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- Newsgroups: rec.skiing
- Subject: Re: Need Advice on Steamboat, Winter Park
- Message-ID: <724@dwp.la.ca.us>
- From: carlson@dwp.la.ca.us (Carlson Peters)
- Date: 27 Jan 93 22:01:38 GMT
- References: <1993Jan26.212916.3118@sol.ctr.columbia.edu>
- Organization: L.A. Dept. of Water & Power
- Lines: 183
-
- In article <1993Jan26.212916.3118@sol.ctr.columbia.edu> miker@newman (Mike Regan X 281) writes:
- >I have a few questions for you knowledgeable folks about my upcoming
- >trip to Colorado. I'm spending the first 10 days of my 2 week trip
- >in Breckenridge (I know, summit county is way behind the rest of the
- >west in snow this year... but they'll catch up in the next 4 weeks!).
- >I'm planning to leave Breck on Tues, 3/9, and head up to Steamboat
- >for a few days before coming home on Sat, 3/13.
- >
- >From looking at my maps, it appears that my best route would be to
- >head up to Winter Park, ski there on Tuesday, then drive to Steamboat
- >Tuesday night, and ski it Wed-Fri. So, my questions are:
- >
- >1 - Is this the best route? We want to ski on Tuesday, probably something
- >outside of Summit Co. Is there a better route which would bring us by
- >some other good skiing?
-
- One suggestion would be to ski Vail or Beaver Creek (Beaver Creek seems
- the better choice for a one day stop over; free parking, small enough
- to get oriented in a few hours) and then head up to Steamboat from there.
- Can't think of the highway number though. Actually this is the only
- other alternative for points inbetween.
-
- >
- >2 - If this is the best way, then how much travel time can I expect
- >from Breck to Winter Park, and how much from WP to Steamboat?
- >
-
- Some people will say less but I'm willing to guess about 1.5 hours to
- Winter Park from Breck. About the same from WP to Steamboat.
-
- >3 - How long (time-wise) is the drive from Steamboat to Denver?
-
- Why not ski Steamboat first and Winter Park last? Winter Park is about
- 1.5 hours from Denver whereas Steamboat is about 3 hours. Best route
- to/from Steamboat is through Silverthorne and up highway 9.
-
- >
- >4 - If the weather turns bad (well, bad for driving, good for skiing!),
- >are there any particular roads to avoid (bad passes, potential closures,
- >etc)?
-
- Avoid Berthoud pass but this is impossible if you ski Winter Park.
-
- >
- >5 - Can anyone recommend a place to stay in Steamboat? I'm looking for
- >something for 2 people, which is walking distance to town. I don't mind
- >driving to skiing, but I don't want to have to drive to go out to
- >dinner at night. Something clean and cheap is my preference here.
-
- I always did day trips from Summit Co. so I have no idea.
-
- >
- >Is anyone still reading this? If so, thanks! Any other comments or
- >suggestions would certainly be welcome. Tips on what to ski (and what
- >to avoid) at WInter Park & Steamboat would be appreciated. We're both
- >strong skiers with a preference for natural terrain (trees, bowls,
- >chutes, etc) over massive bumps (fun for a few runs, but a day
- >of bumping usually leads a couple of days lying on a hard, flat
- >surface...)
- >
- Steamboat is short on natural terrain. You are confined to cut trails
- mostly groomed or bumps. Preist Creek is great tree skiing though. If
- it hasn't snowed lately you can even expect bumps in the trees. Unless you
- hit a powder day, you will probably be bored quickly.
-
- Winter Park has more challenging runs but they are all maxed out with
- big bumps. There are a few steep chutes and mostly lower intermediate
- bowl skiing also.
-
- You may enjoy Loveland alot. The warnings about A-Basin below apply here
- too. You also get a rest from lift ticket shock.
-
- >Thanks in advance for any information you all can provide.
-
-
- Here is my prefab guide to Summit County:
-
- I lived in Summit County for 5 years so IMHO I know the strengths
- and weaknessess of each resort quite well. Here is a review.
-
- Breckenridge:
-
- A very complicated mountain. Most people don't like it because they
- don't get a chance to know it. You will spend a couple of days trying
- to figure out where you are. They also have a terrain gap between
- intermediate and expert, the so called advanced terrain. This is
- another reason most netters pann it. It is the windiest of the four.
- The front and back bowls (Peak 8) often get twice the snowfall
- reported on the cable but dress very warm and be a strong skiier to
- enjoy them. Peak 9 has good lower intermediate terrain. Avoid the
- Quicksilver Quad on 9 - it serves the flatest terrain in the world.
- Breck has a zillion shops and resturants and bars and has lots of
- beautiful wooden victorian architecture(walk around the side of town
- opposite the ski area) and western flavor.
-
-
- Copper Mountain:
-
- My current personal favorite. Strong on long, advanced bump runs, the
- kind that probably would be upper intermediate if they were groomed.
- Some steeps and above treeline skiing too. The mountain is neatly
- divided into beginner, intermediate and advanced terrain. Park at B
- lift and avoid the crowds. The east side is the place to ski if the
- snow is coming down hard but be a strong skier. Lots of narrow,
- protected trails shield you from the wind and flat light. Head to
- Union bowl on a sunny powder morning for the deepest snow on the
- mountain. The absolute best NOVICE and low intermediate terrain in
- the county is on the west end of the mountain. The long, uncrowded,
- gently rolling slopes are perfect for confidence building. The village
- is small and quiet most any time of the year.
-
- Keystone:
-
- Keystone proper is derisevly referred to as a golf course. The runs
- get unbearably crowded mid-season with an obnoxious variety of Texans.
- Ski down the backside to NorthPeak and the Outback early on a powder
- morning for some great skiing. Most advanced skiers simply skip it
- due to Keystones pablum reputation. NorthPeak/Outback gets alot more
- snow than what gets reported on the cable for Keystone. Keystone is
- usually the first to open west of the Mississippi due to extremely
- advanced and extensive snowmaking. Keystone village is very lame and
- expensive. The Ranch has a wonderfully romantic/expensive fixed price
- dinner though.
-
- Arapahoe Basin:
-
- My favorite when I was in my early 20's. This place has the most
- expert terrain and bumps under one lift in all of Colorado. Endless
- varitations are possible if you are in terrific shape. The base is
- just below timberline and there is big, beautiful, mostly intermediate
- bowl skiing above. This is THE place to be on a warm, sunny spring
- day. Midway gets transformed into a beach, complete with lounge
- chairs and log cabin barbecue. The parking lots is full of partying
- tail-gaters. The Basin stays open long after all the other CO resorts
- have closed, usually Memorial Day. Just 4 lifts but an awful lot of
- terrain. It's a nasty place to be in a storm though, no cover and
- complete whiteouts are the norm then. The Basin always get more snow
- than anywhere else in Summit Co but also needs the most due to the
- rocky, rugged terrain. This is just a ski area near the summit of
- Loveland Pass - absolutely no nightlife.
-
- Summit County can be enjoyed without a car, shuttle busses run between
- the first three resorts from early in the morning to late at nite,
- budget about an hour of travel time to get from one resort to another
- although they are all within 15 miles of each other. To get to
- Arapahoe, you must take the county shuttle to Keystone then transfer
- to a shuttle to the Basin - add another half hour. Cut the time in
- half for an auto and multiply by 1.5 if it is snowing.
-
-
- There are three other towns in Summit County. They are located within
- a few miles of each other in the heart of the County and offer cheaper
- lodging and dining as well as quick shuttle access to the ski areas.
-
- Frisco:
- The most lively of the three. Many dining options from fast food to
- gourmet. A few funky Motels, some condos, a nice main street and some
- nitelife.
- Safeway.
-
- Dillon/Dillon Valley:
- Condos, Condos, and more Condos - most of them ugly. Lousy food and
- high prices. Dead after 7 PM. Lodging cheap by Summit County standards
- though.
-
- Silverthorne:
- Pretty much locals only. Try the Mint for western style grill your own
- steak and salad bar. Antonia's for some good Italian food and Pizza.
- CityMarket.
-
- Tip for future ski bums:
- A ski-the-summit season pass includes all of the above areas. This
- gives you access to about 60 lifts and 9 separate peaks with the
- longest season in the west starting in early October at Keystone and
- continuing into June at A-Basin. Buy early and save.
-
-
-
- --
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Carlson Peters L.A. Dept. of Water & Power
- carlson@manta.dwp.la.ca.us 111 N. Hope St., Room 1129
- 213.481.7898 L.A. CA 90012
-