-office-seeking-witnesses

What is the oldest ski shop in the country?

Div I ski racer Tyler Cunningham, now the 4th generation member of the Cunningham family to run the North Creek NY based ski shop.

A common answer to that question is Lahout’s in Littleton NH which was founded by Herbert Lahout who came to the US from Lebanon as a teenager and in 1920 started by selling dry goods from a horse drawn wagon throughout the White Mountains.   After World War II. the store, then run by his son Joe, began selling ski gear and today there is the original store and  seven more Lahout’s  shops in the area where the business began.

However, it turns out now there is another shop with a claim to be the first.

As part of the recent research on the 90th anniversary of the first snow train to North Creek NY, local historians came up with records of The J.E. Cunningham General Store that opened in that Adirondack hamlet in 1918, two years before Lahout’s.

Today, more than 100 years later, both businesses  run by their founding families, still operate in their hometowns

PJ Cunningham, who was born  in Chestertown NY in 1871, was a New York Forest Ranger when he resettled his family in North Creek in 1908. He spent much of his time in the outdoors and became well know for his work building fire towers in the area.  In 1918, he bought the general store in town and named it after his oldest son.

When business slowed in the 1920’s, his younger son Butler dropped out of his engineering studies at Union College to come home to help run the store. While there was no formal ski area at the time in North Creek, there was winter sliding on the logging roads from the nearby Barton Garnet Mines on Gore Mountain. Between mining and logging, the slopes outside the village had been largely stripped and and winter sliding on the open land was a popular pass time.

If you needed skis,  Cunningham’s offered barrel staves rigged with boot toe straps mounted by a local harness shop.

Although primarily a mining and logging town, locals who visited the 1932 Olympic Games in Lake Placid saw the potential for winter recreation in their town 60 miles to the south. The North Creek Ski Bowl just outside the village was established in 1934.  At first there was a rope tow that, in 1947, was replaced by the first T-bar in New York State. Butler Cunningham in 1949 became President of the Gore Mountain Lift Corporation and, while still running the store in town, opened a ski hut on the hill between the lodge and the lift.

Over the next decade, his son Pat was building his reputation as a ski racer. He competed for Norwich University and, after college, while in the US Army in Europe. he  competed in the the iconic Hahnenkamm downhill race in Kitzbuhl Austria. He was training for a spot on the US ski team in the 1964 Winter Olympics when an elbow injury forced him out of competition. Pat came back to North Creek and subsequently joined the family business which was growing as New York opened its third state run ski center at Gore Mountain in town.

There were setbacks.  The original store in town burned down in 1968. At the time, the Cunninghams were also running the retail shop at Gore Mountain. They would eventually lose the concession bid at the ski area, but by then a new store had been built in town on the site of an old horse barn less than a mile from the original general store location. Over the years, the business expanded to other locations including Cunningham’s across the street from the Olympic Center in Lake Placid.

Butler Cunningham died in 1985 and Pat ran the the business until his death two years ago. By then, Tyler Cunningham, a former Burke Academy and St Lawrence University ski racer, had given up a career as a derivatives trader on Wall Street to return home to the family business.

Tyler is the forth generation of the Cunningham family to run the business. It is the same story in New Hampshire where Ron Lahout, grandson of business founder Herbert, has been joined by nephew Anthony and more recently daughter Phebe.

So who can claim to be Number One?

Is it Cunningham’s, founded in 1918?

Is it Lahout’s, doing business in the same location since 1920?

Both families have now been in business in their hometowns, in ski country, for more than a century. It seems that should be more than enough to share bragging rights.

 

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