Where are you going this season (25/26)?

snowave

Active member
I always find it interesting to see what people's plans are for the upcoming winter. Here are mine... Feel free to share yours!


Ride locally (weekdays) as usual at Brundage Mtn and Tamarack, ID. Might finally go to Little Ski Hill in McCall as they are now on the Indy Pass.

Mid February trip w/wife: Mt. Bachelor, plus Indy Pass resorts in OR... Hoodoo, Mt Hood Meadows and Cooper Spur- Mt. Hood (lodging and very small mtn).

Spring: Mt. Bachelor

Possible solo trip (without the wife): Regional Indy Pass option. Maybe Soldier Mtn and/or Pomerelle, ID... or Anthony Lakes OR/Blue Mtn Wa.
 
This winter could be a little different for me. Usually I ski a few early season days in the mid-Atlantic and then go to Utah late Jan to late May. This year I think we'll be going to Utah in Nov and returning to mid-Atlantic in April to attend a wedding around first of May. Besides skiing various Utah resorts, my only other likely distant ski trip is up to Banff in late March with the Ski Talk crowd. I hope to ski a few places on the drive up/back from SLC to Banff. As usual I'll have a Snowbird senior pass and a base Ikon pass.
 
@snowave @jimk You people that reside close to mountains and proper winter are living a fantastic dream. Don’t take it for granted!

I’ll be in Japan (skiing Nagano area) for 12 days at the end of January/start of February and skiing in Europe (likely France given my wife’s preferences) in late March/early April.
 
@snowave @jimk You people that reside close to mountains and proper winter are living a fantastic dream. Don’t take it for granted!

I’ll be in Japan (skiing Nagano area) for 12 days at the end of January/start of February and skiing in Europe (likely France given my wife’s preferences) in late March/early April.
I'd love to go to Japan, for the pow and also the culture/food! The travel time is what keeps me from pulling the trigger. I am not a good air traveler, in particular.

I do not take for granted I live near some great, relatively low key mountains! Although, I do get picky about snow conditions/crowds at times. If I can't ski onto the chair, I get irritable. I know, I'm spoiled. :cool:
 
This year I'll be on my own most of February while Liz and Margaret (from Iron Blosam New Jersey group) climb Kilimanjaro with Wilderness Travel. I view my odds of success at that as miniscule at age 73 in view of how slow I was hiking at 10,000 feet in 2023 on Mt. Hoffman and this past June on San Jacinto. Liz is the age I was in my last hard charging ski season in 2019, so I think her odds of success on a well curated 10-day trip are good. Odds are not so good on cheap trips that try to get it done in 5 or 6 days.

During that time I expect to drive to Canada where I cat ski Island Lake Feb. 23-25. I am supposed to get an Indy Pass from NASJA and I may use that to knock off a few of the U.S. western areas of 1,000+ vertical that I have not skied. But with a car flexibility to chase snow conditions will be first priority. The road trip will end at Iron Blosam Week.

If we go to the Alps it would likely be after March 20 or so.
 
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Having an Epic Pass will significantly influence many of my ski decisions.

Euro Trip:
  • Starts at either Engelberg/Andermatt or La Grave/Les Deux Alpes - 4 days. My UK friend group is still undecided, and I have no desire to be on the group text.
Then, drive from Engelberg/Andermatt to Solden (4 hrs) -- or fly/drive from La Grave/Les Deux Alpes to Solden (8.5 hrs?:confused:). Will have to figure out the appropriate gateway city/airports if skiing in France; otherwise, Zurich.

Austrian Tour - Of course, the below will all get modified depending on the weather/storms, but focus on Solden/Kitzbuhel/glacier resorts.
  • Solden* - 2 days
  • Obergurgl
  • Garmisch Classic - AM, Zugspitze - PM
  • SkiWelt
  • Kitzbuhel
  • Saalbach*
  • Zell am See* - AM, Kaprun*- PM
  • Mayrhofen* - AM, Hintertux* - PM
*= Epic Partner

If it rains or there is little snow in Western Austria (resorts at low elevation, but with extensive snowmaking), I will add 2 days at St. Anton and Zurs/Lech/Warth. They are Epic resorts. And continue to ski the glaciated areas of Solden, Hintertux, and Kaprun-Kitzsteinhorn, and possibly explore Saalbach or Kitzbühel further.

Telluride/Silverton: +/- 5 days.

Kirkwood/Heavenly
1 or 2 Weekends. (Likely not going to Northstar. In the mid-2000s, class bought student passes for $169/yr, so I have logged too many days on that hill. It's probably my #1 California Mountain ;):):rolleyes:, but it does have good storm and tree skiing.)

Whistler Long Weekend in March or so - The weekend crowding starts to lessen by then. See if I can get Seattle friends to come up.

Then see what the weather brings....Whistler could get canceled/skipped, but I'm locked in for Austria, Telluride, and South Tahoe.
 
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Usually I ski a few early season days in the mid-Atlantic

Where do you like to ski? I always thought Whitetail was easy from DC (HSQ, with almost 1,000 ft of vertical). And surprisingly, I found Virginia (Massanutten or Wintergreen) offers a bigger mountain experience than Pennsylvania's Roundtop or Liberty.
 
I’ll be in Japan (skiing Nagano area) for 12 days at the end of January/start of February

Curious what you will think. I never did my due diligence on Nagano because it seemed confusing and a little challenging to get around without a car.

If I ever get back to Japan, the two Nagano choices seem to be:
  • Shiga Kogen
  • Hakuba - Unconnected resorts. Best:
    • Happo One - large
    • Hakuba 47 and Goryu -steeper?
    • Cortina and Norikura - powder

From Powderhounds (Australian skiers):

Nagano offers a range of ski resorts, with the most popular being the vast, high-altitude Shiga Kogen ski area and the internationally renowned Hakuba Valley. Other notable resorts include the historic and family-friendly Nozawa Onsen with its village onsen, the snow-focused Madarao Kogen, and the family-oriented Karuizawa Prince Snow Resort.

Key Nagano Ski Resort Areas

  • Shiga Kogen:
    Japan's most significant and highest ski resort area, featuring 18 interconnected resorts accessible by a single pass and a free shuttle.
  • Hakuba Valley:
    A world-class destination with 10 resorts in the Northern Alps, known for abundant snowfall, powder snow, and facilities used during the 1998 Winter Olympics.


 
Shiga Kogen is far enough west to gets lots of lake/sea effect powder. I have not been there.

Hakuba much less so except for the small but farther west Cortina area which I did not ski in 2011. I skied a morning at Hakuba 47 and Goryu; incoming weather cut the day short. As a result I got good powder at Happo One, but I was ducking ropes for most of it. In 2011 sidecountry skiing was generally allowed in Hokkaido but not so much on Honshu. I do not know if those rules have changed.

If I went back to Honshu I would go to the Aomori and/or Tohoku regions. These areas are places of James' dreams: modest in size, abundant snow and reputedly zero powder competition.
 
I may use that to knock off a few of the U.S. western areas of 1,000+ vertical that I have not skied

AFAIK the only places in the western US and Canada that I haven't skied but have clear interest in are probably Alpental, Mt. Spokane and Red Lodge. Maybe Dodge Ridge, Willamette Pass, Mt. Hood Ski Bowl. Location near to clearly superior areas can be a deterrent. It's probably not an accident both tseeb and I have skied Mt. Ashland because it's well situated to break up a 2 day drive from urban California to the Pacific Northwest. And while Ashland has modest vertical it has interesting terrain variety. In the interior NW Liz has not skied Silver either.

Alpental is a great mountain! However......a big however! Snoqualmie Pass, at 3,000 ft, can have the wettest snow I have ever seen, which has left me a little scared about just twisting a fall and blowing out my ACL, etc.

I was overjoyed to discover that my office in Issaquah, WA, was conveniently located just 30 minutes away. I could go night skiing with coworkers and have access to incredible terrain, including its official footprint, backcountry, and slackcountry. Or if it were a Seattle snow day, I still showed up to work (4WD), and just went skiing in rare, fluffy snow.

I loved this site, which is still maintained. Pactically memorized it so I wouldn't injure myself. https://alpental.com/snow-h.htm
Note: There is enough variety in bounds. The sidecountry gets cliffy towards the bottom, but it is heavily skied, so one can follow tracks.

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SideCountry/Near Backcountry - Looker's right
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Further Out/Far Backcountry - further looker's right
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I enjoyed Mt. Spokane and would highly recommend it. Riblet city!

And if it hasn't rained, and snow levels have been good (a Big if!) Mt. Hood SkiBowl is excellent: Patrolled Sidecountry and great views. Another Riblet city!

I finally caught it right in February 2020

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If I went back to Honshu I would go to the Aomori and/or Tohoku regions. These areas are places of James' dreams: modest in size, abundant snow and reputedly zero powder competition.
They look interesting but are generally low elevation. No issue in a ‘normal winter’ but not ideal in a warm winter.
 
Where do you like to ski? I always thought Whitetail was easy from DC (HSQ, with almost 1,000 ft of vertical). And surprisingly, I found Virginia (Massanutten or Wintergreen) offers a bigger mountain experience than Pennsylvania's Roundtop or Liberty.
I grew up skiing Blue Knob, PA in the 1960-80s. My folks owned a 2nd home near there for 15 years, but haven't been back in about ten years now. It's my favorite mid-Atlantic ski area when the natural snow is good. 2010 was a fabulous year. Over the decades I've skied them all within 3 or 4 hours of DC. Whitetail is one of the better ones that is also closest to the city. Last season I skied Canaan Valley, WV twice because 70+ skies free there. The season before I skied Massanutten three times because 70+ was $5 for a season pass, then they bumped it up to $25 :-) Massanutten has made some very nice improvements in recent years. Blue Knob is suffering in a long decline.
 
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Ride locally (weekdays) as usual at Brundage Mtn and Tamarack, ID. Might finally go to Little Ski Hill in McCall as they are now on the Indy Pass.
Missed that the Little Ski Hill joined Indy. I'll keep that in mind for the next time. We stopped by to look at the base on the way back to Tamarack from Brundage last March.

Little Ski Hill mascot, March 2025
ID moose Mar 2025 - 1.jpeg
 
A mixed bag for 2025-26 with a few standard trips, an experiment, and a ski safari based on the Indy Pass. All the trips include 7-12 days of skiing. Except for the ski safari in March, I've skied at all the other resorts before.
  • Dec: Wolf Creek, plus a few days using Ikon at Copper, ABasin, and/or Winter Park. Driving from NC.
  • Jan: Massanutten (home mountain since 2005) for annual timeshare week and MLK weekend\
  • Late Jan/early Feb: Monarch & Crested Butte, or Big Sky & Bridger
  • mid-Feb: Massanutten for Pres. Day weekend
  • Late Feb: Taos, followed by a couple days at Wolf Creek, may check out Sipapu and/or Pajarito
  • Mar: northeast ski safari using Indy for Jay, Sutton, Owl’s Head, and a few other places
  • Apr: Alta, 16th annual meet up with friends at Alta Lodge
I saved MLK and Pres. Day weekends to take the teen daughter of a local friend to Massanutten. She’s been skiing there on holiday weekends since she was 8. Had fun with her at Big SNOW in July.

The idea behind the trip in early February is “planned powder chasing." Made plans with a ski buddy who is mid-career. She really wants to find some fresh powder, if at all possible. We picked dates so that she could schedule vacation days well in advance. Then picked two potential destinations in different regions and made travel arrangements for both places. We’ll make a decision about where to go a week or two before flying west. Booked flights and lodging that are straightforward to cancel.

Originally had a different idea for March that involved travel with my non-skiing husband. After Indy added more resorts in Québec, decided I’d rather do a northeast ski safari. The plan fell into place when a friend who lives in Boston and is a great travelmate said she would join me. Haven’t skied in the northeast since 2019.
 
Late Jan/early Feb: Monarch & Crested Butte, or Big Sky & Bridger........The idea behind the trip in early February is “planned powder chasing." Made plans with a ski buddy who is mid-career. She really wants to find some fresh powder, if at all possible. We picked dates so that she could schedule vacation days well in advance. Then picked two potential destinations in different regions and made travel arrangements for both places. We’ll make a decision about where to go a week or two before flying west. Booked flights and lodging that are straightforward to cancel.
Hopefully MarzNC will not be offended by a series of questions I have about this plan.
1) I'll hazard a guess based upon age alone (projecting from my own recent age-based observations) that MarzNC is not comfortable on North Face CB, Schlasman's/Ridge at Bridger or Lone Peak at Big Sky. If that is true, the gap at the advanced intermediate level on all of these mountains is a big flaw, and the reason I've advised sbooker and family away from them. For powder, what you want is ungroomed advanced intermediate terrain, due to fewer rocks, delayed openings for avy control, etc.
2) The flights are the one thing I do tend to book farther in advance as they are more expensive if last minute or with no cancellation penalty. The big exception is if you're using FF mileage. With enough status you can usually redeposit the miles without penalty.
3) I usually send along links to my TRs when contacting a ski area in May for snow data that I have skied in the current season. I did not do that for Big Sky in 2023 because the comments in response to my TR here were overwhelmingly negative.
4) Big Sky lodging prices have skyrocketed. That's why SkiTalk doesn't have Gatherings there anymore. So kudos to MarzNC if she found something reasonable. If staying in Bozeman, that's a quite tedious commute, and I suspect a hellish one on powder days.
5) CB is not a good place for powder. Snowfall is modest and the North Face would be a scary place with lots of hidden rocks just below a coating of new snow. Monarch is smaller than any of 9 places I mention in the interior Northwest below.

Now that I'm done :brick: I have constructive suggestions.

This whole plan just screams Interior Northwest to me. From Spokane you have Mt. Spokane, 49 North (Indy), Schweitzer (largest area, Ikon), Silver Mt. (Indy), Lookout (modest size but 400+ inches, half price midweek on Indy). All of these places get more snow than the 4 MarzNC is considering and are usually deserted midweek. Or from Missoula you have Whitefish, Montana Snowbowl (Indy), Lost Trail (Indy) and Discovery.

And finally, MarzNC is on the East Coast. Has she not been inspired by James' late January experiences in the Alps? Density of ski areas within modest drive distances is much better than in the American West, so easier to chase powder with much less competition for it.
 
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Liz is the age I was in my last hard charging ski season in 2019, so I think her odds of success on a well curated 10-day trip are good. Odds are not so good on cheap trips that try to get it done in 5 or 6 days.

I took that view when I was in my 20s. Why not enjoy the climb? It's not a race.

When I moved to Seattle, I started asking around what would be an appropriate guide outfit for Mt Rainier. The most popular, reputable, and well-known one is Alpine Ascents. They guide globally. However, their Rainier trips are typically quick, 3-day, almost death marches up Rainier via Camp Muir with minimal training. Fine if you are coming from outside Washington State.
https://www.alpineascents.com/climbs/mount-rainier-climb-muir/itinerary/

However, I found a Glacier Climbing Class that was taught at Bellevue Community College at the time. A similar group is still offering it. https://www.osat.org/GCC

As you can see, the class was a commitment, but I received legitimate training and summited Mt. Baker and Mt. Rainier.

Glacier Climbing Course
Seminar 1: February 1st, 8:00-3:00, Mercer Island​
Seminar 2: February 12th, 5:30-8:30, Bellevue​
Field Trip: February 15th, 8:00-3:00, Seattle Mountaineers​
Seminar 3: March 5th, 5:30-8:30, Bellevue​
Field Trip: March 8th, 8:00-3:00, West Seattle​
Seminar 4: April 9th, 5:30-8:30, Bellevue​
Field Trip: April 19th, 8:00-3:00, Snoqualmie Pass​
Seminar 5: April 30th, 5:30-8:30, Bellevue​
Field trip (Snow Camp Full Weekend): May 3rd 8:00-May 4th 5:00pm, Steven's Pass​
Evening Outdoor Crevasse Rescue Practice: May 21st, 6:00-9:00, Gas Works Park​
Seminar 6: May 28th, 5:30-8:30, Bellevue​
Field trip (Crevasses Rescue Full Weekend): May 31st, 8:00-June 1st, 5:00 pm, Mount Baker​
Graduation Climbs: June Weekends [7-9, 14-15, 21-22], Mount Baker.​
Post-Graduation Mount Rainier Climbs: June/July Weekends [ June 27-30; July 4-6, 11-13, 18-20]​


Crevasse Rescue Training on Mt Baker: This is a Prusik self rescue method - climbing up a rope using two Prusik knots.

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Hopefully MarzNC will not be offended by a series of questions I have about this plan.
If that was likely, I wouldn't be posting here. I had plenty of experience with a co-ed online ski forum as an EpicSki moderator for the last five years it existed. Plus, I'm a born and bred New Yorker. ;)

In general, keep in mind is that my trip planning is based not only on where I'd like to ski, but also the interests and travel situations for the my travel/ski buddies. A travel "crew" for sharing lodging and ground transportation is 2-6 people, including myself. My husband of 30+ years does not ski at all. These days, he has to put up with the fact that I'm not home much during the ski season.

The Planned Powder Chasing trip was planned around the interests of my friend who learned to ski as a young adult while finishing up a Ph.D. She's doesn't have budget constraints, but does have time constraints because of working full-time in the pharmaceutical industry. She has strong preferences related to lodging. Her husband is not interested in skiing. She reached a level to enjoy deep powder and steeps several years ago. Doing annual Private Ski Weeks at Taos and hiking the Ridge with a favorite instructor in recent years made quite a difference. That's in addition to other lessons for about a decade before that.

Warning . . . this got long. :)

1) I'll hazard a guess based upon age alone (projecting from my own recent age-based observations) that MarzNC is not comfortable on North Face CB, Schlasman's/Ridge at Bridger or Lone Peak at Big Sky. If that is true, the gap at the advanced intermediate level on all of these mountains is a big flaw, and the reason I've advised sbooker and family away from them. For powder, what you want is ungroomed advanced intermediate terrain, due to fewer rocks, delayed openings for avy control, etc.
Your age-related guesses are incorrect in some ways. Between semi-private lessons starting in 2013 at Massanutten, Bridger, Alta, Wolf Creek, and annual Taos Ski Weeks starting in 2018, I say I've become a "solid advanced" skier. That means advanced, but not expert. I'm skiing terrain I never expected to enjoy when I started skiing more regularly out west with adult friends about 15 years ago. Narrow chutes with rocks are not of interest. Have done a few entrances with instructors (Alta, Bridger) and that's enough. The instructors I've worked repeatedly are PSIA Level 3 with 20+ years of experience.

Becoming more fit after knee rehab in 2012 is another factor. I started doing year round ski conditioning and fitness training in assorted ways, including working with a personal trainer during the summer and/or fall. Blowing an ACL in June 2012 was not related to skiing at all. I opted not to do ACL reconstruction surgery. Bottom line is that I'm in far better shape than twenty years ago.

It's been a while since I skied with @jimk or @tseeb at Snowbird. I've improved a lot in recent years.

I prefer Alta to Snowbird, partially because I know all sorts of relatively short powder runs at Alta. Terrain in Catherine's is more my idea of good fun, as opposed to off a Devil's Castle traverse. I've skied in Supreme Bowl but often would rather do Rock 'N Roll to Cabin Hill than No. 9 Express.

4) Big Sky lodging prices have skyrocketed. That's why SkiTalk doesn't have Gatherings there anymore. So kudos to MarzNC if she found something reasonable. If staying in Bozeman, that's a quite tedious commute, and I suspect a hellish one on powder days.
Yep, finding lodging at Big Sky or even Meadow Village is not easy. The last trip we stayed in a 3BR/3BA condo in Meadow Village. Had enough people to keep the nightly cost per person reasonable.

Our reservations for the potential upcoming trip are at the relatively new Home2Suites by Hilton in Four Corners for the days we plan to ski Big Sky. Nightly rate without taxes is $165. Then we'd move to the GranTree Inn in Bozeman for skiing Bridger, where I've stayed before.

Being on Eastern Time is useful for ski trips out west. I'm a morning person in general. My ski buddy is not a morning person. But she (and Bill if involved) are quite willing to be up early enough to arrive at a resort parking lot an hour before lifts open. Waking up at 6am MT is easy during a 1-week trip for people living on Eastern Time.

As for terrain of interest . . .

Big Sky is in my personal Top Five list. I always combine Big Sky with Bridger. Have been five times (2012, 2013, 2019, 2023, 2024). I first skied Liberty off Lone Peak in 2012 during Diva West. Fair to say, I was having to stop every 3-4 turns and reset. Didn't have enough technique for steep terrain back then. During my last trip to Big Sky in Feb 2024, I could have skied Liberty essentially non-stop, but I stopped a few times to take pictures. I was with my primary ski buddy, Bill. Bill also was born and raised in NYC. He moved to Albuquerque decades ago. He's an old bachelor so free to do whatever he likes when it comes to being away from home.

Later that trip Bill and I had plenty of fun in making powder turns on the Moonlight side. On the last ski day we confirmed that the snow was terrible off Dakota and then headed back to Moonlight. With the new lift over there, should be shorter lift lines. I've explored Big Sky enough to know where to find leftover good snow.

For Bridger, I'm not interested in hiking the Ridge. I would ski off Schlasman's during a lesson if my instructor thought it was worth it. I started wearing a beacon in-bounds a few years ago. All of my instructors were pushing the idea. My instructor has been a Ridge Guide for decades. First worked with him after a recommendation from nolo of EpicSki. He's over 70 and semi-retired but happy to do a lesson for me and my friends if he's in town and not off skiing elsewhere.

Only been to CB once, in March 2024. So far, that was the only season I got an Epic Local pass. CB is one of Bill's favorite mountains. I got a good introduction to terrain off the upper mountain T-bars early on during a Full Day Lesson with a long-time Level 3 instructor. We lucked out and arrived shortly after a powder storm.

5) CB is not a good place for powder. Snowfall is modest and the North Face would be a scary place with lots of hidden rocks just below a coating of new snow. Monarch is smaller than any of 9 places I mention in the interior Northwest below.
That's why I'm not committed to head to CB. My ski buddy who is working hasn't been there, but she knows Bill likes CB, both mountain and town, a lot. It's an easy drive for him from Albuquerque. She's done quite a few trips that involved him too. In fact, her first experience skiing deep powder was with Bill at PowMow in 2014 during a Diva West.

Flying to DEN non-stop is easy. From my home airport, RDU, I can't get a non-stop flight to any other airport in western ski country. Bill is willing to pick us up at DEN and take us back for our flights home. His ski car is a Kia Telluride these days. He's going to CB no matter what because making last minute changes to a trip plan doesn't work for him.

We'd warm up skiing Monarch for a couple days on the way to CB. Discovered the Lodge at Poncha Springs, which is family owned and 10 min closer to Monarch than a motel in Salida. Lodging at CB will be at the Old Town Inn in town. I shared a good 2BR/2BA condo near the resort in 2024. But we wanted to book lodging that could be cancelled with no penalty relatively close to the arrival date. Also needed a place that would work for Bill for a solo trip.

If we do decide to head to CB, I'll set up at least one Full Day lesson for the three of us. If the instructor I worked with before isn't available, I'll get a recommendation from her about who to work with. It would be a combination of guided "adventure skiing" and powder technique instruction.

3) I usually send along links to my TRs when contacting a ski area in May for snow data that I have skied in the current season. I did not do that for Big Sky in 2023 because the comments in response to my TR here were overwhelmingly negative.

Except for this Planned Powder Chasing Trip experiment, I don't plan trips out west with much consideration for snow conditions. Meaning, the dates are set months in advance that work for me and my friends who are interested. We go and enjoy the ski trip, regardless of snow and weather conditions. I've been lucky to catch a few deep powder storms (Alta in Apr, Grand Targhee in Mar, Taos in Feb, Wolf Creek in Dec) and I've been skunked with unexpected low snow conditions (Alta in Mar, Taos in late Feb).

If I'm going somewhere new mid-season (Feb-Mar), I don't care about snow conditions at all. For Tamarack, Brundage, Bogus Basin, and Brian Head in March 2025, Bill and I had the best snow at Bogus and Brian Head after my intermediate friends went home. It was more important that they had fun staying at Tamarack and also enjoyed Brundage greens. What I learned on that trip was that I'd like to go back to Idaho. A future trip will be that much easier to arrange in terms of travel planning because of the experience we gained. Overall, it was a really fun trip for all of us.

@Tony Crocker : thanks for the questions and comments. Writing stuff down is how I process best. For planning ski trips, most of the time I'm in the "I know what I know" stage of learning but sometimes I've gone past that into "I don't know what I know."
 
This whole plan just screams Interior Northwest to me. From Spokane you have Mt. Spokane, 49 North (Indy), Schweitzer (largest area, Ikon), Silver Mt. (Indy), Lookout (modest size but 400+ inches, half price midweek on Indy). All of these places get more snow than the 4 MarzNC is considering and are usually deserted midweek. Or from Missoula you have Whitefish, Montana Snowbowl (Indy), Lost Trail (Indy) and Discovery.
Makes sense to me. I've had Red Mountain on a list of potential destinations for a while. But Bill lives in NM. It's a long drive up to the PacNW. He doesn't fly for ski trips.

My experience skiing on the west coast was with Bill in early May a while back. He picked me up in Boise for a ski safari to check out Bachelor (stayed in Sun River), Mt. Hood Meadows (day trip), Squaw (just one morning), and Mammoth (3 ski days). We spent a little time in Death Valley before he dropped me off at the Las Vegas airport. I took a non-stop flight back to RDU. Bill kept driving and went to ski a couple days at ABasin before heading back to Albuquerque.

Have senior friends (over 80) who call Mt. Baker their home mountain. So that's on the list somewhere.

And finally, MarzNC is on the East Coast. Has she not been inspired by James' late January experiences in the Alps? Density of ski areas within modest drive distances is much better than in the American West, so easier to chase powder.
I've traveled in Europe. Started with multiple family trips before grad school. The longest trip involved driving around for three months in 1967 after a few weeks staying in southern France near my uncle's family. After leaving Italy, we visited several countries in Eastern Europe that were fully dominated by the Soviet Union. I know how small the countries are in Europe compared to the western USA. Of course, the states in New England are tiny in comparison when doing a ski safari. Not sure I want to drive in Europe on snowy mountain roads though.

Just got a taste of the Alps doing a short stay in Chamonix in April. It was the second part of a trip my daughter set up for herself to visit her godmother in Basel, Switzerland. We lucked out and had good weather for a morning of skiing groomers at Grands Montets with blue sky views. It had snowed overnight, but going off-piste wasn't happening since my daughter hasn't skied much since middle school. We used Eurail passes from Basel to Chamonix, and then to Geneva for the flight home. I'm well aware that there are non-stop flights from RDU to Paris, London, and Munich.

When I can join the 70 Plus Ski Club, been thinking about one of their European trips. Don't have friends interested in a small group trip to ski in Europe. Don't feel like doing the travel planning for a solo trip. Although I could get plenty of advice from the Aussies. Where I stayed in Chamonix was suggested by an Aussie.
 
James - how did you like Silvretta Montafon? Silvretta Montafon, AT 02/04/15

I was just looking at Epic Pass resorts and realize it's included. I also was looking at Austrian resorts on the Powderhounds site (which I respect), and they even "Rated...(the resort).....3rd in the Powderhounds Best Overall Ski Resorts in Europe category in 2022." Link

Anyways, it seems like it would be a much snowier alternative vs. some of the lower elevation snow-making dependent resorts of Eastern Austria. So I was thinking I should swap out the massive Ski Welt area for Silvretta Montafon, and max out my Epic Pass resorts. It also seems like a resort with the potential for better powder - part of the Voralberg powder triangle.

Also, was this experience easy to sign up for: The experience I tried yesterday is called Hochjoch Totale, a variation of the classic sunrise ski run, where you go out and get turns before the lifts publically open.

I likely will not be able to ski everything I want to, but can hit some highlights in a week. Can always return again if I like Austria outside of the Arlberg/Ischgl mega-resorts. I definitely want to ski Kitzbuhel and base in the resort for 2 nights.

Austrian Tour - Of course, the below will all get modified depending on the weather/storms, but focus on Solden/Kitzbuhel/glacier resorts.
  • Solden* - 2 days
  • Obergurgl
  • Garmisch Classic - AM, Zugspitze - PM
  • SkiWelt Silvretta Montafon*
  • Kitzbuhel
  • Saalbach*
  • Zell am See* - AM, Kaprun*- PM
  • Mayrhofen* - AM, Hintertux* - PM
*= Epic Partner


You might want to chechout the Powderhounds site. Sure, they ski the larger resorts, but the really value the small-mid size Alps resorts with good snowfall and few crowds. Resorts that are 'Greek' to me.

Examples:
  • Excellent value multi-day lift pass that includes other regional resorts (incl. the magnificent secret stash of Gargellen).
  • Best Austria powder skiing 2: Gargellen, Zauchensee, Kuhtai
  • Best Value for Money Overall: See, Kuhtai, Axamer Lizum, Kappl, Gargellen, Diedamskopf, Nauders, Schlick 2000
  • Switzerland is home to a fabulous number of “forgotten” ski resorts with massive appeal to Powderhounds. We have visited a host of smaller, secret-stash Swiss ski resorts in recent years and will keep going back to them because they are so good on powder days. These include Anzère, Arolla-Evolene, Belalp, Bivio, Brigels, Grimentz Zinal, Lauchernalp, Leukerbad, Leysin, Rosswald & St Luc Chandolin. The list goes on. Switzerland is full of these powder laden ski resort gems. Discovering them is (and will be) a helluva lot of fun.
 
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