Tony Crocker":ljla79dp said:
Red is 7 hours away. That's like saying building a new area in Utah will impact Colorado. I believe more vacationers will be drawn to the "Calgary loop" areas in general.
However I believe that most skiers at these ski areas aren't the ski safari looping fans that we are. They tend to go to one place and stay the entire week, so building a place combo like Jumbo/Panorama will probably make the other BC interior options less attractive.
A good example, a collegue at work (also races Masters + season pass at Tremblant) which asked me where he should go between Kick and Fernie for an entire week, I told him BOTH. He prefered opting just for one (and he's younger than I am).
Tony Crocker":ljla79dp said:
I have read differently. After 2 years of flat skier visits the U.S. total is gradually increasing now. Echo boomers are adding to growth faster than the original boomers are leaving. And remember that overall U.S. population is growing, and not static like most of the developed countries. While the above may not be true within Canada, it still seems to me that western Canada should not have that much trouble drawing skiers from south of the border given the quality of the product. And with only 6% of interior B.C. skiers being Americans now, even modest growth in U.S. visitors should be enough.
Yes, but once the boomers will be leaving for good :? , those numbers should start falling. The increase in numbers should be temporary and effect of the Echos and original boomers still active at the same time.
Yes, Canada's demographic situation is slightly different than the US as population growth is mainly due to immigration which as the US growth is also based on births (only one in the Western countries). The problem with this growth is:
Immigration: Most of the immigration in Canada (and I presumed in the US) is from non-skiing countries where skiing is an abstract and odd sport. Immigration in the 20th century was mainly European where skiing wasn't seen as a strange sport. There is a lack of skiing culture in this new population and the ski industry hasen't been able to attract them in sufficient numbers into the sport.
Births: (although I'm not a specialist of US demography). In Canada, and I suspect in the US, the larger families aren't generally from middle/upper class multi-generation Canadian (and American?) citizens. First generation citizen or immigrants tend to have more children, however like I mentioned above, these are less likely to be skiers/boarders.
ChrisC":ljla79dp said:
My brother bought, Hal could have too. So he bitches - weirdly so. He made a bad economic decision. I hate Hal and am not allowed to speak to him. He's awful.
Regardless if he bought in or not, that besides the point. Personnally, I wouldn't have wanted to buy in Whistler in the late 80s (or Tremblant in the early 90s) and having it turned into a circus a few years later. Regardless of the money I would make, the important thing is the loving the place where we live and ski.
ChrisC":ljla79dp said:
I share many of his opinion on many points before reading his book. However he wrote a book before I did. :lol: And of course, my perspective and experience is more regionally (East and some of Western Canada) than his. :?