Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
State/province Peak elevation (ft) Base elevation (ft) Vertical drop (ft) Skiable acreage Total trails Total lifts Avg annual snowfall (in) Adult weekend lift ticket window price (USD) Date statistics updated Ski Bromont: Bromont: Quebec: 1,854 590 1,264 450 141 9 190 $54 December 1, 2019 [1] Apex Mountain Resort: Penticton: British Columbia ...
First detachable at Sunday River. Terminals retrofitted by Poma in 1998, and chairs replaced in 2004. Replaced by a D-Line high speed six pack. 2: Cascades T-Bar: T-Bar: Hall: 1959 - 1990: First lift built on the mountain at Sunday River. Ran up length of Monday Mourning trail, and removed for ski racing. 3: South Ridge: Double: 1981 - 1992
"The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast" news blog lists 503 separate, [a] non-private, [b] lift-served, "active ski areas" as of October 16, 2003. [5] Of the 503 that are on Storm Skiing's list 102 have only surface lifts ; 401 have one or more chairlifts ; and 45 are private or semi-private, where there is some membership, enrollment, residency ...
There's a full event calendar at Mount Snow for 2023-2024, including a Santa Parade on Dec. 23, and torchlight parades on both Dec. 31 and Jan. 13, the latter in honor of Martin Luther King Weekend.
WINTER PARK, Colo. (AP) — Officials were investigating Sunday what caused a crack in a Colorado ski lift that forced the evacuation of over 170 stranded skiers and snowboarders. The gondola lift at Winter Park Resort, about 70 miles (113 kilometers) west of Denver, automatically stopped when it detected the crack in a structural piece of the ...
Rank Resort name State Vertical (ft) Skiable acres Trails Lifts Notes 1: Killington: Vermont: 3,050: 1,509: 155: 21: Largest drop in New England, 26th largest drop in the United States
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Ski resorts (and other venues that issue tickets) commonly use a wicket to secure the ticket (called a "ticket wicket"), a short piece of light wire which loops through the ticket holder's clothing or backpack. The ticket wicket was invented by Killington Ski Resort employee Martin S. "Charlie" Hanley, in 1963, and given its name by his wife Jane.