And I mean I get that people are scaring you off but Killington Stowe and Sugarloaf will have perfectly acceptable snow in January and February.
Anonymous wrote:Go to Whitegrass in WV if you want to cross country. The best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here
Thanks for the tip about Europe. That was not on my radar.
What about Nordic (cross country) skiing as an alternative trip?
OP have you ever skied before? I ski downhill and cross country skiing has always seemed objectively miserable.
Like I think everyone has jumped the shark in advising you. What do you want from this trip? What is your desired budget? What are the key elements for you (ie, niceness of resort? Available spa?). People are answering you as if snow conditions are the key here but you sound like you’ve never skied. And I mean I get that people are scaring you off but Killington Stowe and Sugarloaf will have perfectly acceptable snow in January and February. So what is it you’re actually looking for?
Anonymous wrote:OP here
Thanks for the tip about Europe. That was not on my radar.
What about Nordic (cross country) skiing as an alternative trip?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And if you were open to smaller mountains there are a ton you could hop around to in Vermont and Maine.
Huh? OP is not a college kid.
There are few families in the DMV, especially a non-skiiing one, that wants to schlep UP to northern New England and then schlep across it.
OP, the mid-Atlantic is not a place you can live and have skiing part of your life without dropping a lot of time and/or money.
Driving to Killington isn’t that bad. I’ve done both Vermont and flying to Colorado and Montana, multiple times. Skiing out West is much better, but Vermont is still has good skiing, it’s cheaper and much easier logistically.
Anonymous wrote:Putting Snowshoe, Vermont, and Sunday River in the same sentence is just…bananas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hot take, if you have this much sticker shock pricing out a trip out west, then it is not worth the premium to you to ski out west.
Go to VT or Maine, spend 5k instead of 10 (I don't see how a family of 5 really gets all in for 7.5 out west as I am cheap AF and 4 days at Killington last year was close to 5k for us, but spectacular, highly recommend Killington OP!).
If you are like, a really regular skier who loves skiing etc then sure go out west, but if you don't even have the skill set to appreciate it (and that isn't an insult just reality) then to me it wouldn't be worth the markup. There is plenty of good skiing a day's drive away where you can bring your gear and spend a lot less.
I'd recommend, Killington or Snowshoe or Sunday River if you want a more resort feel. Stowe if you want that LUX feel. And if you were open to smaller mountains there are a ton you could hop around to in Vermont and Maine.
I don't want to be one of those people. Killington can be fantastic, weather dependent. Snowshoe isn't worth the drive ever. Sunday Reiver, meh.
That said, the East Coast taught me to hate skiing. And the Rockies taught me to love it again. I just don't think even northern New England is worth that kind of spend.
Anonymous wrote:And if you were open to smaller mountains there are a ton you could hop around to in Vermont and Maine.
Huh? OP is not a college kid.
There are few families in the DMV, especially a non-skiiing one, that wants to schlep UP to northern New England and then schlep across it.
OP, the mid-Atlantic is not a place you can live and have skiing part of your life without dropping a lot of time and/or money.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Skiing in the U.S. is astronomical and as PPs have said, I’d be very surprised if you could do what you’re describing for $7500 all in.
I learned to ski as an adult and went to France for a week of private lessons because it was significantly cheaper than going out west. I don’t know if this would be possible for your family, especially if your kids are young, but the Geneva airport is within about an hour of a number of French alpine resorts. Some of the smaller ones are very family friendly, boutique hotels are probably cheaper than what you would pay for lodging in CO or UT, and most importantly, lift tickets and lessons are WAY cheaper. Rentals are easy to get.
If you can take a full week and go in February, the French do staggered public school holidays to accommodate skiing, so the resorts run very good and very reasonable weeklong ski schools for kids. Again, I did this as a single adult with friends, so very different than going as a family with kids, but if you are used to international travel it might be worth looking into.
And if you were open to smaller mountains there are a ton you could hop around to in Vermont and Maine.