Ski in Utah, Even on a Budget

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There was a great article written yesterday on thestreet.com about ways to save some money while still enjoying the legendary fresh powder which the Utah ski resorts have to offer.

Why Utah? The best reason to go is the snow. The ski resorts closest to Salt Lake City average 430 inches per year — many received 700 last year (58 feet!) — and it’s almost always light, fluffy powder. Colorado, the Sierra Nevadas and even the Pacific Northwest get plenty of powder, too, but Utah’s dry climate and the effect of Great Salt Lake means exceptionally dry snowflakes, containing as little as 4% water. The result? Ice, a staple for East Coast and Midwestern snow riders, is virtually nonexistent. And in February, the sun shines about 60% of days.

Access and variety also separate Utah from the rest of the country. Seven ski areas lie within 38 miles of Salt Lake City International Airport, a major hub with 800 nonstop arrivals every day. There’s also the Utah Transit Authority, or UTA, a public transit system that can get you from the airport, downtown or just about anywhere else in the metro area to the lodge quickly and cheaply.

Alta, Brighton, The Canyons, Deer Valley, Park City Mountain Resort, Snowbird and Solitude, each with its own character (and price range), offer a combined 14,000 skiable acres, compared to 5,800 for the combined membership of Ski Vermont.

Here are some of the articles suggestions to save some money:

Plan ahead. From lodging to lift tickets and equipment rentals, everything is cheaper if you book early in the season, often before early December. Once you’re on the ground, remember that buying lift tickets and renting equipment before you get to the mountain can also save you money.

Stay in town. Try hotels and condos in Midvale, Cottonwood Heights or Sandy for easy access to the Cottonwoods. Downtown Salt Lake also works well, offering a short trip to Park City and a slightly longer one to the canyons. Check rates at the Residence Inn Salt Lake City Cottonwood or the Best Western Cottontree Inn. If you’re focused on Park City, poke around The Canyons resort and the town’s outskirts, because the town has a fabulous, free shuttle system that runs morning, noon and night.

Take the shuttle or city buses. Loading yourself, your equipment and your ski clothes onto a bus doesn’t sound like fun, but it’s cheap ($2.25 each way). Besides, even with a rental car, you may have to take public transportation to the Cottonwood resorts. Avalanches and avalanche prevention often shut down the roads, or restrict them to buses or four-wheel drive. If it snows overnight, call the resorts’ ski conditions hotlines for road information before you decide where to ski. If you do rent a car, consider your winter driving skills or an all-wheel/four-wheel-drive rental if you’re planning to drive up the canyons.

Scout out discounts. Deals abound, online and on the ground. Wherever you stay, they’ll likely offer discounted lift tickets for nearby resorts. Many offer the Salt Lake Super Pass, with discounts on one to six days of skiing at Alta, Brighton, Snowbird and Solitude (with a free day if you buy three days or more by Dec. 1). It’s also available from Ski-SaltLake.com, CheapTickets.com and other travel Web sites. The vouchers include rides on the UTA buses to the resorts. For the Cottonwoods and the Park City resorts (The Canyons, Deer Valley, Park City Mountain Resort), you can also buy tickets at area ski shops such as Canyon Sports or Ski ‘N See in Salt Lake (but not at Park City stores). You can save up to $18 — provided you buy before you head up.

Ski Magazine Utah Resort Rankings 2008-2009

You probably already know that Utah has the Greatest Snow on Earth ®, well once again we’re a the top of the pile in many resort rankings.  Below are Utah resorts ranked according to Ski Magazine

Overall
#1- Deer Valley Resort
#5- Park City Mountain Resort
#13- The Canyons Resort
#22- Solitude Mountain Resort
#25- Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort
#28- Alta Ski Area
#30- Snowbasin

Snow
#1- Alta Ski Area
#2- Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort
#3- Powder Mountain
#5- Brighton Resort
#6- Solitude Mountain Resort
#9- Deer Valley Resort

Grooming
#1- Deer Valley Resort

Terrain/Challenge
#3- Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort
#4- Alta Ski Area

Value
#1- Powder Mountain
#3- Alta Ski Area
#5- Brighton Resort
#7- Solitude Mountain Resort

Lifts
#1- Snowbasin
#4- Deer Valley Resort

Service
#1- Deer Valley Resort
#3- Snowbasin

Weather
#1- Deer Valley Resort
#2- Solitude Mountain Resort
#4- Alta Ski Area
#5- Brighton Resort
#8- Park City Mountain Resort

Access
#1- Park City Mountain Resort
#2- Deer Valley Resort
#4- The Canyons Resort
#5- Solitude Mountain Resort
#6- Alta Ski Area
#7- Brighton Resort
#8- Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort

On-Mountain Food
#1- Deer Valley Resort
#2- Snowbasin

Lodging
#1- Deer Valley Resort
#8- Park City Mountain Resort

Dining
#2- Deer Valley Resort
#9- Park City Mountain Resort

Apres-Ski
#8- Park City Mountain Resort

Off-Hill Activities
#6- Park City Mountain Resort
#9- Deer Valley Resort

Family Programs
#7- Deer Valley Resort

Terrain Parks
#9-Park City Mountain Resort

Overall Satisfaction
#1- Alta Ski Area

#4- Deer Valley Resort

#6- Solitude Mountain Resort

Brighton your day with a new season pass for you and your kid.

Brighton Resort is offering a great way to maximize your family’s dollar.

Make any early season purchase and receive a child 7-10 unlimited season pass for just $50!  Regularly priced at $129.  This offer is valid through September 12.  To take advantage of these great family discounts go to:

Brighton Resort

9am-3pm Monday - Friday
(801) 532-4731

REI
3285 E. 3300 S.
August 29 - September 1

Sport Authority
5590 S. 900 E.
August 29 - September 1

Burton Chill Program at Brighton

If you’ve not heard of it, the Burton Chill Program involves inter-city youth from 15 different cities across North Amercia and gets them on a snowboard to try something new that they likely would not have had the chance to do. In 2007 it reached over 2500 kids.

Chill teaches underprivileged, at-risk kids to snowboard over six weeks each winter, giving them everything they need for the experience: lift tickets, instruction, bus transportation and head-to-toe gear. Here in Utah, Brighton Resort is the host resort for the program.

Burton Snowboards founded Chill in 1995 in their home city of Burlington, Vermont. Initially, the goal was to bring snowboarding to kids who otherwise wouldn’t have the opportunity.

Many of the kids who participate in Chill have never left their cities, even their neighborhoods, and most have never been to the mountains. Chill gives all of these kids the chance to shed their labels of “addict”, “delinquent”, “trouble-maker”, “under-achiever” and, through their own personal success, become a “snowboarder.”

Ski Utah’s Tim Roberts who maintains the RideUtah.com blog, spent the last 6 weeks going up to Brighton with his neighbor Jake who was learning to snowboard as part of the program. Check out the video that Tim put together documenting the program and Jake’s progression.

Nice work Jake and Tim! Holla!

Rail Jam at Brighton

A month or so ago I was up at Brighton Resort for the Bluehouse Rail Jam. It was cool to see all the skiers that came out to compete, many of those who were stoked about a ski only rail jam. Brighton hooked up the kind spot, rolled out the red carpet and a slew of sponsors including Tramdock.com kicked down prizes.

Brighton knows how to embrace the local riders and skiers! Right on Brighton!

Check out the vid:

Give Brighton a Chance

I heart Alta and Snowbird and Solitude and all of Utah’s lovely resorts…but I feel like a lot of people (locals and tourists) don’t give Brighton a chance. They don’t have outstanding lodging or restaurants, which means perks in other places. A day pass at Brighton is $53 [Canyons=$79, Snowbird=$69, Solitude=$55, Alta $59]. They almost always are the first resort to open, give out a very local vibe, have recently upgraded the Milly lift to a quad, and have an awesome park crew. Even if you don’t ride park, its fun to be involved with the events weather you’re a volunteer or a spectator.

I recently got to be a judge for the Bluehouse Slopestyle comp that was held at Brighton on March 8th. It could have been a balmy spring day, but turned out to be a bit of a blizzard. Despite that it was fun to see the die hard kids compete for gift certs and a brand new pair of skis. In the past I have always been on the competitor side of these Slopestyle events and found myself as the only female competing often times. So, I had extra respect and stoke for Kristy Giles who was the only female (and killed it by the way taking 4th place with all the males). Brighton was more than happy to have us there and groomed the park nicely for the athletes.

If any of you can make it, Brighton is also hosting a sweet event this Saturday March 22. Put on by Slug Games, they will be hosting a slopestyle comp…funds raised by it will be donated to fighting Breast Cancer. A local Burton rep, Krista Moroge, is in her own fight to stay alive…come out and support this wonderful woman.  If nothing else, come out and give Brighton a try.  [p.s. During April Brighton will be doing a buy one get one free deal on Tuesdays!]

Ski Salt Lake Shootout - A Recipe of Sorts

This past week Ski Salt Lake held a unique photo contest called the Ski Salt Lake Shootout. It featured 4 Utah resorts, local athletes, and a number of top photographers from around the western United States and Canada. The recipe for getting stunning images of the Cottonwood Resorts was the brain child of Adam Barker.

Here’s how the Recipe played out:

1. Heavy dose of Ski Salt Lake’s 4 resorts (Alta, Brighton, Snowbird, Solitude)

2. A small handful of local ski athletes like Sage Cattabriga-Alosa, Ben Wheeler, Jamie Pierre and more

3. 1 bunch of top notch ski photographers (1 bunch = 7 photographers)

The final and secret ingredient - 2 feet of fresh Utah Powder - air chilled at 15 degrees overnight

Let the mixture loose for 5 days, uncovered and unencumbered.

The result? Well, the results of the Ski Salt Lake Shootout are in and the final product is nothing short of amazing.

While I love the powder division winning shot of Snowbird local Ben Wheeler gasping for air amidst flying powder, the overall winning image by Grant Gunderson is a shot taken in the early hours of the morning near Alta of skier Bryce Phillips. It’s not hard for me to say that it’s one of the most diverse and amazing ski images I’ve ever seen.

Categories included Air, Powder, Big Mountain, Mountain Lifestyle, City Lifestyle with each category winner taking home $1000. Grant Gunderson’s image landed him a cool $4K as the overall winner.

Check out the winning photos at Ski-SaltLake.com

500 is a Beautiful Number in Utah

Yesterday morning as skier and snowboarders were sliding through the 6-13″ of new snow that fell around the Wasatch, Alta and Brighton surpassed that oh so wonderful mark of 500 inches of snowfall for the 2007-08 season.

For Brighton this came around 6am when their snow total reached 503” of fluffy white goodness. They currently have a base depth of 132” and boasting 32 amazing powder days so far this season. Yea, it’s been an amazing year.

In the past 28 years reaching 500 inches of snowfall has only come 4 times in the month of February, this year being one of those four. Their base depth is 154″. Lines I’m used to skiing at Alta are completely filled in this year. Options abound.

I didn’t realize how stellar the base depths here in Utah were until earlier this morning when I was looking at a friend’s Facebook page where he has a feed with all the Colorado resorts listed with their base depths. There were only 3 resorts in Colorado with depths over 100″ while in Utah there are only 3 with base depths under 100″. Hmmm…where to ski, where to ski?

Brighton is a Giant Terrain Park

Saturday dawned somewhat gloomy in the valley with lightly falling snow and foggy conditions and as I headed up to Brighton I anticipated it to much of the same. But to my surprise it was sunny with a few puffy clouds. It’s amazing what 30 minutes of driving will do.

As I was hopping off the Magestic lift for a spin through the park I noticed that the sides of the runs had more powder on them than I had thought. The report said 7″ but it looked and felt more like 12. While the morning was spent in the park helping out with a rail jam put on by Bluehouse Skis I couldn’t help but look at Millicent Peak and see all the lines being dropped and the various cliff hucks lower down.

So following the comp I hopped on my freshly mounted Rossignol Scratch Brigades (which I think I mounted too far forward - the jury is still out) and headed up the Millicent Lift with a sizable posse. We rallied skiers right from the lift and into the various zones littered with cliffs and rollovers.

Dave Wintzer, who I skied Snowbird with back in December, hit a couple of sweet lines including this little gem below which I whimped out on.

He kindly offered the line to me and after some reluctance, party because of being on new skis with a mount that I’m not sure of, I backed off. (Thanks Dave). He sent it…with express shipping.

As with any large posse it didn’t survive the third lap and I found myself with Elias Green and his cousin Caitlin Morgan, both Alta locals who had come over for the rail jam. We took a few more laps as they tee’d up a nice little 20′ drop by spinning 3’s.

After the fun on Millicent we headed back to the park for a few more laps…and some carnage on my part. I’m not blaming it on the skis this time. Learning rails and boxes which comes with a price.

Either way you look at it, with man made or natural features, Brighton is one giant terrain park worth sessioning.

Learning, Part 1.

Fallen DownA lot of times we take skiing for granted. We may live in Utah, close to a resort, own a quiver of skis, and enjoy a lot of powder days. Some people on the other hand, and I say this carefully, could care less. They look at the mountains and view beauty and grandeur, but when the snow starts falling, confine themselves to the shelter that their homes and work offer.

Last week, my friend Spencer decided to change his personal status quo.

Spencer King is a good friend of mine, and was raised in the “Lone Star State”. After being in Utah for school for a few years now, he decided to take the powder plunge and try skiing with me last Friday.

He was eager, he was anxious, and Brighton was the perfect place to learn to slide the slippery slope. The Explorer lift at Brighton was where I learned to ski many years ago during a youth activity with my church. I remember being cold and wet, wearing my dad’s oversized gloves and ski jacket. After making thousands of turns at Brighton over the years, I wanted to share that same joy with Spencer this snowy February day.

This is a post that is a good deal longer then anything I have written here so far. The full article is after the break, and contains a story of a day of skiing. If you take the time to read it, I applaud you, there a lot of words there. Tuesday, I will post part two, which takes me to Park City, and chronicles my Dad, a Principal at Hillcrest High School, conquering the terrain park.

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