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Oh what a day on the mountain! Take bright sunshine, temperatures in the 50's, a turtle neck shirt, a ski bib and ski vest. Add in soft snow, fast lifts, and no crowds. Throw in some bumps for good measure. Blend it all together. And while you are at it, say a pray to the divinity for being able to ski all winter to develop hard skiers legs. You have got today down pat!
I arrived at the mountain just before 9. I put my boots on in Bay 1 of the K1 parking lot, and slipped over to the K1 Gondola. It was hot. As I am going up K1, I am a little pensive. The base area was damp. Highline was groomed like a Slurpie run over by an 18 wheeler in a 7/11 parking lot. Royal Flush looked like it needed a plunger. East Fall was laying flat. And Cascaded looked like it was covered with lots of little icy bumps. I was not sure what I had gotten myself into.
A warm breeze greeted me at Killington Peak. I snapped on my skis, and headed out, followed by a couple of friends I met at the peak as I was getting ready. The first run was down Great Northern to Rime to East Fall. The snow was soft and creamy. East Fall was erratic in spots, the result of inconsistent sunshine warming the trail through the trees. But the Canyon Quad was running, so all was right with the world.
The next run saw us take a wider swing down Great Northern to Highline. Full sunshine had been on Highline since daybreak. The snow surface was folded like a delicious whipped cream, pushing back with enough texture and body on the skis to keep speed in check, but not being sticky and foul like a sugary meringue. I though it was great. The guys I was skiing with at the time ...not so much... so off to breakfast they went leaving me to the mountain and my own whims.
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Cover Art for Herb Alperts 1965 album Whipped Cream and Other Delights. Click to enlarge.. |
I took the K1 Gondola again and skied across the top of the mountain. Superstar was looming in the distance, but I did not feel like skating in front of the K1 Base Lodge so off to the peak I went. From the peak I traversed across Launch Pad to just below the Superstar Headwall. Launch Pad was medium soft primarily due to warm air temperature, versus spring sunshine. Entering Superstar brought full sunshine, and more whipped cream.
From Superstar I decided to brave Bear Mountain. By now it was 10 AM and I expected Bear to be mixed up. I traversed over to Bear Claw and found some more beautiful snow. I followed that with a cruise down Upper Wildfire, with some nice, soft, little bumps. Both Bear Claw and Wildfire empty into Lower Wildfire because of the Hole Shot competition on lower Sky Burst. I thought this might be a problem, but I hung to skiers right near the trees and found more delicious soft serve ice cream for my efforts.
I found more of the same on my run down Skyburst to Dream Maker to Cruise Control, as well as a follow up run down Bitter Sweet. By now I am starting to look for some bumps, as the high speed soft snow cruising was starting to loose my attention span, so I took a run down Sky Lark to the Superstar Quad. Upper Skylark was the creamy goodness found around the mountain. Lower Skylark had gorgeous big soft Volkswagen beetle bumps. Just enough variety to get the legs moving and get your attention. I was ready for more.
By now Superstar was calling my name. The upper headwall had a few bumps to keep the party going, followed by a whipped cream filling in the middle, and more bumps on the lower headwall. I sought out the bumps under the lift line on skiers left. I found them the perfect height and combination of firmness and softness to just develop a great rhythm heading down the trail. When I got to the bottom, I had to do it over before my day was done. It was just a delight after a long winter of predominately Super G style skiing.
When I was driving home, the riff on the talk show I was listening too was "A Taste of Honey" by Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass. It was from his album "Whipped Cream and Other Delight" which was the perfect descriptor for skiing at Killington today. But there is something even stranger about this story. It is the connection between this album from 1965 and skiing. The original album was produced and released by A and M Records. In 2005, it was re-mastered into digital format to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the albums release. It was re-masterd by Shout Factory...who happen to be the same company that makes and distributes Warren Miller ski movies. Talk about closing a circle....
Here is to more great spring skiing and riding at Killington!...... Let it snow!!!
Congratulations are in order for the residents of Killington for turning out in high numbers to vote in the first Australian Ballot Killington Town Meeting.
From information provided by town government, 391 ballots were cast in the election. This represents a 60% increase in voter turn out from last years town meeting, at which 245 votes were cast in an open floor vote in March of 2011. For comparison purposes, from town reports, 241 votes were cast in 2010, 193 in 2009 and 242 in 2008 (source Town of Killington and Chris Bianchi). Yesterdays Australian Ballot voting clearly reached it's initial objective of creating a more participatory environment to engage Killington residents in town government.
Congratulations are also in order for all of the candidates who participated in yesterdays election. Your desire to volunteer your services to the community of Killington is noteworthy, whether you won or lost the elected position that you sought. Thank you!
Election results for can be found on the Town of Killington's website on the Election Results page.
Let it snow!!!
On a perfect day to head out to the mountain to ski, the registered voters of Killington are turning out to make history. By a wide margin at a special town meeting held last year, the voters of Killington decided to modify the existing Town Meeting procedures for from the floor voting, and move instead to a formal ballot using Australian Voting rules. Today was the first local election with the new rules in place.
While it is too early to proclaim that the switch to Australian Ballot for local elections is a success, early indications are that the people of Killington are responding well to the changes. Last night, the first part of the change took place with an Informational Town Meeting to review the issues before the voters of Killington. The meeting was attended by several hundred people to discuss issues presented to voters on the ballots to be cast today. A live stream video record of Monday nights meeting can be found online here.
if you are a Killington resident reading this blog, no matter what your point of view, I encourage you to get over to the elementary school on Schoolhouse Road today before 7:00 PM and cast your vote.
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Chris Bianchi answering questions at the Killington Town Meeting held on Monday night, March 5, 2012. Click to enlarge.. |
The election is not the only activity taking place in Killington today. The beautiful blue sky and crisp late winter temperatures are driving residents and guests outside to play in the snow.
Before heading to the polling place to cast my votes in this years election, I made my way to the resort for a short jog around the mountain. By this morning, the resort had groomed out the powder that had fallen the last several days, resulting is surfaces that were noticeably firmer. Some moderate powder could be found on some trail edges, and along windblown areas prone to drifting snow. The woods today was not an option for me, as I was skiing with people who do not partake in the trees, but I would guess that tracked out areas would have also firmed up in the cold overnight temperatures.
Skiing today was back to primarily Super G conditions with flat and fast conditions underfoot. Trails that had minimal grooming had firm bumps under a small cover layer of powder. Lower Skylark is an example of the latter, with Sky Burst to Lower Wildfire being a perfect example of Super G downhill.
Spring skiing conditions are due to spread across the area over the next couple of days with temperatures reaching well above freezing. They should be nice days to grab your ski shells and sun screen and take a few laps around the mountain.
Let it snow!!!
You can't make this up!
All winter long we have been moaning about the fruits of Mother Nature... The last 2 weeks have certainly changed that tune!
Today was another in a series of Powder Days at Killington. 4 inches of beautiful, bright white, fluff draped the region overnight setting the table for another great day to be on the mountain. With temperatures in the low teens, the morning was set up for powder run after powder run all across the mountain.
From Bear Mountain, to Needles Eye to Sky Peak to Rams Head to Snowdon, to Killington Peak, everywhere we went this morning I was able to find untracked, or minimally tracked powder all across the mountain.
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Mary and Nina in the powder at Killington Vermont, March 5, 2012 Click image to stop rotation. Click again to resume rotation. |
The mountain did have some character builders to it, however. The groomed cruisers (Bear Claw, Lower Wildfire, Sky Burst, Cruise Control, Swirl, Easy Street, Caper) were all set up with powder depths ranging from a dusting to 4 inches. You could just rip down these trails with powder flying in all directions.
The bump runs, (Superstar, Outer Limits, Needles Eye, Royal Flush, Highline, Low Road, Interceptor) all presented their own challenges. A weekend worth of skiers and riders created bumps on these trails ranging from a small sitzmark to Volkswagen Beetles. The larger bumps, with clearly defined troughs, while totally covered in powder, were clearly visible, allowing one to take either aggressive, or evasive, action to cope with the bump. The smaller bumps were virtually invisible in the freshly fallen snow. Hitting them at speed was a work out for the legs, which was not a bad thing as they could continue to be strengthened in preparation for this summers golf season.
I do have a couple of black and blues from catching tree branches along the sides of some of the trails. The powder along most trail edges was shin to knee deep. It is a price one has to pay on occasion to get the good stuff.
We have another cool day on tap for tomorrow (Election Day in Killington --- Don't forget to vote!) which should keep the mountain in perfect mid winter shape. After that it looks like we have a bout of spring skiing on tap with bright sunshine and warm temperatures. Don't forget your sun screen!
Let it snow!
We just did that? Garry and The Bagel look back at a cloud covered Thimble under the Skyship Stage 2
I needed to leave the mountain today at 10:15 AM.
When I sat down and wrote yesterdays blog at 11:30 PM, I did not know that I had another 4 hours to go before getting to bed. It turns out a late arrival planted their car in a snow bank on Butler Road leading into the inn. By the time the tow truck pulled them out and they were settled into the inn, the clock had struck 3:30 AM. It is just hard to ski in the powder on 3 hours sleep after skiing all out the day before.
During my hour on the hill, I did manage 6 runs on wonderfully soft, if visibility challenged, trails. Yesterdays powder was moved around all around the resort last night by Killingtons grooming fleet, covering every trail with a thick coating of machine groomed lightly packed powder. Each turn yielded a sweeping cascade of snow as the skis carved into the surface.
In addition to the groomers, the resort had also left the sides of many trails filled with wonderful soft bumps. After a couple of runs, my sleep deprived legs were no match, unlike yesterdays outing on the snow. As my legs turned to rubber with each bump, it became apparent that my ski day would be short. So it goes...
Tonight the inn is full with almost the whole house due to arrive. The saga of traveling to Killington will be lived by thousands this afternoon and this evening as they head into town to enjoy a weekend in Vermont. The great news in my shortened ski day is that the snow has energized people to visit Killington, and stay at our inn. Plus the snow will also go a long way to providing Killington with a long and soft spring skiing season. I can sleep when the snow melts.
Let it snow!!!
It has been a very full day.
As I sit down to write this installment to killingtonblog.com, the clock has just struck 11:30 PM. My legs feel like Picaso's famous painting The Scream. They are talking to me...no yelling at me. And they are a bit wobbly as well. A day of rodeo riding beautiful powder bumps on the slopes of Killington followed by several hours behind a 9 horsepower, rattle your bones till the ache, snowblower will do that.
In short.... it was a great day to be in Killington!
I can't go into the details of everywhere we skied at the resort today. We did many of the usual suspects....Wildfire, Bear Claw, Cruise Control, Bittersweet, Skylark, Superstar. We traversed across the mountain for runs down Cascade, East Fall, Rime, Reason, Great Northern, Chute, Bunny Buster, Mouse Trap, Great Bear. And then we also did some bush whacking, some reserved runs through the trees, some places where knowing where you are does not mean you know where you are going.
It was a great day to be in Killington!
If you subscribe to the resorts newsletter, The Drift, you will read in the morning about feet of snow falling on Killington the last few days. You may be enticed to visit Killington to play on the mountain, and by all means please come to Vermont and stay with us at the Birch Ridge Inn. But that does not tell the half of what it was like on the trails today.
The morning started with snow, glorious snow. To the resorts credit, they did not over groom the place last night, letting the snow build up on the trails so skiers and riders could enjoy the experience of being in fresh powder. All morning long, the resort was experiencing a 1 to 2 inch per hour snow fall, so virtually every run was an opportunity to find fresh powder on the trail. You did not need to look far. Many times it was right down the middle of what ever trail you were on at the time. Of course, we rarely stayed in the middle of any trail for long. Like blood hounds in search of a scent,if the best powder was right, we turned right. If the best powder was left, we turned left. At least in the first 30-45 minutes, we tried not to cross each others path. We tried not to ruin it for other skiers and riders and restricted our turns to graceful swiggles in the snow, verses large arcing cross trail traverses. But by 10AM, all bets were off.
It was a great day to be in Killington!
Several thousand people turned out to Killington today to play in the snow. There were no lift lines. There was no rowdy behavior. There was a lot of ear to ear grins. And by 10 AM there were a lot of bumps.
The bumps were like Forrest Gumps box of chocolates. Some were ephemeral, vanishing into a cloud of fluff as you hit them. Some were like a goose down pillow, obediently and softly giving way when lovingly manipulated by your skis. Some were powder sugar coated hard candy, causing audible grunts when they were hit as your legs were pushed into your chest forcing all the air out of your lungs.
On some of the wider trails, where most days the careful grooming by the resort causes local skiers to experience a fog of boredom, the bumps were the most forgiving. Carving at speed was your friend with broad smiles at the end of the trail for the next lift ride up. On the narrower trails, the "natural trails", the trails not touched by human hands or tilled by GPS coordinated machines, the bumps became a wild bucking bronco rodeo ride. Speed, and momentum, and inertia, and flying powder, all came into play with even bigger smiles of self satisfaction in the next lift line.
It was a great day to be in Killington!
I have one more check in tonight to go before I go to bed. I hope they get here soon. I want to do it all over again in the morning!
Let it snow!!!
Just when you through it was safe to reserve your spring tee times at Green Mountain National Golf Course, Mother Nature has decided to give the Killington Resort a Leap Year gift.
A winter storm warning has been posted for Vermont. The first elements of the storm are already entering the area with high overcast and occasional snow flurries. Currently, the National Weather Service is predicting 6 to 12 inches of snow in Killington spread fairly equally between tonight and tomorrow. Usually, based upon past history, snow fall totals on the upper elevations of the mountain tend to trend to the higher amounts.
Ahead of the storm, we had guests arriving last night as late as ~3:00AM to position themselves to take advantage of the advancing powder. Ski house friends have also called to tell us that they are in motion this afternoon; heading to their ski houses in Killington to seek out the pow on Thursday. Bookings at the inn have also followed suit, with just 1 room left available for the coming weekend as I write this blog. It looks like this years poor to date snow fall has created strong pent-up demand in the North East ski community for some good skiing before calling the season to a premature close. With the second multi-inch snow storm predicted to hit the area in less than a week, it looks like Mother Nature has finally responded to the call.
And remember.... March is usually the snowiest month of the year in Killington!
Let it snow!!!