Do they have snow this year? We went in February last year and it was like east coast skiing with only manufactured snow.Anonymous wrote:Whistler. The Peak to Creek is a super long blue groomer, and there are tons of other great long blue and green trails on both Whistler and Blackcomb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about the best ski resort for near- beginners looking for long green runs?
For true beginners I think peak 9 in breckenridge is incredible. The greens are very mellow and wide. As someone who learned to ski as an adult I would have loved to learn there. There are also easy blues you can progress to.
I believe you. But 2+ hours on I-70 in the winter is not for the faint of heart. We did it in the summer and that was terrifying enough.
huh?
what was terrifying about it in summer? I can see it being scary during a snow storm, but the rest of the time it is just a highway.
We have driven it many times in winter. It has never taken more than 2 hrs to get to Breck from the airport. I would not recommend going when a storm is coming or it is actively snowing, but the rest of the time it is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I ski. "long blue groomers" is a weird phrase for intermediate skill level trails. (Really sounds more like a term related to sexual perversion than to recreational skiing.)
It's not weird at all. All the other skiers on this thread knew exactly what OP was talking about. Groomers refers to runs that are groomed (not moguls, not powder, etc).
Anonymous wrote:I ski. "long blue groomers" is a weird phrase for intermediate skill level trails. (Really sounds more like a term related to sexual perversion than to recreational skiing.)
Anonymous wrote: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.
We have skied Vail, Aspen, Whistler, and Breck and Breck has so many more blue runs and better ones then all the ones we have been to.
Aspen and Whistler are more challenging blues so I would not go there if you are not at least a solid advanced blue. We haven’t been to Jackson Hole but heard it’s a very difficult mountain and so agree with PP who said that. Waiting till DC gets better before going to JH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about the best ski resort for near- beginners looking for long green runs?
For true beginners I think peak 9 in breckenridge is incredible. The greens are very mellow and wide. As someone who learned to ski as an adult I would have loved to learn there. There are also easy blues you can progress to.
I believe you. But 2+ hours on I-70 in the winter is not for the faint of heart. We did it in the summer and that was terrifying enough.
Anonymous wrote:I ski. "long blue groomers" is a weird phrase for intermediate skill level trails. (Really sounds more like a term related to sexual perversion than to recreational skiing.)
Anonymous wrote:Targee!!!
Anonymous wrote:DP here. Do any of these also have a good amount of greens? One parent and teen want to go out west because they love skiing and enjoy blues (and sometimes blacks but maybe not out west.) The other parent and other teen enjoy greens but really don’t enjoy harder skiing and also might want more breaks than the other two.
Thoughts?