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- Newsgroups: rec.skiing
- Path: sparky!uunet!mnemosyne.cs.du.edu!nyx!mwallace
- From: mwallace@nyx.cs.du.edu (Mark Wallace)
- Subject: The Colorado Skier - Ski News 1/26
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.001825.455@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
- Sender: usenet@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu (netnews admin account)
- Organization: Nyx, Public Access Unix @ U. of Denver Math/CS dept.
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 93 00:18:25 GMT
- Lines: 338
-
- Following is an article I'm posting which was written by a
- co-worker of mine who's hobby is ski area trivia.
- I'll pass along any feedback you may have, but don't question
- this information without consideration, I've seen some of his
- resources.
-
- Mark Wallace, Castle Rock, CO
- mwallace@nyx.cs.du.edu
-
- ******************************************************************
-
-
- Subject: THE COLORADO SKIER - SKI NEWS 1/26
-
-
- Greetings from THE COLORADO SKIER
-
-
- PUBLISHER'S NOTE: This is the Premier Edition of our new series on
- "Ski News". We hope that you will find it a worthwhile addition to
- THE COLORADO SKIER fine family of ski publications which also includes
- "The Lost Ski Areas of Colorado" and "Ski Trivia". Those series will
- continue independently. We have invited Mary Margaret, Skiing Editor
- of the Crested Butte Pilot, to report on our new child which was
- unveiled at a recent press party. Her coverage appears in Section 6.
-
-
- THE COLORADO SKIER - SKI NEWS 1/26
-
- *** PREMIER EDITION ***
-
-
- EDITOR'S REMARKS:
-
- A. The SKI TRIVIA posts were getting too big, averaging six pages per
- issue. So we decided to separate out the miscellaneous stuff into
- a new series of posts. This will also give us a chance to talk
- about more skiing subjects. Also we will pick up some of your
- suggested trivia subjects which were good trivia ideas but didn't
- always lend themselves to specific trivia questions.
-
- We plan to include Snow Reports, Ski Area News, some Trivia
- subjects, a look at the Mail Bag, and what ever else comes to
- mind. We are also debuting a new series on the weird and wondrous
- world of "strange ski area statistics".
-
- So sit back and enjoy, but try not to fall asleep. Please feel
- free to suggest subjects to be covered.
-
- B. In past posts we have stated that our material would always be
- objective - not subjective, and factual - not opinion. That
- policy will continue (mostly) for "TRIVIA" and "LOST" but in this
- new series we will occasionally get into subjective stuff like
- "best skating rinks" and "prettiest ski mountain", etc. We may
- even offer an opinion. (Forgive us ULLR for we are about to sin!)
-
-
-
- 1. SNOW AND SKI REPORTS
-
- a. THE WEST - Since we reported last, many of the CALIFORNIA areas
- have achieved over 150 inch bases. "Best season in ten years"
- said one report (Guess we will have to check that out). At last
- report, MT BACHELOR had a base of 152 inches, and TIMBERLINE had
- 132. SUN VALLEY and TAOS are up to 86 and 90 inches,
- respectively. Utah areas are hanging in at just over 100 inches.
-
- SAY AGAIN? - We thought that a ski area had to actually be OPEN to
- draw skiers and make money. Here is an exact quote (we are not
- making this up) from the marketing director at KIRKWOOD: "The
- road's closed, the resort's closed. It's a welcome, welcome
- surprise." ???
-
-
- b. COLORADO - Respectable, but not fantastic snow depths. The state
- reports that average snowpack in mid-January is 95% of normal
- state-wide. It varies from 70-90% of normal in the north to 130%
- in the southwest. Remember, of course, that "normal" in COLORADO
- is some real good skiing. For example, it snowed every day at
- ARAPAHOE BASIN from 14 to 23 Jan - a total of 35 new inches.
-
- REPORT from CRESTED BUTTE (16, 17 Jan) - Boris and Natasha and
- their Russian Wolfhounds spent a delightful weekend. There were
- 30 inches of new snow the previous week and 17 more from Thursday
- through Sunday. So, lots of snow, altho not exactly dry powder.
- Also snow everywhere else - parking lots, sidewalks, roofs. No
- lift lines except on the North Face poma.
-
- REPORT from KEYSTONE (18 Jan) - Good base, but the usual Keystone
- hardpack and boiler plate. Our reporter enjoyed the intermediate
- runs off The Outback through the trees. Lines were 5-8 mins on a
- holiday.
-
- REPORT from a Faithful Reader (from Bowie, MD) - "The skiing in
- Summit County in January was fun despite subpar conditions."
-
-
- c. VAIL OFFICIAL COMPARISON DATA (thanks to the Colorado Skier
- archives)
-
- Base depths at VAIL (unpacked snow depth at midway - in inches)
-
- 15 Dec 15 Jan
- ------ ------
- 92/93 17 40
-
- 10 year Mean 30 37
- 10 year Median 27 37
-
-
- d. CAMERON PASS - There was another skiing avalanche death up on
- Cameron Pass west of Fort Collins. Since two of our faithful
- readers have mentioned being up there from time to time, we held
- our breath while reading a newspaper account. Even more
- disturbing was the news that the victim lived in "Rist Canyon"
- where reader John lives. John is, fortunately, still with us.
-
-
-
- 2. SKI AREA NEWS
-
- a. PAJARITO - Attention Kelly, John, and Jeff down New Mexico way.
- Did you see the article on PAJARITO (which means "short pajamas"
- in English) in the February issue of SKIING?
-
-
- b. CUCHARA VALLEY - Reopened this season after being dark for 3
- seasons. Failed to make it into the 92 Colorado Ski Country Ski
- Guide. Closed on Tues. and Wed. (1/25 base depth 34 inches)
-
-
- c. MOUNTAIN CLIFFE (formerly CONQUISTADOR) - Reopened this season
- after being shuttered for 4 seasons. Failed to make it into the
- 92 Colorado Ski Country Ski Guide. Lost all their snow due to
- wind in early Dec and had to shut down. Has recovered and now
- reports 95% open. Closed Tuesdays. (1/25 base depth 31 inches)
-
-
- d. POWDERHORN - Had been operating during Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Was
- purchased by a private company last fall and did open. Now open
- daily. (1/26 base depth 57 inches)
-
-
- e. BRECKENRIDGE - Still has not received NFS (Forest Service)
- permission to open Imperial and Peak 7 bowls. Why? Now looking
- at March. Note that the avalanche death last week occurred in an
- out-of-bounds area (called "Windows") off Peak 9, not Peak 7.
-
- Avalanches have claimed SEVEN lives in Colorado this year, all
- skiers (none in-bounds). Unfortunately one-third of all avalanche
- deaths in the U.S. each year occur in Colorado.
-
-
- MORE BAD NEWS - Just as we went to press, another avalanche death was
- announced. This time it was an ice climber. We think that the
- accident occurred in Ten Mile Canyon near Officer's Gulch, a popular
- ice climbing area.
-
-
- f. KEYSTONE - Has their new "bowls" on the back side of The Outback
- open but a diverse group of locals and cross-country interests has
- complained to the NFS about opening up still more "back-country"
- area to pagans. Not a law suit - just requires an administrative
- decision on the part of the NFS - who approved the opening in the
- first place. Any bets?
-
-
-
- 3. FOLLOW-UP AND OTHER TRIVIAL STUFF
-
-
- a. SHOULD WOMEN SKIERS USE MODEMS? We don't have many WOMEN readers.
- This subject has come up in various ways on the net and here we
- will give our perspective. We keep a log and statistics on all
- respondents who E-Mail to The Colorado Skier or who post to one of
- our subjects. With "Trivia-7" the total number of different
- respondents to all of our posts reached 100 (and we thank you).
- But - based on first names - they are almost all men. Why?
-
- First, there are two names we are not sure of. Our very first
- respondent was JAN, from Portland. We assume that "Jan" can be
- male or female. Then there was KELLY, from Albuquerque. Gender -
- neutral again. So, we had zero females, or maybe one, or two.
- Great, we muttered, the next E-Mailer will be "PAT", as in
- genderless Pat from SNL! Sure enough, we heard from "Pat"!
- Actually it was PATRICE, from Montreal. We thought possibly that
- "Patrice" could be some French spelling of "Patrick" so took time
- out of our holiday shopping to check out baby name books in a
- bookstore. The books agreed that "Patrice" was the French
- spelling of "Patricia", and always female. Congratulations
- PATRICE - you are a member of a small club! Then, of course,
- there is JUDITH - globe hopping lady skier. No gender doubt there
- (altho there was that one guy named Judy in North Beach - but he
- didn't ski).
-
- So, out of 100 respondents we have two confirmed females and two
- possibles - call it three, total. Three out of 100! Three per
- cent! We have read that 42% of all skiers are female. Where we
- work about 15% of the engineers are women. Most engineers have
- PCs. Most PC owners have modems. Why don't women skiing
- engineers with PCs and Modems talk on the network? [Or is it why
- don't they talk to The Colorado Skier? - don't tell us, we don't
- want to know!]
-
- One of our female staffers said that the answer to this perplexing
- question is simple. Women engineers are too busy WORKING to ever
- want to fool around with these silly network topics. To which a
- male wag replied: "Sure, they are busy working to save money to
- go to SUN VALLEY and meet a rich husband - so they can quit work".
- Whoops! We didn't say that, and Mark didn't either.
-
- To reiterate - Why don't more women skiers use modems?
-
-
- b. THE RATTLER - In one of our posts we kidded about the tremendous
- "vertical drop" on "The Rattler" wooden roller coaster at Fiesta
- Texas and how our daughter, PC Jr, loved to ride it. "BUCK", from
- a Boston suburb (do you work at DEC?), wanted to know if she was
- brave enough to ride in "Seat #6". What does that mean, Buck? We
- have heard that folks like to ride in the "front seat" and "rear
- seat" and we can imagine a "Car" #6, and "Row" #6 - but, are the
- individual seats numbered? PC Jr needs to know (Fiesta Texas
- opens in five weeks).
-
- BTW, "Buck" sounds like a nickname. Most "juniors" get nicknames
- (to avoid being called "Junior"). Would you be "Buck, Jr"?
-
- Speaking of suburbs of Boston (stay with us on this one). When we
- were kids growing up in the midwest, on long car trips we would
- pass the time counting SILOs. When we moved to the west where
- there are few silos, we switched to counting WINDMILLs. Then
- while we spent our two years of penance in a small town near
- Boston (where there are neither silos nor windmills) we switched
- to counting "DEC plants". There is one in every town! Further
- north (NH, ME) we counted DEXTER Shoe Stores.
-
-
-
- 4. WHOM DO YOU TRUST - THE STATISTICS GAME
-
- [A new feature on ski area numbers that just don't add up.]
-
- When VAIL opened "China Bowl" back in 1988, the expansion brought
- their total skiable acreage to 3787 acres (they are now at 3992
- acres). VAIL was naturally curious as to where they ranked in
- size among the largest U.S. ski areas. MAMMOTH MTN claimed 3000
- acres, making VAIL bigger. SQUAW VALLEY, however, claimed 8,300
- acres. Wow! The VAIL PR department called SQUAW and asked,
- really? Yes, said SQUAW, when every lift and run is open there
- are 8,300 skiable acres (in 1988). At that time, "The White Book
- of Ski Areas" also listed 8,300 acres for SQUAW.
-
- Let us move forward to the present. Well, buckaroos, the Fall
- 1992 SQUAW VALLEY ads in all of your favorite ski magazines now
- say 4,000 acres! Why, one ski magazine asked them, have you
- dropped from 8,000 acres to 4,000 acres? It just seems like a
- more realistic figure, SQUAW replied! Meanwhile, the 92/93 "White
- Book" reports that SQUAW VALLEY has 4,850 lift-served skiable
- acres. STRANGE!
-
-
-
- 5. FROM THE MAIL BAG
-
- a. LOOKING FOR MS WRIGHT - George, from Golden, CO (home of the Coors
- Brewery) asked if we had hired Shirley Wright away from Click and
- Clack, the Tappet Brothers. Seemed unlikely, but we checked. Ms
- Wright says that her last employer was The Good Time Garage in
- Cambridge, MA, run by two guys named Tom and Ray. OK?
-
- b. HOT SPRINGS - Next issue Donny, if you tell us where you're from!
- (COS?) [Is this known as blackmail, or extortion?]
-
-
-
- 6. "Hit The Trail" by Mary Margaret
-
- DATELINE - Somewhere in Colorado at COLORADO SKIER headquarters.
-
- I like literary parties. Usually the food is good and there are
- lots of beautiful people. Of course these were ski people - cute
- at best. And the food - Kool-Aid and Ritz crackers! I heard that
- there was some Ripple and Tater Tots earlier, but that was all
- gone when I got there. It took forever to get up the infamous
- Colorado Skier driveway. It looked as high and as steep as the
- longest run at NASHOBA VALLEY! They wouldn't let us drive up -
- too icy. We had to ride up with their transportation coordinator,
- Rick Shaw. He was driving a Jeep CJ. Talk about class!
-
- We were told that there would be some skiing celebrities at the
- party. I was hoping for Clint Eastwood, or the Don Johnsons, or
- maybe RJ (Bob) Wagner and Jill St. John. [You know, in ski
- clothes, on a cloudy day, I look a lot like Jill. I'm much
- younger, of course.] But, instead, we got BUDDY HACKETT. He
- doesn't look much like a skier but I've seen him ski and he's
- pretty good. He has one major advantage over the rest of us.
- When he falls down - rather than try to get up - he just rolls to
- the bottom of the hill! Nice guy too (but that language!). Of
- course, John Denver wasn't invited. Recently he has become to the
- ski industry as Jane Fonda is to the whaling industry. What
- happened to your Aspen roots, Henry John Deutschendorf?
-
- Oh yes, the new publication. Colorado Ski News? Who needs it!
- We've already got Ski, Skiing, Powder, and Snow Country, plus the
- Summit Sentinel, Summit Journal, Straight Creek Journal, Aspen
- Times, Gunnison Times, Leadville Herald-Democrat, on and on, ad
- nauseam. Aren't they enough? The publisher claims that this
- "Colorado Skier" person will read all the ski news and digest it
- for the rest of us. How kind! Why don't they just call it "Skier
- Digest"? Oh well, at least I get free copies - how bad can it be.
- I'll give it a shot. It might be fun. Ciao! Mary Margaret
-
-
-
- 7. EPILOG
-
- a. Thanks for providing your city name in E-Mails to us. BTW, you
- only have to do it once - we keep records.
-
- b. ULLR, the God of Snow - You may have noticed that we prayed to the
- God ULLR earlier (or was that EARL, ullier). ULLR is the God of
- Snow commemorated in the "ULLR Festival" in The Kingdom of
- Breckenridge. There has been an ULLR celebration in The Kingdom
- for about 30 years, sometimes called "ULLR Fest", "ULLR Dag", or
- "ULLR Days". (We have a 1966 coin which says "ULLR Winter
- Carnival") Why the "Kingdom" of Breckenridge? Well, that is a
- long story. Some other time. [Who knows about "Flauschink?]
-
-
- Cheers from THE COLORADO SKIER
-
-
- From Calvin & Hobbes (Calvin speaking about the new Colorado Skier
- feature "Ski News"):
-
- "You call this NEWS?! This isn't informative! This is a sound bite!
- This is entertainment! This is sensationalism! Fortunately,
- that's all I have the patience for. :-)" [thanks, we think]
-