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Aspen, Colorado Ski Resorts
Aspen/Snowmass is an expansive winter resort complex located in
western Colorado. There are 4 ski resorts operated by the Aspen Skiing Company:
- Aspen Mountain, the oldest of the four areas, located on Bell Mountain
and the Aspen Mountain above the town of Aspen.
- Aspen Highlands, located on Highland Peak and Loge Peak just north of Aspen.
- Buttermilk, a low altitude family-oriented ski area just north of Aspen
Highlands.
- Snowmass, the largest of the four areas (bigger than the other three combined),
located near Snowmass Village.
Aspen Mountain
Aspen Mountain ("Ajax") is a ski area just outside and above
the city. At only 673 acres (2.7 kmē), it is somewhat small compared to nearby Snowmass
ski area, and retains a unique cultural flavor that hearkens to the earlier days
of recreational skiing in the state. In its fourth season, Aspen hosted the 1950
World Championships, the first world championships held outside of Europe, and the
first since 1939.
Access to the mountain was radically changed in 1986 with the installation of the
Silver Queen Gondola, a gondola lift which ascends to the summit of Aspen Mountain,
with a vertical rise of 3,267 ft (996 m). The gondola is one of two lifts, along
with the Little Nell chairlift, which ascend from Gondola Plaza in the heart of
the downtown Aspen. The configuration allows visitors to ascend the mountain from
the center of town, and ski down the Little Nell Run back into town.
The mountain is considered moderate-to-difficult with no "green" (beginner) runs.
- Top Elevation: 11,212 feet (3,417 m)
- Base Elevation: 7,945 feet (2,422 m)
- Skiable Area: 673 Acres
- Runs: 76 Total (0% beginner, 48% Intermediate, 26% Advanced, 26% Expert)
- Longest Run: 3 miles (4.83 km)
- Lifts: 8 total (1 gondola, 1 high-speed quad chair, 1 high-speed double chair, 1
quad chair, 2 double chairs, 2 secondary lifts)
- Average Snowfall: 300 in/year (7.62 m/year)
Aspen Highlands
Aspen Highlands is an intermediate-to-expert difficulty level skiing mountain
in Aspen, Colorado. It is famous for the Highland Bowl, which provides some of the
most intense skiing in the state. The lift system has recently been redone and provides
quick transport around the mountain. Since Aspen Highlands has only intermediate
and expert runs, beginning skiers usually go to Buttermilk or Snowmass further up
the road.
Mid and Lower Mountain Terrain -
Rolling wide beginner and intermediate trails through thick lodgepole pine forest
constitute most of the mid-to-lower mountain terrain. The very bottom of the mountain
is dominated by the Thunderbowl, an expansive steep intermediate run that normally
hosts most of the ski competitions on the mountain. The lower mountain also contains
challenging, but underappreciated expert runs such Lower Stein and P-Chutes. It
is served by the Exhibition and Thunderbowl lifts. The Mid-Mountain area is anchored
by the 60s era Merry-Go-Round restaurant, with a large, south-facing deck. The Merry-Go-Round
also serves as the hub of the major chairlifts on mountain. The Cloud Nine lift
serves primarily intermediate and difficult runs on the mid-mountain as well as
Scarlett's, a notorious mogul run. The summit of Cloud Nine lift is the location
of Cloud Nine Bistro, offering the best on-mountain dining of the Aspen ski areas
and views of the Maroon Bells.
Upper Mountain Terrain
-
What attracts most skiers to Highlands is the dramatic, just-above-timberline summit
of the mountain. The upper mountain is primarily served by the Loge Peak high speed
quad originating at the Merry-Go-Round. The ridge that extends down from Loge Peak
(the lift-served summit) has only one intermediate run, Broadway, which follows
the ridge spine. On either side, Steeplechase and the No Name Bowl fall away at
precipitous angles. Spectacular views of the Maroon Bells, Pyramid Peak,
Hayden Peak, and the Highland Bowl greet skiers at the summit.
The Highland Bowl -
Since 2002, the Highland Bowl has been the crown jewel of Aspen Highlands. Most
of the terrain is accessed only on foot, although a
snowcat can cut the distance by a third. The Highlands ski patrol monitors
the Bowl and conducts avalanche control for skier safety. The Bowl faces primarily
east, towards Aspen Mountain. Generally, the best snow to be found is in the north-facing
G-Zones ("G" corresponds to green ski wax, for the coldest temperature snow). The
B-Zones (for blue wax) are the steepest, face east, and descend down the center
of the bowl from the 12,382 ft (3,774 m) summit of Highland Peak. The south-facing
Y-Zones (yellow wax), can be skied without hiking if one rides the snowcat. Until
recent chairlift improvements, a run down the Highland Bowl was followed by the
Grand Traverse, a long, flat catwalk back to the Loge Peak lift. The Highland Bowl
also offers access from the summit into the steep and highly avalanche prone backcountry Five Fingers Bowl.
- Top Elevation: 11,678 feet (3,559 m)
- Base Elevation: 8,040 feet (2,450 m)
- Skiable Area: 1010 acres (4.09kmē
- Runs: 131 Total (18% Beginner, 30% Intermediate, 16% Advanced, 36% Expert)
- Longest Run: 3.5 miles (5.6 km)
- Lift System: 5 total (3 high-speed quad chairs, 2 triple chairs)
- Terrain Parks: 0
- Snowfall: 300 in/year (7.62 m/year)
Snowmass
Snowmass is a part of the Aspen/Snowmass ski resort complex located adjacent to
Snowmass Village, 9 miles from the town of Aspen, Colorado.
Snowmass is the largest of the four Aspen/Snowmass mountains, comprising 3,128 acres.
The mountain is most notable for its wide cruiser runs, family-friendly atmosphere,
and extensive ski-in/ski-out lodging. Despite its family reputation, the resort
also contains several terrain parks, extensive extreme skiing terrain, mogul runs,
and gladed terrain. Snowmass has the most vertical feet of skiing of any ski area
in the United States.
- Vertical: 4,406 ft (1,343 m)
- Top: 12,510 ft (3,813 m)
- Base: 8,104 ft (2,473 m)
- Skiable Area: 3,128 acres (12.66 kmē)
- Runs: 88 (6% beginner, 50% intermediate, 12% advanced, 32% expert)
- Longest Run: 5.3 Miles (8.5 km)
- Terrain Parks: 3 terrain parks (Pipeline, Makaha and Scooper), 1 superpipe and 1
minipipe
Buttermilk
Buttermilk Ski Area is the easiest skiing mountain in the area.
Although, Buttermilk has been the host to the ESPN Winter X-games multiple times,
West Buttermilk is known as a beginner ski area with gentle slopes. It is also home
to one of the best ski schools and children's programs in the United States, and
is a great beginner ski area.
- Top Elevation: 9,900 feet (3,000 m)
- Base: 7,870 feet (2,400 m)
- Skiable Area: 435 acres (1.76 kmē)
- Runs: 44 Total (35% Beginner, 39% Intermediate, 26% Advanced, 0% Expert)
- Longest Run: 3 miles (4.83 km)
- Lift Systems: 9 total (2 high-speed quad chairs, 3 double chairs, 4 surface/ski
school)
- Terrain Parks: 2, 1 superpipe
- Snowfall: 200 in/year (5.08 m/year)
Aspen, Colorado History
Founded as a mining camp in the Colorado Silver Boom and named because of the
abundance of aspen trees in the area, the city is now a ski resort and an upscale
tourist center.
The city sits along the southeast (upper) end of the Roaring Fork Valley, along the Roaring Fork
River, a tributary of the Colorado
River
about 40 miles (64 km) south of
Glenwood Springs, Colorado. It is surrounded by mountain and wilderness
areas on three sides: Red Mountain to the north, Smuggler Mountain to the east,
and Aspen Mountain to the south.
The city's roots are traced to the winter of 1879, when a group of miners ignored
pleas by Frederick Pitkin, governor of Colorado, to return across the Continental Divide due
to an uprising of the Ute Indians. Originally named Ute City, the small community
was renamed Aspen in 1880, and, in its peak production years of 1891 and 1892, surpassed Leadville, CO as
the United States' most productive silver-mining district. Production
expanded due to the passage of the
Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890, which doubled the government's purchase
of silver. By 1893, Aspen had banks, a hospital, two theaters, an opera house and
electric lights. Economic collapse came with the
Panic of 1893, when President Cleveland called a special session of Congress
and repealed the act. Within weeks, many of the Aspen mines were closed and thousands
of miners were put out of work. It was proposed that silver be recognized as legal
tender and the
Populist Party adopted that as one of its main issues; Davis H. Waite,
an
Aspen newspaperman and agitator was elected governor of Colorado on the Democratic
Ticket; but in time the movement failed.
Eventually, after wage cuts, mining revived somewhat, but production declined and
by the 1930 census only 705 residents remained. There was a fine stock of old business
blocks and residences and excellent snow. Aspen's development as a ski resort first
flickered in the 1930s when investors conceived of a ski area, but the project was
interrupted by World War II.
Friedl Pfeifer, a member of the 10th Mountain Division who
had trained in the area, returned to the area and linked up with industrialist Walter Paepcke and his
wife Elizabeth. The Aspen Skiing Corporation was founded in 1946 and the town quickly
became a well-known resort, hosting the FIS World Championships in 1950. Paepcke
also played an important role in bringing the Goethe Bicentennial Convocation to
Aspen in 1949, an event held in a newly designed tent by the architect Eero Saarinen. Aspen was now on the path to becoming
an internationally known ski
resort and cultural center, home of the
Aspen Music Festival and School. The area would continue to grow with the
development of three additional ski areas, Buttermilk (1958), Aspen Highlands(1958), and Snowmass (1969).
Ground Transportaion
-
Roaring Fork Transportation Authority or RFTA, provides bus service in Aspen,
and pay service to the surrounding communities of Snowmass Village, Basalt, El Jebel,
Carbondale, Glenwood Springs and Rifle. Local RFTA bus service within town and to
the Airport is free.
*This article is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License . It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Aspen, Colorado", Wikipedia article "Aspen Highlands", Wikipedia article "Aspen Mountain (ski area)",
Wikipedia article
"Snowmass (ski area)"
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