Middlebury Snowbowl, VT: 03/25/26

jamesdeluxe

Administrator
Staff member
I'd always wondered about Middlebury Snowbowl, which opened in 1934, is still owned/operated by the prestigious college 15 miles to the west, and used by its ski teams and phys ed education programs. It's run more like a college-owned facility that’s open to the public than a traditional ski area. Between it being on the Indy Pass and the fact that we were staying 40 minutes away in a friend’s condo, there was no excuse not to check it out.

Here's the website's drone shot showing the upper 400 verts of the front side:
1774608427262.png


The Snowbowl is a classic "James ski area" similar in feel to defunct NY State favorites like Bobcat and Hickory but with a somewhat larger footprint. Per the website: three fixed-grip chairs and a surface lift serve 28 trails and 11 gladed areas across 110 skiable acres, with over 600 additional acres of woods and backcountry terrain. I've juxtaposed the newer trail map on the left (easier to read but charmless) with the slightly older painted one that provides a better feel for the terrain and shows you the trail pod that's lit for night skiing Wednesday through Friday:
1774473678589 (1).png
1774607241328.png


The atmospheric, bare-bones base lodge dating to 1940:
20260325_135259.jpg


Thankfully, they haven't replaced the handmade trail signs:
20260325_125557.jpg


The area operates Wednesday to Sunday with lift tickets $58 on weekdays and $68 on weekends. There were maybe 50 people on the hill and virtually all of them looked like retirees. At lunch, we overheard a guy nearby talking about needing a new “ski parka” and mentioning he’d left something at home in the “icebox.” That pretty much sums up the "very Vermont" vibe.

While the vertical is only 1,000 feet, it skis bigger due to the well-designed layout (nice fall lines, several classic northeastern trails that wind through the woods intriguingly) so it doesn’t feel limited once you start moving around. Looking uphill from the base lodge, this woman was with her black lab puppy named "Cinder."
20260325_120917.jpg


I didn’t get any in-action pix from the handful of laps I took on looker's right, just a few shots of my wife working with our son on the green Lang trail. She accidentally took him down a legit black run and said that he handled it well/didn't fall!
20260325_125835.jpg


Full coverage in the woods:
Middlebury 1b.png


A nice sustained pitch on the blue Proctor trail in the distance:
Middlebury 1c.png


The only disappointments were timing-related -- the front side faces due north so on this late March day the snow softened somewhat but not as much as I would've liked. More importantly, the Bailey Falls chair that services the backside (where a lot of the signature terrain lives) doesn’t run midweek. Locals will tell you chapter and verse that not having that sector on the table takes away a big chunk of what makes the Snowbowl special.

Still, the overall impression was strong. This is a place with real character, nice terrain, and a great throwback vibe. I chalked up this visit as a useful reconnaissance mission and look forward to returning here mid-season when everything is in play.

An end note: with it being the end of the season, we grabbed a pair of virtually new Salomon boots ($80) for my son at a rental shop that was thinning its inventory and I gave him my 2005 Volant Gravity 71mm skis. They served me well as groomer sticks up through 2013 and I'm happy that he'll be using them for the foreseeable future.
20260325_133615.jpg
 
Trail map clearly shows way more scale and interest than Fairmont where I was in February with only a bit less vertical. Did you know about the backside closure schedule before your visit? We are in the Upper Rhône right now but won’t be visiting Arolla after James’ discovery of limited operation in spring.
 
Did you know about the backside closure before your visit?
It was mentioned two or three times in NY Ski Blog's Middlebury thread; however, I didn't realise until speaking with people there how big a role it plays in the ski area's mystique: no snowmaking, protected from wind, beautiful tree skiing, collects snow Monday through Friday, etc. Five different people had a variation of "oh, you gotta come here when the Bailey chair is spinning!"

Unfortunately, we couldn't stay until the weekend so skiing the backside wasn't in the cards.
 
Back
Top