Well, we haven’t seen any snow in the Colorado Rockies in the last week or so, and with temperatures in the 50′s and 60′s we can safely assume that spring is upon us. And yes, this means SPRING SKIING!
While there will probably be a few spring storms that pass through and drop off some snow in the Colorado Rockies in late March and April, there is slushy snow and blue skies for now. And although skiing when there is tons of snow is great, it doesn’t get much better than skiing in t-shirts under a great blue sky.
Spring skiing often resembles “Early Season Conditions,” so be careful out there and watch out for rocks, protruding trees, dirt gaps, and even puddles! And if you are looking to ski through the trees, be cautious because the snow is heavy and planting turns can get a little tricky. So while skiing in the spring is possibly the most fun, there can be some questionable conditions – stay safe and have fun!
Here are some mountain stats:
Aspen (Highlands): 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Aspen (Ajax) : 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Aspen (Buttermilk): 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Beaver Creek: 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Breckenridge: 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Copper Mountain: 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Keystone: 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Snowmass: 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Telluride: 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Vail: 24 hr: 0 in, 72 hr: 0 in
Come on out to Colorado this spring and be sure to contact one of our Friendly. Knowledgeable. Locals.® to help answer any questions you have about vacationing in any of our fun-filled destinations this spring. Call today! (855) 210-2469
Last Wednesday Vail Resorts reported that 11″ had fallen in Vail overnight followed by another 12″ on Thursday. This snowfall caused a frenzy in Vail, which prompted me to write this blog.
With the right timing, you can avoid lift lines, get better snow, and ski all day hassle free!
So here is a guide of When to Ski (and when to stay home)…
1) Just in Time for the Storm – The weather channel informs you that a massive snow storm is headed for the Rockies. My advice is to book a room with Rocky Mountain Vacation Rentals and dip out of town while you still can! Don’t wait for the weekend to make it happen – that’s what everyone else does.
2) On Closing Day – Costumes, drinking, and half-clothed people skiing on the mountain is a good time. Closing day at any resort is a party that you don’t want to miss! Even though it is crowded, closing days is often the most fun day of the year. Below is a list of when our favorite Colorado Resorts are closing for the 2011-2012 season. Don’t forget that A-basin stays open until the snow melts each year!
3) Between opening day and December 17th (roughly and excluding Thanksgiving weekend) – This is the time for discount lodging leading up to the holidays. As soon as December 22nd hits, you’re paying holiday rates that are often much, much higher than normal rates.
4) During the Spring! – After March 31st you’ll typically find cheaper lodging through the end of the ski season and beautiful days on the hill. The weather is often terrific, and sometimes there are even powder days!
When you should probably stay home…
1) The Day after Christmas – Enough said.
2) New Years Day (+/- 1 day) – Surprisingly enough people still love to ski on New Years Day. The truth is, nothing cures a hangover as quickly as some fresh mountain air blowing in your face while cruising down the mountain.
3) President’s Day weekend – Next to Christmas, this is the busiest time of year to be in the mountains. If you have to ski over President’s Day Weekend be sure to book your lodging early in the season and expect to pay premium prices. If your trip can wait, then I’d recommend holding off until the holiday passes to go skiing.
Hopefully you found these local tips on when to ski and when not to ski helpful. Rocky Mountain Vacation’s Rentals’ staff is local to each of the destinations we represent, so wherever your ski vacation may be, be sure to give Rocky Mountain Vacation Rentals a call! (855) 210-2469
Timing
Learn to love the “unpopular” months to ski! You can save mucho dinero by traveling the weeks after New Years and before President’s Day Weekend while getting the same great snow. It’s known that with holidays come crowded runs, lengthy lift lines and tracked out snow conditions. Think ahead, or just follow the powder report and I promise you’ll be happy.
Plan Your Shred Scope
Colorado is ski resort heaven! It hardly makes sense to fly all the way out here and be limited to skiing at just one resort. Each resort offers completely unique features and terrain and the same goes for the towns that surround them. If you are an experienced, confident driver in the snow, then what’s stopping you from renting a car for a day or two? Only 4-wheel or all-wheel drives will do—don’t forget you’re going to need room to stash all your gear. Before you rent a car, check with your lodging property to see what kind of parking they offer. Otherwise you’re going to end up paying $25 a day for parking. If this is the case, it might be smarter to hire a shuttle or take Public Transit to get you from point A to point B.
Purchase Travel Insurance
I cannot recommend travel insurance enough if you’re planning on taking a ski vacation this winter. Flying into Denver or other regional airports in Colorado during the winter is never a guarantee. We’ve had guests end up missing their whole trip due to inclement weather. That’s thousands of dollars lost in booked lodging, life tickets, and transportation. Talk to our Destination Specialist about adding CSA Travel Insurance to protect your vacation and your pocketbook. If anything does go wrong, CSA acts as your personal travel agent to get you back on track.
HYDRATE!!
The most important tip for any traveler is HYDARATION. Altitude sickness is a quick way to ruin a vacation and an all too common occurrence for travelers in the high Rockies. Avoid it—drink more water than you think you should before you arrive and during your trip. Camelbacks are a lifesaver on the ski hill! I should also mention that alcohol hits your blood stream much quicker and harder at high altitudes. You’ll likely feel tipsy after just one beer, hinting that you need to drink more water and possibly slow down your drinking; hangovers are a sure bet to keep you from getting first chair the next morning!
Find out more about how our team of Friendly. Knowledgeable. Locals.®can help you plan your customized summer or winter vacation in any of our fun-filled destinations.
Being someone who has spent numerous years in the service/retail industry, I’ve developed a great appreciation for service with a smile. As a new snowboarder, I knew I was going to be doing some serious shopping for new snow gear. Not totally familiar with the area, I was directed to a sporting goods store called Venture Sports. At Venture Sports in Avon, they truly embody what it means to value excellent customer service.
As soon as I entered, I was warmly welcomed and asked if I needed assistance with anything. I was in the market for some new gloves and a helmet, but I decided to take some time to myself just to browse and see what else they had to offer. I quickly realized that I had no idea what I was looking at so I asked for some assistance. Though there were other guests in the store, they were never too busy to answer a quick question about recommended gloves or share their specials and sales with me.
Overall, I walked out of the store with a new pair of quality gloves and a solid new helmet. I was ready to get out on the mountain. Before leaving, I took some extra time to browse and I noticed some sick looking bikes mounted to their ceiling. During the summer they become a full service bike shop, tune shop, and tour operator. Covering cycling from very high-end road and mountain bikes to base model serious bikes. If you aren’t sure about your purchase, they feature try before you buy. What more can you ask? Venture Sports is truly a one stop shop where you develop a trusting and lasting relationship as well as superior customer service.
Elevation – It’s always been a love/hate relationship with me. While it provides us with beautiful mountains and snowfall, it also causes us to feel out of shape, ill, and at times discouraged. The most amazing mountains in Colorado are perched 8,000 feet above sea level, which means that the air is “thinner” and your body can’t get as much oxygen as it would at lower elevations. This decrease in air pressure also means that water vapor from your lungs is lost at a much faster rate. These factors combined can easily lead to altitude sickness; a nasty combination of nausea, headaches, insomnia and shortness of breath with the potential to ruin your Ski Vacation.
Take action to prevent high-altitude illness.
What to do if you get altitude sickness?
The best way to treat altitude sickness is to simply go down to a lower altitude. If symptoms are severe enough, descend as much as 1,500 to 2,000 feet lower. Ask your doctor about acetazolamide, which will help transport oxygen more efficiently through your body. Or opt for the more natural route and use lemon soda and ginger, and ginkgo biloba, to help ease the symptoms.
Types of High-altitude sickness:
1) Acute Mountain Sickness
2) High-altitude pulmonary edema (also called HAPE), affects the lungs.
3) High-altitude cerebral edema (also called HACE), affects the brain.
Do yourself a favor, prepare your body for your next ski vacation and avoid falling victim to altitude sickness. To your health!
Winter solstice will technically arrive on December 21st, but as far as I am concerned, Jack Frost has already graced us with his presence, bringing along with him tons of snow. The last few weeks, ski resort towns have been receiving snowstorms making them look like the holiday season has already begun.
Last weekend I found myself in the town of Breckenridge, enjoying good friends and spirits while watching the constant flow of snow. Breckenridge has received 36” of snow in the last 72 hours!
While I was driving back to Vail, my jaw dropped when I stared at Vail Pass. Pillows of snow covered the entire pass, as if just waiting for someone to ski what looks to be waist deep powder. I spent the last few years spending my backcountry time in Loveland and Berthoud Pass, so I am really stoked to explore Vail Pass.
If you decide to hit up any pass or other backcountry spots, make sure to be prepared. The following provides a list of materials that should be brought along on any backcountry journey:
Colorado has a lot to offer, from amazing backcountry to the top ski resorts in the country. Whatever your choice may be, make sure to be properly prepared and remember to book your vacation with Rocky Mountain Vacation Rentals.
I have been living in Colorado over twenty years now and there is a certain system of rules I like to live by in the winter. My rules are in the list provided below:
So when planning on visiting the Rockies, or if it’s your backyard, you may want to follow a rule or two and have a great winter. Remember to book your trip through Rocky Mountain Vacation Rentals.
If there are any rules you like to live by during the winter, please add them in the comments.
The snow is here in Vail and that can help me (as well as everyone else in the office) get excited about riding at all the resorts we are so lucky to live amidst. However, one thing I am so excited about this year which I have always wanted to do but have never done is a ski hut trip in the Rockies. The 10th Mountain Division Hut Association in Colorado has over 29 backcountry huts all throughout the Rockies which are connected by 350 miles of suggested routes for backcountry skiing, snowmobiling, and hiking. I personally will be using them for backcountry skiing and trying to access places in the mountains not many people get to see. Lucky for you, you can do this too, and the best part is that even if we are out there in these huts at the same time, chances are we won’t see each other or track out each other’s lines because there is so much terrain to ride that there is more than enough for everyone. Huts range from 3 beds to 20 beds and come equipped with wood burning stoves for heating and cooking, photovoltaic lighting, cooking and eating utensils, toilet paper, mattresses, pillows, and decks for those warm spring days.
Hut trips are a great break from the luxury living style here in Vail, but I know we all love Vail for its amenities and services that you can’t get anywhere else. So when planning around your hut trip for your next vacation here to the Vail Valley, be sure to call us at Rocky Mountain Vacation Rentals at 1-888-866-2305 so we can help you get the most out of what Vail has to offer.
The season is in effect! We have decided to not only provide you with one playlist for riding, but a top ten every week! So, gear up and load your iPod with the best tunes to jam out to on the slopes! Feel free to reach out to us with YOUR favorites as well! ENJOY!
1. “19 2000” – Gorillaz
2. “Daylight” – Matt & Kim
3. “In the Waiting Line” – Zero 7
4. “Lisztomania” – Phoenix
5. “The Instrumental” – Lupe Fiasco
6. “Midnight Voyage” — Ghostland Observatory
7. “I Own America, Part 2” – Slick Rick
8. “Epic Holiday” – Angels & Airwaves
9. “Cinderella Man” – Eminem
10. “Hey Ma” – Cam’Ron
Here is a playlist of our favorite tunes to jam out to while shredding the pow! We took a vote around the office and chose the best from there. So here you have it, Rocky Mountain Vacation Rentals’ very own soundtrack to the perfect day out on the slopes!
1. “Half-Mast” – Empire of the Sun
2. “First Snow” – Emancipator
3. “Ooh La La” – Goldfrap
4. “Round the Wheel” – String Cheese Incident
5. “Time to Pretend” MGMT
6. “Instantly” – Sound Tribe Sector 9
7. “Colorado” – Railroad Earth
8. “Magic Spells” –Crystal Castles
9. “Rhinestone Eyes” – Gorillaz
10. Anything Miike Snow
Thanks for checking it out!
10 tips to prepare for ski season
Olympics Update
After four days of exciting Olympic races and performances, Germany is leading with a total of nine medals- three gold medals, four silver medals and two bronze medals, followed by the US in second with a total of eight medals, and France which is third in the medal count with seven medals. The two gold medals for the US are from Snowboard Cross racer Seth Wescott and Freestyle Moguls skier Hannah Kearney. The two silver medals come from the Colorado Nordic Combined racer Johnny Spillane who grew up in Steamboat Springs, and Short Track Speed racer Apolo Anton Ohno. The four bronze medals the US has so far are from Bode Miller who got third in the Men Alpine Downh
ill, Bryon Wilson a Freestyle Moguls skier, Shannon Bahrke who placed after Hannah Kearney as well as J.R. Celski who got another medal for the US in the men 1500m Short Track Speed Skating.
For today Wednesday February 17, 2010, there are more very interesting Olympic competitions on the program. First there is the Ladies Downhill skiing where Linsey Vonn from Vail is a potential medal candidate. The Ladies’ Downhill will start at noon our time. During the whole day, the Cross Country skiing sprint heats are going on where Kikkan Randall from Alaska is hoping to make the final. One of the most spectacular competitions today will be the men’s Snowboard Halfpipe event. Starting with the qualification at two mountain time and ending with the finals at eight o’clock everybody is excited what Shaun White practiced at his secret private half pipe somewhere in Colorado as well as his competitor
s. Hopefully there is going to be some better weather up in Whistler Mountains so that the alpine races can have a fair competition…
So get ready for more very intense and exciting Olympic days!!!
P.S. Congratulations to one of the most amazing athletes – Tatjana Huefner, who was my roommate in some army camps back home in Germany and who won the gold medal in women’s luge!!!
Olympia is coming soon, only 1 day left!!!
The past weeks Olympia 2010 did not make the best headlines- lack of snow and rainfall in Whistler where most of the skiing events will take place, gave the organization committee some sleepless nights. But right in time hundreds of officials and volunteers managed it to get all venues prepared and ready to start off in time. The opening ceremony will take place this Friday February 12. Before that ski jumper will already have their first qualification on Friday morning. Then Saturday February 13, the 21st Olympic Winter Games will be kicked off- Ski Jumping, Men’s Downhill, Ice Hockey, Speed Skating, Biathlon, Freestyle Skiing, Luge, and Short Track. Then on Sunday and Monday the games continue with Nordic combined, Figure Skating, Cross Country Skiing, Curling and Snowboard races. The last day of the 21st Olympic Games will be on February 28 with a 50km cross country skiing race, the Men’s Ice Hockey Final game and the closing ceremony at night.
There will be 15 winter sports events which are announced as part of the 2010 Winter Olympics. The eight sports categorized as ice sports are: bobsled, luge, skeleton, ice hockey, figure skating, speed skating, short track speed skating and curling. The three sports categorized as alpine skiing and snowboarding events are: alpine, freestyle and snowboarding. The four sports categorized as Nordic events are: biathlon, cross country skiing, ski jumping and Nordic combined. So far ski jumping is only an Olympic discipline for men. In 2006, the IOC voted not to include women’s ski jumping in the 2010 Games on the grounds that the sport was not yet developed enough and did not meet basic criteria for inclusion. The members of the Canadian Women Ski Jumping Team filed a grievance with the Canadian Human Rights Board citing gender discrimination. So far the IOC has yet to comment or change its decision.
The number of National Olympic Committees that will enter teams in the 2010 Winter Olympics is projected to be over 80 representing more than 2630 athletes. Nations will be added as they qualify at least one athlete or team. Cayman Islands, Colombia, Ghana, Montenegro, Pakistan, Peru and Serbia will make their winter Olympic débuts. Also Jamaica, Mexico and Morocco will return to the games after missing the 2006 Winter Olympics. Tonga sought to make its Winter Olympic début by entering a single competitor in luge, attracting some media attention, but he crashed in the final round of qualifying. Luxembourg qualified two athletes but one did not reach the criteria set by the NOC and the other was injured before the games. Hence Luxembourg will not take part.
So only 2 days to go…get ready for two great weeks of winter sport with hopefully instead of bad injuries and doping issues a lot of fun, action, excitement and success stories !!! I will blog again next
Wednesday with the first update of results; hopefully I can already report some Olympic medals for the US or for my home Germany.
Monday morning I woke up on the Front Range to rain and couldn’t wait to get back up to Vail as rumors of snow swirled. As I approached Idaho Springs it was beginning to look like a winter wonderland and behind the wheel of my Subaru I was flooded with nostalgic memories of driving I-70 through white out conditions jamming to my
favorite tunes, focused on the other end of Eisenhower Tunnel and the powder conditions that waited for me over Vail Pass. It is rare to see such a beautiful sight, the gold and greens of the Aspens in contrast to the snow covered pines, it reminded me how lucky I am to call Vail my home. Signs of winter have finally come to the Rockies, so say it loud and say it proud “62!” Only 62 days until the opening day of Vail Ski Resort, we know every skier and rider is ready, and today mother nature let us know she too is ready.
The burning question is what will the 2009-2010 ski season look like? According to the farmer’s almanac the Rockies can expect lower than normal temperature and above average precipitation, with below-normal winter temperatures and an above-normal precipitation forecast, the Great Lakes and Midwest
will see above-normal snowfalls, especially during January and February; it’s like music to your ears I know.
In September we can expect showers of rain that will turn to snow as cold air settles over the Rockies making for an
early season freeze. October is calling for cold rains/ snow over the Northern Rockies, in mid October the Rockies will be cold and clear preceded by Clouds and steady rain/ snow. The first week in November shows snow of the Rockies followed by big storms that will come down from the Pacific Northwest. By opening day the Farmer’s Almanac is saying a storm crossing the Rockies will bring heavy snow and cold air.
Last year we had record days of snow and this year is calling for more, my advice is to get up, shape up, gear up, and show up for opening day baby!
To book your Rocky Mountain Vacation Rental call 970.477.1777