Thursday, December 28, 2006

Gerald Ford slept here

Vt. hotel keeps photo spread of former president's ski trip

By John Curran, Associated Press Writer December 27, 2006

STOWE, Vt. --Gerald Ford slept here.

And skied here. And ate here. And frolicked in the snow with an attractive blonde whose name wasn't Betty.

Long before he became a congressman, an accidental president and a "Saturday Night Live" punch line, the nation's 38th president was featured in a 1940 spread in Look magazine, a copy of which hangs in the Green Mountain Inn here.

A framed display copy of the five-page pictorial, entitled "A New York girl and her Yale boy friend spend a hilarious holiday on skis," adorns a corridor wall, across a narrow hallway from the women's room; a dog-eared original is kept separately by the inn's general manager as a keepsake.

"The Inn takes great pride in the fact that Gerald Ford was here," said Patti Clark, innkeeper of the 104-room inn, showing a copy upon request Wednesday.

Ford, who died Tuesday at 93, was a fresh-faced law student when he posed for the magazine with Phyllis Brown, of New York.

"Only five years ago, if a New Yorker had suggested `Let's go skiing for the week end,' he would have been classified as a wise guy," the story begins. "Today, he gets serious attention, for ski trains have put snow-packed hills within easy reach of the metropolis."

The ensuing pages chronicle the couple's adventure, starting aboard the New Haven Railroad's "Ski Meister," which they ride north to Stowe before taking rooms at the 19th-century inn. "Trips like this cost $25 to $30 apiece--$12 to $14 for train fare, $3.50 a day for room and board in hotel or farmhouse, $5 to $10 for incidentals," according to the text lead-in.

The pictures tell the rest of the story: "Gerry" and "Phyllis" tying their skies to a taxicab for the ride to Toll House Slope, Gerry on bended knee, tending to the bindings of her ski boots, the couple ascending the mountain on a rope tow, their sleigh ride off the mountain to the Ranch House for lunch.

After skiing past dark, they repair to a piano room at the Inn. "After a hot dinner at the Inn, they loaf, sing, drink beer, dance, talk skiing -- and so to bed," one caption reads.

The pictorial ends with the two headed home, showing Ford kissing Brown goodbye before he gets off at New Haven and she continues on to New York.

While it isn't prominently displayed, the Look magazine article still attracts plenty of attention, according to Clark. "It gets to be a bottleneck, when people see it -- especially the history buffs," she said.

On Wednesday, visitor Robert Coenen, 66, of Cheshire, England, looked it over.

"Ford was a regular sort of fellow, I guess," he said. "He took over when you were in dire straits with Nixon."

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Ski areas coping with iffy weather

Ski areas coping with iffy weather
By Bonnie Obremski, North Adams Transcript
12/27/2006 11:56:21 AM EST

Wednesday, December 27

Officials with two ski resorts in the region said Tuesday that while warm, wet weather has dampened lift-ticket sales, business is still good, and the slopes are set to "shred" — enthusiasts' lingo for ready for downhill speeding.

Man-made snow has more than made up for the dearth of the natural stuff at Jiminy Peak in Hancock, and close-by Mount Snow in Vermont picked up a few inches of powder Tuesday.

"People have the perception that there's no snow because they're looking in their backyards and not seeing any," Christopher Lenois, communications manager at Mount Snow in West Dover, Vt., said. "We're 3,600 feet up. Someone 25 minutes away in Bennington could say it's raining, and I look outside the window here and it's snowing."

Still, most of Mount Snow's fluffy stuff so far was blasted from the bellies of snow machines. Just 25 of the mountain's 106 trails are open — five of the open trails are "top-to-bottom" trails.

"We've been behind projections and we're not breaking sales records," Lenois said.
In an effort to boost the season's slow start, Lenois said several Vermont ski resorts gathered two weeks ago to mail out special-delivery packages to the state's meteorologists.

"We got some Cabot cheese and put it into coolers packed with snow from our slopes," he said. "It's to say, 'See? We've got snow. We'll even send it to you.'"

Jiminy Peak Mountain Ski Resort has 14 of its 44 trails open. Director of Marketing Betsy Strickler said overall sales are below average, but the lodge is completely booked through the new year and calls for reservations continue to stream in.

"We've noticed some interesting trends," Strickler said. "Our 'Get Skiing' and 'Get Boarding' learning programs have increased in participation numbers over last year."

She said the warm weather might actually be fostering a timid athlete's comfort with learning a new sport. "It's not the worst year," she said of the weather. "One year, five years ago, we didn't open until the second week in December." The resort opened this year just after Thanksgiving.

"We've had warm winters in the past," Strickler said. "But every year, we work our way through."

Forecasts show natural snow may fall again on Mount Snow and on Jiminy Peak this week as the daily high temperatures continue to drop. Efforts to reach officials at Bosquet Ski Area in Pittsfield and Stratton Mountain Resort in Vermont for this article were unsuccessful.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

The industrious snow blowers at Okemo

I can hardly believe the picture to the right but they are pretty impressive at making the snow at Okemo. Right now its warm and possibly drizzly, but look at this aerial view from this morning of Okemo's main mountain.

They have harnessed that 70 million gallon snowmaking pond well. These are the things you don't hear about much when a resort makes infrastructure improvements, but really deliver value in a sketchy season. And given global warming trends, its getting harder and harder to believe that Northeastern skiing will deliver consistnent natural snow in the future.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Atta boy !



"I got to party and socialise at an Olympic level" -- Alpine skier Bode Miller, the 2005 overall World Cup champion, on his Olympic achievements after arriving in Turin as the great American hope but leaving without a medal.

Monday, December 18, 2006

For Skiers, Too Soon to Panic?

For Skiers, Too Soon to Panic?
By DAVE CALDWELL

BURLINGTON, Vt., is usually a snow-covered city in December. But the weather has been so mild in the last month that snowfall is being measured by the meager inch, not by the traditional foot, and Brook Tabor, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service office there, has become an unofficial concierge for the Burlington area.

Frustrated skiers, without enough slopes to schuss down, are calling the Weather Service office to get tips on good shops and restaurants. “We’re trying to give them some alternative things to do,” the cheerful Mr. Tabor said by telephone on Tuesday.

Throughout the Northeast, the ski season is lurching out of the gate because it has just been too balmy. Ski areas across the region are reporting less snow than usual, fewer trails open and temperatures often too warm for snow making.

But, the real question is this: Is it too soon for skiers and resort operators to panic?

The answer, for now, they say, is no. But resort employees and skiers in the Northeast tend to be optimists. They say the region’s season does not begin in earnest until Christmas, and long-range forecasts are calling for a winter that will be a little cooler and wetter than normal — good news for skiers, if not shovelers.

“When this season is over, despite the slow start, I think people will look back and say it’s been a pretty good winter,” said Herb Stevens, an independent meteorologist from North Kingston, R.I., who is known as the Skiing Weatherman.

The ski crowd does not appear worried, either. Most resorts say reservations for the week between Christmas and New Year’s Day are running normal — even a bit above normal for some — and ski clubs are not yet canceling trips to the slopes. “Every year, it’s iffy until you get to January,” said Lore Conway, of Tuxedo, N.Y., who is the president of the 100-member German Ski Club of New York.

What the lack of snow and the warm weather have done, more than anything, is scrub some of the excitement from the start of the season — think of it as the Psyche Effect. When it snows, even in New York City, skiers tend to flock to their neighborhood ski shop for a new pair of skis or even a hat and start gazing north with longing.

“It’s just a big time of year for us, and wet weather is not what we want,” said David Wingard, a buyer for Paragon, an outfitter in Manhattan, referring to the city’s recent warm, rainy days. Even yesterday, temperatures in New York strained toward 60 degrees — and that just doesn’t promote thoughts of heading out and hitting the slopes.

Mr. Wingard, who skis and snowboards, was at Hunter Mountain, 125 miles north of Manhattan, on Tuesday. He said it felt more like late March than mid-December. Paragon has usually scheduled ski trips to Hunter for its customers by this time each year, but not so far.

And going farther north isn’t much of a help. Mr. Tabor, the Weather Service meteorologist, said that November in Burlington was the second warmest on record, with an average temperature of 42.8 degrees — or an all-important 10.8 degrees above freezing. He said the Weather Service recorded a half-inch of snow in November atop Mount Mansfield, the state’s tallest peak (and the site of Stowe Mountain Resort). The previous low for the month there was seven inches in 1964. The average temperature of 34.6 degrees broke a 40-year-old record by nearly 3 degrees.

Not only do ski resorts want cold weather so snow will fall, but they also need cold weather to make snow artificially and to keep it from melting into slush.

Some meteorologists are blaming the weather on a weak El NiƱo system in the Pacific. And temperatures, they say, are expected to remain warmer than average until nearly Christmas. And there is always the specter of global warming.

“I honestly can’t remember it being this warm this late,” said Bill Saydah, a resident of Rivervale, N.J., who has been a member of the New York Ski Club since 1954.

The impact of the warm weather in the Northeast is being magnified this season, partly because last year’s ski season was widely considered to be memorable, and because the slopes in the West are off to a strong start. Vail, in Colorado, has 27 of its 33 lifts open and 177 of 193 trails, with 27 inches of snow at midmountain; a foot of powder fell between Sunday and Wednesday.

But back in the Northeast, “it’s nothing like what we would expect to see in the middle of December, but it is a marked improvement over two weeks ago, when I was out playing golf,” said Sandy Caligiore, who works for the Olympic Regional Developmental Authority, which oversees activities at Whiteface and Gore mountains in upstate New York, among other places.
So far this year, he said, skiers are finding other things to do in and around nearby Lake Placid, like taking a bobsled or luge ride or spinning around the outdoor skating oval that is open to the public.

Nothing has been scrapped from the schedule at Whiteface or Gore so far even though a United States of America Snowboard Association event scheduled to be held at Whiteface tomorrow has been postponed until Jan. 7. “We’re fighting the fight at this point,” Mr. Caligiore said.
Some skiers are content to be patient. John Sadowski, who lives in Allendale, N.J., and who has skied for 40 years, said the season has been normal for the 150-member Telemark Ski Club, which meets in Brooklyn and has a lodge in Pittsford, Vt., not far from Killington. But it is still early.

“This is purely personal, but skiing has always been a January-February-March sport for me,” he said. “I’ve always considered March to be the best time to ski because the weather is better, the light is better and in general, the conditions are better.”

MEANWHILE, the ski areas and resorts are doing what they can. Rich Edwards, a spokesman for the Catamount Ski Area in western Massachusetts, said Tuesday that 6 of Catamount’s 32 trails were open, compared with the usual 10 or so at this time of year.

Hunter’s spokeswoman, Jessica Pezak, was not optimistic. “We might not have snow for Christmas,” she said, “and we almost always do.” She added that melting snow is hard to groom and that heavy traffic on the slopes tends to push that snow into the ground.
Hunter’s neighbor, Belleayre, has opened 6 of its 47 slopes. “We’re kind of used to ups and downs in the weather,” said Pat McVitty, the area’s marketing director.
Mr. Saydah said the New York Ski Club has scheduled a New Year’s Eve party at its lodge in Center Berlin, N.Y. He did not sound sure that many of the club’s 100 members would ski at nearby Jiminy Peak in the Berkshires or at Okemo Mountain Resort, in Ludlow, Vt.
Bonnie MacPherson, a spokeswoman at Okemo, said 32 of its 117 trails were open Tuesday — an average number. But she added that business has been slow, as it has been at most places.
“We had 100 inches of snow at this time last year,” said Judy Sweeney, who manages Snow Ridge Ski Resort in Turin, N.Y., between Utica and Watertown. As she spoke, Snow Ridge had not opened. Usually, Ms. Sweeney said, all 22 of Snow Ridge’s trails are open by now. At least, Snow Ridge could take a little solace that larger resorts have also had trouble making, and keeping, snow.

Killington Resort, the skiing giant in southern Vermont, opened Nov. 23, then closed Dec. 1 and 2 because of rain and warm weather, and then opened again. Closing after opening, said Killington’s spokesman, Tom Horrocks, was very unusual. “It really deteriorated,” he said of the conditions. “There was really no way around it.”
It then got cold enough to make snow and, as of Tuesday, Mr. Horrocks said, roughly 40 trails were open. On the same date last year, 60 trails were open at Killington. Forty-six trails were open on Dec. 12, 2004, he said, and 75 were open on Dec. 12, 2003.
Mountain Creek, a smaller resort in Vernon, N.J., 47 miles west of Manhattan, is not open at all. Mountain Creek has powerful machines that could pile a foot of snow inside Giants Stadium within an hour, but it has not been cold enough.
“It’s New Jersey, and we’re used to weird December weather,” said Shannon McSweeney, a Mountain Creek spokeswoman. “More often than not, something unusual happens during the month.”
Ms. McSweeney said late Wednesday that Mountain Creek had decided to open two runs tomorrow and Sunday, only a week behind its scheduled opening. She was hopeful that the weather would turn colder and stay that way.
“We know everybody’s dying to get out in the snow,” she said.
Sometimes, the only thing skiers and operators can do is look to the skies — as they used to say in 1950s science fiction movies — and wait for a bank of leaden snow clouds to roll their way. “We’re the eternal optimists in this business,” Ms. MacPherson said. “You have to be.”

Monday, December 11, 2006

Snow Making at Okemo

It looks like they are still making snow at Okemo, but things are starting off quite slow for skiing in the East. It hasn't been consistently cold enough to generate real snowfall.

We did get Jennifer some ski's over the weekend, a new pair of Head's in 150 cm length, on a seasonal lease. They look fine and are all tuned/adjusted for her boots. Hopefully the weather will be more cooperative by Christmastime. If you poke around in here you can find Jenn's boots, I think

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Cops on the Mountain (VDN)

Note that Colorado is pursuing collisions on the mountain that are deemed to be reckless, malicious or cause with significant injuries. What used to be simply boorish behaviour is now being handed over to the criminal justice system. As someone who witnessed and been involved in some serious collisions (on both sides!) it is no surprise that local governments are getting involved. When tourists get killed/hurt, and business is damaged because of negligent behaviour, government starts to care. Rather amazingly, the Eagle county DA has secured felony convictions in some cases. A felony pretty much permanently impairs a person for the rest of their life for just an incredible variety of things.

Cops: Snowboarder hit 8-year-old

Man allegedly ran down mountain and into bar, where he was arrested
Matt Zalaznick
December 2, 2006

VAIL — A snowboarder ran away after colliding with an 8-year-old girl who was skiing on Vail Mountain Saturday afternoon with her father, the Eagle County Sheriff’s Office said.The snowboarder, 22, took off down the mountain when the girl’s father, who was described as “very upset,” told the young man ski patrol had been notified of the collision that occurred shortly after 2 p.m. at the bottom of the Born Free run near the Lionshead village base of the mountain, said Sgt. Greg Daly of the Sheriff’s Office.“He left his snowboard at the scene and made his way down the mountain,” Daly said. “There might have been a physical exchange between the father and the snowboarder — that’s the subject of an ongoing investigation.”Neither the name of the snowboarder, who Daly said lives in the Avon area, nor the girl were released. Daly said he did not know where the girl lived.The snowboarder was tracked down later Saturday afternoon by ski patrollers, Vail police officers and sheriff’s deputies, who found and arrested him in Garfinkels, a bar near the bottom of the mountain, Daly said.The man was charged with skiing while impaired by alcohol and leaving the scene of an accident, both petty offenses and violations of the state’s Skier Safety Act, Daly said.“He initially denied being involved but decided to tell the truth,” Daly said of the suspect. “He did admit to consuming alcohol.”The girl was taken to Vail Valley Medical Center and released later Saturday, Daly said. The man remained in jail Saturday evening and the incident is still being investigated, Daly said.

Monday, December 04, 2006

Ski-Resort Deals Hit Brisk Pace

Ski-Resort Deals Hit Brisk Pace, And High Prices

Private-Equity Firms Scoop Up Mountains, Add Luxury Items;
Aging Skiers Alter the Terrain
By CONOR DOUGHERTY
December 2, 2006; Page B1
Wall Street Journal

What's the must-have item this ski season? A resort.

Some of North America's best-known ski areas have changed hands in the past year, in some cases fetching record prices, as private-equity firms and wealthy individuals are pouring money into mountains. Buyers have snapped up everything from destination resorts like Whistler Blackcomb in British Columbia to smaller ski hills in New York and Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains.

Mammoth's Superpipe in California was the first halfpipe to open this season in North America.
New owners are betting that with the number of ski resorts declining, the remaining players will get a bigger slice of the market. Private-equity firms think they can better compete because they have what many former owners lacked: access -- via generous debt markets -- to truckloads of money to add new lifts, restaurants and boutique shops. They plan to squeeze out further profits building hotels and selling houses and condominiums to second-home buyers.

Analysts expect more ski-resort deals in the months ahead. "I think the pace of deals will remain brisk," says Chris Woronka, an analyst with Deutsche Bank in New York. "We are only in the early to middle innings of activity in the ski industry."

Reflecting the intense interest in ski resorts, shares of Vail Resorts Inc., a large operator of ski properties, hit a record high of $44.39 during Thursday's trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

In October, New York investment firm Fortress Investment Group LLC completed the purchase of Intrawest Corp. for $2.8 billion in cash and assumed debt, a buyout deal that included the Stratton ski resort in Vermont, Copper Mountain resort in Colorado and Whistler Blackcomb. That followed deals for Mountain High Resort, in Southern California's San Gabriel Mountains, which was purchased last year by private-equity firm Valor Equity Partners, of Chicago, and Mammoth Mountain Ski Area, also in California, which was bought late last year by a group of investors led by Greenwich, Conn.-based Starwood Capital Group Global LLC, which is led by Barry Sternlicht, former chief executive of Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc.

That deal valued Mammoth at $365 million, or about 10 times annual cash flow, according to the company, which ski-industry analysts and executives say was one of the highest premiums ever paid for a resort. In a separate transaction Starwood Capital and its investors, which include Mammoth Chief Executive Rusty Gregory, paid about $100 million for mountainside real estate that they plan to develop into homes, condominiums and hotels.

Industry analysts say rising investor interest may have played a role in American Skiing Co.'s decision in July to explore "strategic options" for its Steamboat resort in the Colorado Rockies. The Park City, Utah, company declined to comment.

In the past two years, New York's Windham Mountain and Camelback in Pennsylvania have changed hands, and last year two partners at venture-capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers bought a stake in Bear Valley Mountain Resort in California and have poured $6 million into the area. CNL Income Properties, an unlisted real-estate investment trust based in Orlando, Fla., has purchased two resorts this year: Bretton Woods in New Hampshire and Cypress Mountain in British Columbia.

Ski resorts are in some ways a perfect target for private-equity firms, which buy businesses in hopes of selling them for a profit after improving them. The resorts generally have low debt, and their upscale clientele is less affected by economic fluctuations. But for investors, ski resorts come with plenty of risk. Despite efforts to become year-round venues, resorts remain a seasonal business largely dependent on Mother Nature to provide good snowfall. Resorts have spent millions updating their snowmaking equipment over the past decade, but the resort business still has generally better years when there is more natural snowfall, according to the National Ski Areas Association. Warmer weather in some areas is creating a market for snowmaking equipment that functions more efficiently at higher temperatures.

The new players in the ski-resort business are also buying into a softening real-estate market that could hurt demand for second homes and condos.

And there's the issue of the aging skiers and snowboarders: The average resort visitor last season was 35.1 years old, up from 33.2 in the 1997-98 season, according to the NSAA. About 30% were 45 or over. While the industry has recorded a string of record seasons -- 59 million skier visits last year, compared with an average of about 55 million over the past decade, according to the Lakewood, Colo., industry group -- a good chunk of the ski population could be ready to hang up their equipment. (Skier visits include daily mountain visits, from season-pass holders to night skiers and walk-up lift-ticket buyers.)

Investors say all of this is precisely what makes ski areas attractive. Over the past two decades, competition has pushed hundreds of smaller resorts out of business because the areas couldn't afford upgrades or snowmaking equipment to weather lean snow years. There were 478 ski areas in the U.S. last year, compared with 735 in 1984, according to the NSAA.

A look at the blueprints for California's Mammoth Mountain shows what some of the private-equity folks have in mind with their new acquisitions. Most of the skiers at Mammoth, near Yosemite National Park, drive five or more hours from their homes in Southern California, and three-quarters come just for the weekend, according to the resort. Mammoth's investors think planned air service and a dash of the resort treatment will have the area buzzing all week long.

The mountain is already tipping toward a higher-end resort, and its new investors plan to accelerate that. Next year Mammoth plans to open its first luxury hotel, a 230-room Westin next to a gondola that connects the nearby town of Mammoth Lakes to the ski area, a six-minute ride. The town could also use a nightclub and more-upscale restaurants and more high-end hotels, says Marc Perrin, managing director with Starwood Capital. "We feel there's a need for a five-star brand in Mammoth," he says.

On the real-estate front, Mammoth's new owners estimate there is room for about 3,000 new units, including hotel rooms, timeshares, and single-family homes.

Other newly purchased resorts also are getting a makeover. Mountain High has added Italian and Mexican food to its cafeteria, tripled the size of its outdoor seating area, and bought the neighboring Ski Sunrise and renamed it "Mountain High North." The new owners of Bretton Woods plan to spend $20 million sprucing up the resort, including renovations to the 200-room Mount Washington Hotel, which was built in 1902 and was upgraded with central heating just six years ago, as well as a convention center and spa.

Randy Frankel, a former managing director at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., last year purchased Windham Mountain in Windham, N.Y., where he has owned a home for a decade. In the off-season, he spent $5 million on three new lifts, an ice-skating rink and a restaurant with an open-hearth fireplace and a menu of "creative comfort food." Mr. Frankel says he plans to develop dozens of single-family and condominium residences over the next five to 10 years.

This isn't the ski industry's first ownership shake-up. In the 1990s, companies including Intrawest, Vail Resorts, of Broomfield, Colo., and American Skiing began buying ski areas and consolidating them. Both Vail and American Skiing went public in 1997. While Vail's stock is soaring today, American Skiing stumbled from the beginning. Lugging a large debt load, it has since sold assets, had a merger plan fall through, and its shares now trade over the counter for less than $1.

Write to Conor Dougherty at conor.dougherty@wsj.com1