Anthony":x9cnq623 said:
Mont Glen , Now that brings back great memories from high school ski club days back in the late seventies.
Memories... :roll: I went back to Glen in 2001, the previous time was probably when I was 5 or 6 in 1970-71. The places had the same feel to it. My dad was a ski instructor at Glen in the first years of the ski area in the early 60s. He had left the Laurentians to explore the potential in the Eastern Township (I presume).
Anthony":x9cnq623 said:
Read a book last year on the history of Glen Mountain which explains its history but can't remeber the name.
Out Of Bounds: The Glen Mountain Ski Story by Brian Eddington. A very good read with many stories.
http://www.aelaq.org/mrb/article.php?is ... =358&cat=4
Anthony":x9cnq623 said:
Don't think this place will make a comeback and to make matters worse overall snow totals in Quebec's Eastern Townships are the lowest of all Quebec ski zones and this area also has the highest chance of being rained on due to its location and lack of elevation . If your lucky you could arrive in this area after a snow storm and be able to hike up .
Tony Crocker":x9cnq623 said:
Really? Proximity to Jay should be worth something. I think Patrick has numbers from Sutton running about 60% of Jay, which would be around 200. I'm under the impression that Ste. Anne and Tremblant are no more than 150.
Snow Fall totals in the Appalachians (Eastern Townships) in general are, I believe, greater than the Laurentians and Quebec City, however I believe what Anthony means is more related to snow retention. Precipitations in the Townships in last 20 years have been increasingly more of a mixted nature. Ste. Anne is a few degrees colder like Tremblant and the little snow they received compared with the Townships last longer. However if you're looking for the big storms totals, but don't go to Trembalnt or Ste. Anne.
Snow accumulations are least important in Quebec than in the West. Most areas are covered in snowmaking and snow precipitation sometimes have little to do with what is skiable. On this matter, Glen didn't have any snowmaking, so it lived on mother nature every breath. The mountain did have snowmaking for a year or two, but sold it to some other ski area because they needed the cash. The ski area has had a history of disputes on ownership almost for day 1. Competition started from Day 1 also. Many ski areas neighbouring Glen open the same year or close like Sutton, Echo (lost now), Owl's Head and Bromont.
I don't if many people know that Glen Mtn owned Norquay in Banff in the late 80s or early 90s. :shock:
Glen is a great small mountain, I wouldn't necessarily say that they will never open again. People in the community nearby are fairly conservative about changes and powerfull. Many big and rich families have a residence in Knowlton including the current Prime Minister of Canada, I believe.