Anonymous wrote:We loved skiing in Vermont. I liked that better than traveling to Colorado, and avoided the drama of flying post 9/11. The one time we did fly to Vermont, we encountered fierce turbulence and will never fly that route again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We like deals in this family.
Family of 4, 3 skiers, going to Park City
Airport parking about $80
Flight to Salt Lake $425 + miles for the rest
Lift tickets $500 max for 5 days of skiing - Epic Pass $1,500 for 5 days
Food estimate $400 groceries, $60 * 5 = $300 for lunches on mountain. 2 * $80 for dinners = $160 > $860 total
Lodging $1,400 for 7 nights on points and deals for nice resort
ski/snowboards amortized cost for 3 is $75/year (cheaper to buy, pass down to younger sibling, then sell)
Uber $100 RT
Total $4,440
*cheap learn to ski programs during 4th and 5th grade so no lessons needed.
A lot of your cost is reduced due to miles and points though so the cost above is not the true cost of your trip.
DP but yes it’s 2023 and everyone travels with miles and points. Is that a joke?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Went to Aspen. Family of 5 was approximately $25k. It was fun but everything is so expensive.
This is why i ski Wisp and Timberline, which I can barely even afford.
Wisp? seriously? you need to get out west and realize it is totally worth it.
Wow. Work on your reading comp.
PP, can you afford driving to Vermont?
I second that. If you want decent skiing ( still eastern) , try Vermont. The most budget friendly is Smugglers Notch ski resort. It is not part of any passes, but more than west VA hills, and far better snow especially end of January early February..
The east coast has no snow. We have a family place in VT and were there over Christmas. It was very bleak. They are making snow on a few trails and the bunny slopes (when it’s not raining). If going wasn’t free, I’d be very upset to have spent money there. The mountain was empty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Went to Aspen. Family of 5 was approximately $25k. It was fun but everything is so expensive.
This is why i ski Wisp and Timberline, which I can barely even afford.
Wisp? seriously? you need to get out west and realize it is totally worth it.
Wow. Work on your reading comp.
PP, can you afford driving to Vermont?
I second that. If you want decent skiing ( still eastern) , try Vermont. The most budget friendly is Smugglers Notch ski resort. It is not part of any passes, but more than west VA hills, and far better snow especially end of January early February..
The east coast has no snow. We have a family place in VT and were there over Christmas. It was very bleak. They are making snow on a few trails and the bunny slopes (when it’s not raining). If going wasn’t free, I’d be very upset to have spent money there. The mountain was empty.
Vermont had a rough Christmas, but for most of November, had more snow than most resorts out west.
How is northern Vermont (Burlington area/Stowe) for skiing in mid to late March?
Mid March can be awesome and is probably your best bet of any time during the season for good snow conditions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Went to Aspen. Family of 5 was approximately $25k. It was fun but everything is so expensive.
This is why i ski Wisp and Timberline, which I can barely even afford.
Wisp? seriously? you need to get out west and realize it is totally worth it.
Wow. Work on your reading comp.
PP, can you afford driving to Vermont?
I second that. If you want decent skiing ( still eastern) , try Vermont. The most budget friendly is Smugglers Notch ski resort. It is not part of any passes, but more than west VA hills, and far better snow especially end of January early February..
The east coast has no snow. We have a family place in VT and were there over Christmas. It was very bleak. They are making snow on a few trails and the bunny slopes (when it’s not raining). If going wasn’t free, I’d be very upset to have spent money there. The mountain was empty.
Vermont had a rough Christmas, but for most of November, had more snow than most resorts out west.
How is northern Vermont (Burlington area/Stowe) for skiing in mid to late March?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Went to Aspen. Family of 5 was approximately $25k. It was fun but everything is so expensive.
This is why i ski Wisp and Timberline, which I can barely even afford.
Wisp? seriously? you need to get out west and realize it is totally worth it.
Wow. Work on your reading comp.
PP, can you afford driving to Vermont?
I second that. If you want decent skiing ( still eastern) , try Vermont. The most budget friendly is Smugglers Notch ski resort. It is not part of any passes, but more than west VA hills, and far better snow especially end of January early February..
The east coast has no snow. We have a family place in VT and were there over Christmas. It was very bleak. They are making snow on a few trails and the bunny slopes (when it’s not raining). If going wasn’t free, I’d be very upset to have spent money there. The mountain was empty.
Vermont had a rough Christmas, but for most of November, had more snow than most resorts out west.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We like deals in this family.
Family of 4, 3 skiers, going to Park City
Airport parking about $80
Flight to Salt Lake $425 + miles for the rest
Lift tickets $500 max for 5 days of skiing - Epic Pass $1,500 for 5 days
Food estimate $400 groceries, $60 * 5 = $300 for lunches on mountain. 2 * $80 for dinners = $160 > $860 total
Lodging $1,400 for 7 nights on points and deals for nice resort
ski/snowboards amortized cost for 3 is $75/year (cheaper to buy, pass down to younger sibling, then sell)
Uber $100 RT
Total $4,440
*cheap learn to ski programs during 4th and 5th grade so no lessons needed.
A lot of your cost is reduced due to miles and points though so the cost above is not the true cost of your trip.
DP but yes it’s 2023 and everyone travels with miles and points. Is that a joke?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Went to Aspen. Family of 5 was approximately $25k. It was fun but everything is so expensive.
This is why i ski Wisp and Timberline, which I can barely even afford.
Wisp? seriously? you need to get out west and realize it is totally worth it.
Wow. Work on your reading comp.
PP, can you afford driving to Vermont?
I second that. If you want decent skiing ( still eastern) , try Vermont. The most budget friendly is Smugglers Notch ski resort. It is not part of any passes, but more than west VA hills, and far better snow especially end of January early February..
The east coast has no snow. We have a family place in VT and were there over Christmas. It was very bleak. They are making snow on a few trails and the bunny slopes (when it’s not raining). If going wasn’t free, I’d be very upset to have spent money there. The mountain was empty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We like deals in this family.
Family of 4, 3 skiers, going to Park City
Airport parking about $80
Flight to Salt Lake $425 + miles for the rest
Lift tickets $500 max for 5 days of skiing - Epic Pass $1,500 for 5 days
Food estimate $400 groceries, $60 * 5 = $300 for lunches on mountain. 2 * $80 for dinners = $160 > $860 total
Lodging $1,400 for 7 nights on points and deals for nice resort
ski/snowboards amortized cost for 3 is $75/year (cheaper to buy, pass down to younger sibling, then sell)
Uber $100 RT
Total $4,440
*cheap learn to ski programs during 4th and 5th grade so no lessons needed.
A lot of your cost is reduced due to miles and points though so the cost above is not the true cost of your trip.
Anonymous wrote:We like deals in this family.
Family of 4, 3 skiers, going to Park City
Airport parking about $80
Flight to Salt Lake $425 + miles for the rest
Lift tickets $500 max for 5 days of skiing - Epic Pass $1,500 for 5 days
Food estimate $400 groceries, $60 * 5 = $300 for lunches on mountain. 2 * $80 for dinners = $160 > $860 total
Lodging $1,400 for 7 nights on points and deals for nice resort
ski/snowboards amortized cost for 3 is $75/year (cheaper to buy, pass down to younger sibling, then sell)
Uber $100 RT
Total $4,440
*cheap learn to ski programs during 4th and 5th grade so no lessons needed.
Anonymous wrote:This thread has inspired me. We’ve had a standing invitation to stay with family in Vail for ages and keep putting it off due mostly to hassle and cost (even with free lodging.) But my kids are teens now and I think we need to just suck it up and go. What do you think is the minimum amount of time it’s worth it? 4 nights okay? 5?