I'm back in Colorado for the next 11 days so this weekend a couple areas are on the docket that virtually no one mentions in the online ski world (other than Tony's helpful TRs in 2013). Even if I had an Epic or Ikon Pass, I'm not sure I'd want to be at any of those major ski areas over a busy holiday weekend.
Opened in 1966, it's an unpretentious, old-school ski area frequented exclusively by locals.
I hadn't seen any of these in a while!
From the map, it doesn't look like much compared to the monster ski areas to the east, but it covers 2,000 verts/680 skiable acres and has a surprising amount of variety, including a lot of tree skiing in the aspen groves, some steep chutes, and on the lower looker's left a good-sized sector of double-black terrain that's going to be served next year with the ski area's first new lift in decades: the East Ridge expansion. I'd bet a doughnut that it won't be a high-speed chair, which they don't really need.
The two main chairs are Riblets from the late 60s/early 70s. The lifties patiently remind every person or couple boarding the chair "watch out for the center pole."
Overnight, Sunlight picked up 4-6 inches. Here I am in my first pix on a ski-area's social-media feed. It only took 20 seasons of skiing for someone to notice me.
Sorry for my sometimes blurry pix; I had to zoom in for a few of them, and the high clouds never completely dissipated until around 2 pm. Still, a fun day.
I caught up to a posse of telegirlz on one run:
By early afternoon, most of the obvious new snow had been tracked up but there was plenty of soft chop that was fun to play in:
They use old snowboards for trail signs:
Heading into the aspens for additional untracked mid-afternoon:
I shared a chair with the only other skier on the hill on Kästle skis. Turns out that she'd lived a couple years in Lake Placid, was well acquainted with the good/bad/ugly of skiing in the northeast, and said that her preferred mountains were Whiteface and Jay Peak.
Despite the long drive from Denver, Sunlight is a fun off-the-beaten-path area only 15 minutes from I-70 and a great place to avoid the holiday hordes. So far this season, I'm three for three in Colorado for fresh snow.
Opened in 1966, it's an unpretentious, old-school ski area frequented exclusively by locals.
I hadn't seen any of these in a while!
From the map, it doesn't look like much compared to the monster ski areas to the east, but it covers 2,000 verts/680 skiable acres and has a surprising amount of variety, including a lot of tree skiing in the aspen groves, some steep chutes, and on the lower looker's left a good-sized sector of double-black terrain that's going to be served next year with the ski area's first new lift in decades: the East Ridge expansion. I'd bet a doughnut that it won't be a high-speed chair, which they don't really need.
The two main chairs are Riblets from the late 60s/early 70s. The lifties patiently remind every person or couple boarding the chair "watch out for the center pole."
Overnight, Sunlight picked up 4-6 inches. Here I am in my first pix on a ski-area's social-media feed. It only took 20 seasons of skiing for someone to notice me.
Sorry for my sometimes blurry pix; I had to zoom in for a few of them, and the high clouds never completely dissipated until around 2 pm. Still, a fun day.
I caught up to a posse of telegirlz on one run:
By early afternoon, most of the obvious new snow had been tracked up but there was plenty of soft chop that was fun to play in:
They use old snowboards for trail signs:
Heading into the aspens for additional untracked mid-afternoon:
I shared a chair with the only other skier on the hill on Kästle skis. Turns out that she'd lived a couple years in Lake Placid, was well acquainted with the good/bad/ugly of skiing in the northeast, and said that her preferred mountains were Whiteface and Jay Peak.
Despite the long drive from Denver, Sunlight is a fun off-the-beaten-path area only 15 minutes from I-70 and a great place to avoid the holiday hordes. So far this season, I'm three for three in Colorado for fresh snow.
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