Thursday, December 25, 2014

Christmas Opening!

I didn't go, but here is the Mountain Report 
Tips UpUpdated: 12/25/14 @ 8:00 a.m. Merry Christmas! We've picked up almost three feet of snow since last Friday and the forecast is calling for snow showers today and as we head into the weekend. Out on the slopes you'll find plenty of soft fresh snow and packed powder on top of a solid base. We are open daily with 9 lifts in operation and are planning to get Southback open this morning! We opened the new Quicksilver lift and Chair 6 yesterday and they will now be open daily.

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Here we go. Dec 21, 2014.

OPENING TOMORROW!!!

WE ARE CLOSED TODAY – BE ADVISED THERE IS NO AVALANCHE CONTROL.  We made it through the warm front and fared as well as we could.  For most of the storm the freezing level was around mid-mountain and we picked up over a foot of new snow at the higher elevations.  Green Valley filled in with a thick layer of snow and coverage is great.  We will open the Mt. Rainier Gondola and Green Valley Express lift on Monday, December 22, and tickets will be just $35.  We will open more lifts and terrain starting Tuesday, and plan to remain open daily!  We’re expecting snow showers over the next few days and will get as much of the mountain open as we can throughout the week.  It’s a Christmas miracle!  Either that or the pineapples finally got the message.  Stay tuned for updates.

Friday, December 19, 2014

2014/15 SEASON STARTS with a thud......

It's December 19 and it has not started yet.  Here is the Crystal Report:
Last Updated: 12/18
24 HR: 0" 
72 HR: 0"
4" - 24" 

It's really not open, and nothing in Washington has that much.  Alpental and Snoqualmie are not close to opening. And there is a Pineapple express coming in this weekend. 
  It'd be ok if there was a great base elsewhere in the West, but there is not a place that is at normal.  It's warmer is the problem, because there has been a lot of moisture here and there. 

I bought a seasons pass at Crystal, so it'll be interesting to see the value I get from that!!

Sunday, March 23, 2014

March 23. Full on 9 with beautiful sunny conditions.

Herschal and I. Just awesome. The scene of a pristine powder bowl staring at us all day was awesome, and then at 1 they opened the hiking line and the boys went up and shredded it.  It was beautiful.
We saw all the avalanches, 2 on Powder bowl and the big one down the thrown chutes that took the whole upper bowl of the left side of Chair 6.  More photo's to follow of that never to be forgotten slide and incredible destructive week.

  Here is the report from the website.

What's Fresh It was another sunny, beautiful spring day and the snow was nice and soft. Ski Patrol opened Powder Bowl just after 1pm with hiking access along the west ridge only. If you're willing to hike you'll be rewarded with pristine powder turns down the middle of the bowl. We received over a foot of new snow last week and the coverage is excellent from top to bottom. The groomed trails are buffed out wall-to-wall. The forecast is calling for sunshine through Monday with snow showers the rest of the week. All operations are weather and conditions permitting.photo.phpPhoto: Ski patrol opened Powder Bowl this afternoon with hiking access along the west ridge, and it was good! Spectators from the summit also enjoyed the view.  Photo: Patrick Fleming

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Chair 6 at Crystal destroyed by Patrol Induced Avalanche. End of an era, but a new one will go up.

An avalanche destroyed a chairlift at the Crystal Mountain resort near Mount Rainier on Monday afternoon when the resort was closed. The avalanche was intentionally set off by the resort's ski patrol and no one was hurt.
Despite the destruction, patrollers say they have no regrets.
Ski areas routinely trigger avalanches to stabilize the snowpack before skiers and snowboarders arrive, but there's no guarantee any avalanche will go where they want it to. Crystal Mountain, for example, had triggered several avalanches the day before the one that took out the chairlift.
In this video filmed on Sunday, Crystal Mountain ski patroller Kim Kircher and her husband John Kircher, who owns the resort, watch a patrol-triggered slide take out trees.
"Kim? It's huge," he says.
"Oh my god," she replies. Then, "Uh oh," as trees crack in the distance.
Explosives In A Snow Saucer
Kim Kircher was part of a three-woman team that set off a 25-pound explosive on one of Crystal's highest slopes on Monday afternoon.
The three ski patrollers hiked up a ridge above the mountain bowl called The Throne. They put the 25-pound explosive and its 90-second fuse on a plastic snow saucer.
With a rope, they lowered the explosive down the slope and took shelter behind the ridge, then behind a tree. To protect their eardrums from the blast, they plugged their ears and opened their mouths.
Kim Kircher said she knew something was different about this avalanche as soon as the blast went off.
It was just a thundering, ripping sound. Then I heard the timber breaking--there’s nothing like that sound. It’s very distinctive: "Oh yeah, there’s trees breaking. This is going big, you guys." And then we hear the sound of twisted metal, and we think, "Uh oh. We hit the chair."
Kircher said she'd never seen such a destructive avalanche in her 25 years patrolling at Crystal Mountain.
The slide toppled the resort's High Campbell lift, as ski patrollers discover to their (expletive-laden) dismay in the video below. Replacing the lift will cost about $1.75 million, according to Crystal Mountain officials.
Video contains strong language. 
Potential For More
Northwest Avalanche Center director Kenny Kramer said the center had only heard ofone other large, slab avalanche in the Cascades in recent days: on Kendall Peak in the backcountry near Snoqualmie Pass.
"It tells me that we have the potential to see these large slides not just with a massive amount of explosives but also released naturally," Kramer said.
After a winter of long dry spells, Crystal Mountain received nearly 10 feet of snow in February and as much as 6 inches of rain in the past six days. Rain falling on snow can make the snowpack heavier and more prone to slipping downhill.
Kramer said none of this winter's events are that unusual in the Cascades.
"When you link them all together, that's what makes it unusual," he said. "The fact we had these long, cold, dry spells gave us layering that is unusual for us."
Kramer said the snowpack in Monday's avalanche ripped apart at a layer of snow that had fallen back in December, but whose crystals had been transformed and weakened by the cold, dry nights in December and January.
Kim Kircher said, though the avalanche caused more than $1 million in damages, she wouldn't have done anything differently.
"We are glad we did it because we did it when it was unoccupied," she said. "We know that the chances of this happening during the day were high if we didn't do it."
Her husband was planning to replace the destroyed chairlift in the next five years. Now he plans to do so this summer.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwQNnjS2E-s&feature=player_embeddedhttp://kuow.org/post/intentional-avalanche-destroys-crystal-mountain-chairlift#.Ux-3hNlkaHE.facebook

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Crystal has Epic First 2 weeks of March.

I'll post the exact article, but after a 3 ft dump, and avalanche patrol work belwo Chair 6, a slide blew the bottom of the chair away.  Photo's to follow. I haven't been since I've been in the desert, hope to go Thursday.

Here is from Jeff and his trip on March 17:
"David, Sally and I went up today.We decided at 6am. Interesting day. 13 inches of the worst snow that I have ever skied in. Thick and heavy and probably some of the worst condition ever. It did get easier once it was cut up and groomed was great but man what an experience. Looks like Thursday might be a nice sunny groomer day but I'm tied up. 
Maybe we are getting old but man what a struggle it was.
Jeff"

It's a weird year, that's for sure. 

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Big Day At Alpental. Feb 23

ALL DAY SNOW: Deep and kept snowing all day and was so good that the sking was as good at the end of the day as at the beginning. Huge crowds still couldn't stop it.  Dan Ogborn and I had a great time and skied as much as we could until our legs gave out.
Awesome day.

Friday, February 21, 2014

Beautiful Powder Day with Stuart Silk, Sally and Jeff Fiorini on 2/20.  9" new on top of heaps. Snowing all day, foggy, great old storm day at Crystal.  Had a great time.


Mountain Report


CLEAR
Summit 150 F     Base 200 F
Snowfall Totals    6,230'    4,570'
Overnight1"1"
24 Hour7"3"
48 Hour26"19"
72 Hour36"29"
Snow Depth
   Summit 130" 
   Base 79"
Season
   Total: 240"

View the above table in US Standard or Metric | 02/21/14 7:05am
What's Fresh What an incredible series of storms! We've received snow daily for the past 13 days with 129" (over 10 feet) of new snow! This sets us up nicely for making turns in March and April. The primary surface conditions are soft powder, and skier packed powder. Southback will remain closed, however it's possible Northway will open today. Ski Patrol has had their hands full with so much snow accumulation in such a short amount of time, but they are working hard to open those winter wonderlands soon. All operations are always weather and conditions permitting.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Sun Valley Saturday February 15. Torin's Memorial. Now it's Really Snowing at Crystal

Sun Valley by myself on a foggy soggy day when there had been a bunch of snow early, but when I got there at 10:30 it was done poached.  I did what I could, but my knee didn't like the conditions at all .
Torin's memorial was as good as one of those things can get.  May he rest in Peace is all I can say.  What a kid.

Now it's snowed for a week at Crystal, they have had 24" in last 48 and about 50" in 72.  They think that it's going to snow all the way through . Crystal was closed for the day today with a power outing.  I wish I could go tomorrow, can't.  He's a link to the website:  Maybe it will come through.
Overnight18"18"
24 Hour25"22"
48 Hour40"32"
72 Hour56"44".

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Torin Tucker


Tragic Loss for Nordic Community: Dartmouth Skier Dies at Craftsbury Marathon

“He was having the race of his life,” said Erik Fagerstrom, captain of the Dartmouth men’s ski team.
Torin Tucker, a 20-year-old Dartmouth junior, was skiing in the lead pack in the Craftsbury 50 kilometer on February 1st when he collapsed on a long climb up Sam’s Run. Despite the extraordinary efforts of other racers and emergency responders, no one was able to revive Torin, who died on the trail at the 42 k mark.
Torin had a previously undetected structural anomaly in his heart that caused him to go into cardiac arrest at a time of peak athletic exertion, according to Vermont Deputy Chief Medical Examiner, Dr. Elizabeth Bundock.
This unfathomable loss has touched even those who didn’t know Torin. Many students from other colleges made the trip to Dartmouth on February 5th for the memorial service and candlelight vigil. And nearly 400 skiers came to celebrate and remember Torin at a beautiful evening ski in Craftsbury on February 6th, on the eve of the Dartmouth Carnival.
“Torin was the most genuinely inclusive, kind-hearted and competitive skier out there,” said Annie Hart, co-captain of the Dartmouth’s women’s ski team. “He may not have stood on many podiums, but he was the exemplar of what Nordic skiing should be about.”
Our hearts go out to Torin’s family, friends and teammates as we try to honor his memory and tell this story.
THE RACE
The day of the marathon dawned clear and cold. Temps at the starting line hovered below zero, but were predicted to warm up close to freezing by the race’s end. Nearly 400 racers, including several dozen Dartmouth skiers and alumni, assembled in the Craftsbury stadium to race either 25 or 50 k classic around a challenging 12.5 k loop. The race started slow, according to Fagerstrom, with a lead group of about ten men settling into a steady pace. But by the end of the third lap a core group had broken away: Torin and Fagerstrom, led by former Dartmouth skier and Craftsbury Green Racing Project (CGRP) member Gordon Vermeer, with Tim Reynolds and Eli Enman hanging on close behind.
Torin racing earlier this season.
Torin racing earlier this season (Courtesy photo).
“Torin was always known for pushing the pace— especially at the beginning— though he often ended up hitting the wall pretty hard,” said Hart. “But this season he was competing at a higher level every single weekend.”
Heading into the final lap of the marathon, Torin was skiing well, sitting between Vermeer and teammate Fagerstrom. Vermeer began to push the pace heading into the steepest hill on Sam’s Run (known to Craftsbury locals as “the manure spreader hill”), the last significant climb before a series of flats and downhill recovery terrain. Torin let a small gap open between himself and Vermeer, and Fagerstrom, third in the pack halfway up the hill, seized the opportunity to pass.
“This was the pinnacle of the race, where we were all exerting ourselves the most,” said Fagerstrom, the eventual race winner, who was working hard to catch Vermeer and create distance between himself and his teammate. The trail left the woods and leveled off slightly, and Fagerstrom describes glancing back briefly and seeing Torin’s green Dartmouth ski team suit about 20 meters behind
“I continued my race, and glanced back multiple times as the course wound its way through the woods and fields,” said Fagerstrom. “I remember finding it very odd that, suddenly, nobody was behind me. Torin had vanished quickly from sight, and I thought to myself that he must have bonked realllllly hard.”
Meanwhile Jamie Chapman, a former Dartmouth rower and current CGRP sculler, was lapped by the lead men in the middle of her third lap. “Torin was behind Erik and just ahead of me at the crest of the hill when I saw him collapse,” said Chapman. “As if there were not a bone in his body.”
Another female skier immediately stopped and bent over Torin, and Chapman shouted that she was going for help. She began to sprint to the next feed station to get a medic, about 2 k up the trail where Sam’s Run meets Ruthie’s Run. Two minutes into her sprint, Chapman passed race spectator Gina Campoli from the Craftsbury Outdoor Center and told her to call 911. Eight minutes of quick people-dodging later, Chapman reached the station and informed workers that a Dartmouth skier had collapsed and didn’t have a pulse. Craftsbury employee and medic Matt Renaud raced back to the scene, already too late to help.
“Everyone acted beyond their normal capacities that day to deal with the completely unimaginable,” said Hart. About 40 seconds after Torin collapsed, former CGRP skier Reynolds arrived and immediately checked for a pulse and respiration. Reynolds began doing CPR as more racers started to ski into the scene. Meanwhile, with no cell phone service in Craftsbury, Campoli and Dartmouth’s Charlotte Gross were skiing as fast as they could backwards on the course, 1 k to Elinor’s farmhouse, to call 911. Arriving first, Gross made the call to Hardwick Rescue, a volunteer ambulance squad located about twenty minutes away.
Torin training with Dartmouth teammates (Courtesy photo)
Torin training with Dartmouth teammates (Courtesy photo).
According to Fagerstrom, the biggest player in the rescue efforts was Joel Bradley of Portland, Maine, a second-year medical resident and former Williams College carnival skier. Bradley arrived on the scene less than five minutes after Reynolds, and immediately took over and led the efforts to save Torin. Several other skier-doctors were present to assist, as were numerous skiers who were not medically trained. Dr. Anne Burnham of Carlisle, MA, tried to encourage later skiers to keep racing and not over-crowd the scene, said John Brodhead, the marathon’s race director.
Joe Holland, Dartmouth Ski Team class of ’84 and an avid marathon skier who has raced the Craftsbury Marathon at least 24 times, was passed by two snowmobiles on the trail.
“I heard the snowmobiles coming with the medics,” said Holland. “When the first one passed me going quickly I thought there must be trouble, when a second one passed I knew it was serious. A couple of minutes up Sam’s Run was the accident scene. Nobody was leaving the area, there were at least six skiers working on him, plus the medics were getting into the rotation. One snowmobile left with a skier to get more help. There was nothing any more of us could do at that point, so we rather sheepishly started moving on and getting back up to speed, asking each other, ‘Who was that skier?’”
Eight kilometers after passing Torin, Fagerstrom crossed the finish line in first and was congratulating second-place finisher Vermeer. Several minutes later he learned that a skier had collapsed on the course, and then received the devastating news that Torin hadn’t survived. Fagerstrom knew he had to tell his coach, Ruff Patterson, who was with the rest of the Dartmouth team at the University of Vermont Carnival at Stowe. “I ran into the garage to make the most difficult phone call of my life,” said Fagerstrom.
REMEMBERING TORIN
The Dartmouth Ski Team returned to Hanover in shock to mourn the loss of their teammate, a humble and outgoing young man with a big smile and perpetually rosy cheeks. In an article in The Dartmouth, Torin’s mother Kathryn Tucker said that he’d always loved the outdoors and had started skiing (both Nordic and alpine) as soon as he could walk.
Torin hailed from Sun Valley, Idaho, where he excelled as a Junior in Rick Kapala’s Nordic program. His high school coach remembers him as an exceptionally open-minded, unself-conscious, and curious individual, according to The Dartmouth. In college Torin studied Arabic and double-majored in economics and physics, possessing incredible drive and determination.
Torin racing for the sun Valley Ski Education Foundation as a junior. He is in the right lane, competing in a Junior Olympic Qualifier at Soldier Hollow, Utah.
Torin racing for the sun Valley Ski Education Foundation as a junior. He is in the right lane, competing in a Junior Olympic Qualifier at Soldier Hollow, Utah.
“He had a lot of gifts both as a learner and athlete, and he was dedicated to seeing that his potential was reached,” said Kathryn Tucker in The Dartmouth. “He went after it. Whether it was excelling in academics or sports, there wasn’t a bit of potential he was going to leave on the table.”
Torin’s drive to succeed was balanced with great humility and a kind, joyful spirit. Fagerstrom noted one moment in the Craftsbury marathon that exemplified his personality. “About 1 k before he collapsed, we skied past Charlotte Gross ’16, teammate and friend,” said Fagerstrom. “As we went around her on the right, Torin yelled out something along the lines of “Way to go, Charlotte!”… That’s the type of man Torin was. He had so much joy and support for his friends, family, teammates… We believe these were his last words.”
The Nordic community celebrated Torin at an on-snow memorial in Craftsbury on the Thursday following the marathon. “It was important for the team to go back up there, together,” said Cami Thompson Graves, Head Coach of the Dartmouth women’s team. According to Hart, “an unbelievable turnout” gathered in the stadium skied slowly, in silence, out to the point on Sam’s Run where Torin died, now marked with a stone cairn built by the Center. As the sun set, Fagerstrom spoke briefly about the race, and Torin’s teammates placed a wreath on the cairn. Then hundreds of skiers returned along the remaining 8 k of the marathon course that Torin could not finish.
“I’m not usually the religious type,” said Hart, “but the sky that evening was absolutely unbelievable and it’s hard for me to fathom that Torin wasn’t in some way responsible.”
EMERGENCY RESPONSE AND ATHLETE SCREENING
Given the hundreds of thousands of skiers who compete in marathons worldwide, Torin’s untimely death has raised questions about safety in the ski racing world. Do we need more extensive emergency response plans at race venues? Can increased cardiac screening for young athletes help detect heart anomalies like Torin’s and prevent fatalities?
The New England Nordic Ski Association (NENSA) issues no single standard of safety protocol for event sites, said John Brodhead, Race Director of the Craftsbury marathon. Since the marathon first began in the 1980s, Craftsbury has developed its own extensive response plan. In an area without cell service, Craftsbury takes communication very seriously, utilizing at least 40 radios among staff and volunteers. The Center always has a doctor on-site at races, according to marketing director Sheldon Miller.
Every year Brodhead recruits volunteers and staff to work as marshals and medics out on the marathon course. He’s also requested that Hardwick Rescue be on-site at the race, but the entirely volunteer-staffed ambulance squad has declined. Given the suddenness of Torin’s passing, even if an ambulance had been located several miles away via dirt road at the start/finish line, it would have arrived too late.
But Brodhead plans to keep improving Craftsbury’s ability to handle race emergencies. “We’re definitely revisiting some of our internal safety policies in light of this tragedy,” said Brodhead.
According to NENSA Executive Director Zach Stegeman, Brodhead and his team do an admirable job. “Craftsbury has a robust medical and emergency response plan that NENSA uses as an example for venues hosting NENSA programs,” said Stegeman.
As for preventing sudden cardiac death (SCD), there are few experts on this subject, according to Dr. Jim Carothers, an emergency physician with an interest in sports medicine. Torin Tucker was born with an abnormal coronary artery, an undetected condition that caused him to go into cardiac arrest at 42 k.
Even a screening electrocardiogram (EKG) would likely not have picked up Torin’s abnormality, said Dr. Carothers, and in any case is not required for U.S. athletes in pre-participation physicals.  While some athletes with coronary artery anomaly may experience symptoms like chest pain, sudden cardiac death is typically, and tragically, the condition’s presenting sign.
SCD in young athletes is thankfully rare, especially compared with teen driving fatalities (more than 1 in 3 teenage deaths are caused by car crashes, according to the CDC)
Much of the literature on SCD and sports medicine comes from Italy, where EKGs are required for athlete pre-participation and have been shown to prevent incidence, said Dr. Carothers. One prominent study by Basso et al (in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology) estimates that “the prevalence of athletic field deaths to be 0.5 out of 100,000 per year in high-school-age athletes in the U.S. and 1.6 out of 100,000 per year in competitive athletes in Italy.”
But Dr. Carothers thinks “it is nearly impossible to give a real estimate on prevalence of SCD among athletes. There is a huge disparity in the prevalence estimates which, to me, makes them almost irrelevant.”
Some sources estimate that coronary artery anomalies occur in about 1% of the general population, though in most cases, the condition is only fatal under extreme athletic training.
According to the Sudden Death Committee of the American Heart Association, coronary anomalies cause 19% of deaths in athletes. However, the same study also qualifies that “coronary artery anomalies are some of the most confusing, neglected topics in cardiology.”
Dr. Carothers urges athletes and their parents not to dismiss any unusual symptoms of distress during training. “Athletes with a similar condition [to Torin’s] may experience chest pain, palpitations, lightheadedness, or even pass out with exertion,” said Dr. Carothers.  “They need to be taken seriously by their doctors and at least receive an EKG, and possibly be referred for an echocardiogram and further testing.”
When people are identified with a coronary artery anomaly, doctors will often severely limit their exercise activity, since ”the greatest incidence of sudden death occurs during heavy physical exertion.”
***
Remembering Torin Tucker on the final lap of the Craftsbury marathon, we can only imagine the extraordinary stress that his heart experienced. But we can also take solace that “at the end, Torin was doing what he loved, alongside people who he loved and who in return, loved him” – as the Dartmouth captains wrote in their open invitation to the on-snow memorial.
Perhaps this inconceivable loss gives us renewed gratitude for our lives and our health, for the fresh snow falling on the Northeast, and makes us closer to family and friends. Perhaps we’ll think of Torin when we glide over the trails or survive the intensity of a ski race.
“Torin was having the race of his life,” said Fagerstrom, “one of those days that ski racers cherish because of the rarity of having all the pieces fall into place. Great skis, great venue, great weather, and the ability to really push your limits. With the discovery of his heart defect, I think it’s fair to say that he literally pushed himself harder that day than he ever had before. And that is a beautiful thing.”
About the Author: Diana Sabot Whitney, Dartmouth Ski Team class of ’95, is a writer and yoga teacher in Brattleboro, Vt. She worked for six years at the Craftsbury Outdoor Center and at one point helped run the Craftsbury Marathon. Please contact her with any questions at diana@coreflowyoga.com

Crystal Going off : February 13





  • TonightSnow after 10pm. Low around 27. South southeast wind 9 to 18 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. Total nighttime snow accumulation of 5 to 9 inches possible.
  • FridaySnow showers, mainly before 4pm. High near 32. West southwest wind 10 to 18 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New snow accumulation of 4 to 8 inches possible.
  • Friday NightA chance of snow showers before 10pm, then a chance of snow showers after 4am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 26. South wind 7 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New snow accumulation of less than a half inch possible.
  • SaturdaySnow, mainly after 10am. High near 32. Southeast wind 9 to 14 mph increasing to 16 to 21 mph in the morning. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New snow accumulation of 6 to 10 inches possible.
  • Saturday NightSnow showers. Low around 21. Breezy, with a southwest wind 17 to 23 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New snow accumulation of 7 to 11 inches possible.
  • SundaySnow. High near 26. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New snow accumulation of 4 to 8 inches possible.
  • Sunday NightSnow. The snow could be heavy at times. Low around 25. Breezy. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New snow accumulation of 13 to 19 inches possible.
Jeff Fiorini and I went on Tuesday the 11th and had a great powder day. 
My first day of the Winter at Crystal!  Off to Sun Valley for the Torin Tucker Memorial. 
Poor Torin died on February 1 at the Carnival at Dartmouth.  So many articles about what a great, great kid he was.  This is going to be a challenging weekend. 

file://localhost/Users/David/Pictures/iPhoto%20Library/Masters/2014/02/13/20140213-192205/photo%202.JPG

Sunday, February 9, 2014

FINALLY, it's doing what it should Weekend of February 8,9.





PARTLY SUNNY
Summit 150 F     Base 190 F
Snowfall Totals    6,230'    4,570'
Overnight8"8"
24 Hour8"8"
48 Hour9"9"
72 Hour10"10"
Snow Depth
   Summit 73" 
   Base 35"
Season
   Total: 141"

This from Crystall's weather goddess.  This was the weekend that Kimberly Huggins was buried and memorialized at home, and the weekend after the death of Torin N Tucker, who loved the nordic ski world, good snow and bright temperatures.  It's too much to take, so we can turn to the snow, the mountains for solace.  I'm going to Sun Valley next weekend for Torins Sun Valley celebration of his life. 
What's Fresh 



Wake up powder hounds! There's 8" of white gold covering the entire mountain and you need to get some. The wind is calm averaging 10mph out of the west. Due to the low temps the snow is dry and light, so in other words it's going to be blower! The main trails were machine groomed overnight and are soft and buffed out. We'd like to remind you that we guarantee you a parking spot, or your next visit is on us! However we don't expect parking to be an issue today. Drive safe and give yourself a little extra time to get here this morning. The roads have been plowed and are in good condition. If you're going to chain up please do so in designated areas along Highway 410. The forecast is calling for more snow over the next few days so keep those pow skis and boards waxed and ready. See you on the mountain!