Anonymous wrote:What about the best ski resort for near- beginners looking for long green runs?
Anonymous wrote:As someone who is an avid skier who has skied all of the mountains mentioned here, hands down the answer is Steamboat. It is the best for lots of intermediate terrain. It isn't a bad drive from Denver (3 hours) but you need an AWD SUV. You can also fly into Hayden, but that is a pricy option. I believe there is a non-stop from IAD on Saturdays. Steamboat is a great mountain/resort with lots of lodging options. The town is nice. You can visit the hot springs at Strawberry Park. There is a community rec center/pool that is right downtown. The cool thing is that the pool is hot springs fed.
Stay away from the Vail Resorts. They are a mess right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jackson Hole. Lots of long blue and double blue tuns.
Not as family friendly and the few blues they have are steeper. Also the snow is not as great when compared to Breckenridge or Keystone. Keystone isn't really a town though, if you are also looking for that. It's kind of like Vail - Disney with skiing.
I would stay away from all resorts on the Epic Pass after the Park City Ski Patrol strike this break. Vail is totally out of line. The request to move patrollers' wages from $21 to $23 is very reasonable, considering Patrollers at neighboring Deer Valley get paid well over $23/hour. Vail ruined many people's holiday vacations by taking such a ridiculous and unwavering position. If you were staying at the Canyons Base, you had only the gondola and High Meadows to ski, meaning you didn't ski. I generally dislike Unions, but on this issue, they are warranted, and their ask was reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Ski Magazine just covered this: https://www.skimag.com/ski-resort-life/best-resorts-to-ski-groomers/
I disagree with DV being number one, though. The runs aren't long, and there are too many homes on the mountain.
Anonymous wrote:Prefer park city to Breckenridge for those runs because at Breckenridge you usually have to go down to the bases for them. At PC there are more mid mountain lift options so you can do shorter lines.
Anonymous wrote:Steamboat's addition of the new "Wild Blue" gondola that takes you from the base to the Sunshine area is a game changer. Tons of long blue runs up there and many people just ride the gondola down at the end of the day. Steamboat has also moved the learning area up the mountain to a mid-point of the Wild Blue.
I agree that Breck has great blue runs as well, but the super-high altitude leaves me with a headache the entire week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jackson Hole. Lots of long blue and double blue tuns.
Not as family friendly and the few blues they have are steeper. Also the snow is not as great when compared to Breckenridge or Keystone. Keystone isn't really a town though, if you are also looking for that. It's kind of like Vail - Disney with skiing.