Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sunday River is a ski resort located in Newry, Maine, in the United States. It is one of Maine's largest and most visited ski resorts. It is one of Maine's largest and most visited ski resorts. Its vertical drop of 2,340 feet (710 m) is the second largest in Maine (after Sugarloaf ) and the sixth largest in New England .
With beards and stocking caps flapping, some 300 red-suited Santas were lively and quick at the foggy Sunday River ski resort in western Maine as they took a break from the holiday hustle and bustle.
Sugarloaf (formerly Sugarloaf/USA) is a ski area and resort located on Sugarloaf Mountain in Carrabassett Valley, western Maine.It is the second largest ski resort east of the Mississippi in terms of skiable area (1,240 acres or 500 ha after Killington's 1,509 acres or 611 ha) [1] [2] and snowmaking percentage (95%); its continuous vertical drop of 2,820 feet (860 m) is the second longest in ...
Comparison table of North American ski resorts Resort name and website Nearest city State/province ... Sunday River: Newry: Maine: 3,140 800 2,340 870 153 18 155 $109
The ski season usually runs from late November to late-April at Alaska’s largest ski resort, Alyeska, located just 45 minutes from Anchorage in the Chugach Mountains and the resort town of Girdwood.
Mother Nature doesn’t appear to be cooperating with those wanting to hit the Take ski slopes this Christmas weekend. Tahoe ski conditions: Lackluster snow fall means little open terrain ...
Sunday River may refer to: Sunday River (Osgood River tributary), Chaudière-Appalaches, Quebec, Canada; Sunday River (Androscoggin River tributary), Oxford County, Maine, United States; Sunday River (ski resort), one of Maine's largest ski resorts located near the confluence of the Sunday and Androscoggin rivers
American Skiing Company was one of the largest operators of alpine ski, snowboard and golf resorts in the United States. Its resorts included Sunday River and Sugarloaf in Maine, The Canyons in Utah, Killington, Mount Snow, Haystack, Heavenly and Steamboat. In the early 2000s, the company sold all assets and shut down in 2007.