6 weeks, 79 ski areas in 18 states.
nyskiblog.com
Interesting article. Nice job by
@jamesdeluxe . My responses to world traveler's trip:
By the end of the article it seemed clear to me that World Traveler's motivation is "collecting" ski areas. I've visited about 100 ski areas, but generally when I make ski plans I have different priorities than "collecting". My priorities are things like skiing at a place where I can join friends on the slopes, seeking good conditions, or burly terrain, or ski at a new place/region that I've long been interested in exploring. I definitely tend to visit "big" resorts rather than small places, so I differ greatly from him in that regard too. Although, I've had some very fun times at Mom and Pop ski areas and held a season pass at one for 15 years in my young adulthood.
As a senior who has skied for 58 consecutive seasons I've experienced variety, now I prefer quality and the mega passes work well for that as they cover some of the best and snowiest resorts in North America and Europe.
I consider approx 30 choices (offered by a mega pass) as a big improvement for about the same money over the old US season pass model of one pass for one ski area, and then paying for a few days per season at areas not on my season pass.
The flexibility that World Traveler talks about in Europe where you can buy a day pass for $75-100 bucks and go anywhere you want that day is ok. For many years I did something similar with liftopia or other discounts to ski misc areas on an adhoc basis, but as an avid skier with disposable income to travel, I like the mega pass model better.
Sort of joking, but this guy is making a mockery of our lifetime ski area visit metric, which many of us proudly declare. He is adding mtns to his collection that he's only doing a few runs at. Whereas many of us on FTOL desire to experience many ski areas, but also see their highlights, signature runs and lifts, optimal conditions, etc., so that we can compare and contrast with all the others we've been to or heard about.
I loved World Traveler's comment about the sociability of American skiers compared to reserved Euros. I'm guilty!
Also, I had guys drinking beer next to me on Little Cloud chair today 25 Feb 2026 at Snowbird at about 11:15 am. I don't care for morning booze, but I'm usually glad to have a beer at lunch or apres ski. In fairness, those young guys visiting from out of state today had probably been up since 5 or 6am and were approaching their lunch hour
I agree with the nice community aspects of US base lodges and perhaps the lack thereof in other countries. However, Europe seems to make up for this with very nice on-mtn lodges/restaurants, and refuges.
safety bars - kind of a stale topic with me. I use them and just announce when coming down. All seems fine with this approach where ever I go.
retirees ski a few hours - this fits with the US season pass vs Euro day ticket approach. I have no qualms about short days because I'm using a season pass not a day ticket - where you'd want to maximize by skiing bell to bell. The short days are very good for extending the ski life of a geezer ;-)
He is definitely a collector at 800+ resorts, but can he intelligently discuss the pros and cons of the majority of them???