Pacific Northwest Ski blog (and a few other places!)

Lots or reports from skiing around the Pacific Northwest, with some East Coast excursions thrown in for good measure

Monthly Archives: May 2011

Blackcomb in May

Trip report format from Snowheads. Read on …

Date: April 30th-May 7th, 2011

Our mob: 3 addicted skiers

Website : here

Basics : Whistler closes one of its mountains at the end of April, and keeps the other open until, this year, May 30th. It’s Blackcomb’s turn this year. Access is via the Blackcomb gondola from Whistler  and the majority of the mid and upper mountain lifts are open every day. For Edge Card holders, a $79 Spring Season Pass is available. Yep, 7 days skiing for $79 bucks on this trip 😉

The skiing: It’s been a record-breaking La Nina year at Whistler, and the snow depth was still like mid-winter, with skiing all the way down to the village. When the weather was good, the place to be was up high in Glacier Bowl and off 7th Heaven. The mid mountain runs got slushy later in the day, but rarely sticky, rather with fun, sugary snow prevailing all the way down the village. Groomers like Cloud 9, Ridge Runner and Zig Zag were at various times in perfect condition, fast and carvable. In the alpine, Pakalolo, Cougar Chutes and the bump runs off the Jersey chair were epic as long as you timed it right. The only downer was 3 foggy days, occasionally reducing the visibility to levels similar to Donald Trump’s credibility for President. This was the time to hit the tree runs, with Bark Sandwich, In the Spirit and Outer Limits being places to lay tracks in great spring snow.

Lift lines. Er … none.

Off-piste : There was so much snow you could basically ski anywhere. We had runs off Spanky’s Ladder, which were superb, and explored some precipitous lines off the cat track just past Heavenly Basin. Again, as long as you were smarter than the average bear with your timing, there was some really great off-piste skiing. Talking of bears, we saw some pretty big tracks in the trees below Crystal Chair 😉

The resort : Whistler Village is fantastic in spring. It’s not too busy, even at weekends, and there are bargains galore to be had eating, drinking and shopping. I invested in a new Salomon jacket for half price that should suffice for next season. So many bargains, so little budget ;(

Food : We deliberately explored new eating options, and exploited a few of the many special deals available throughout the village. Huge prime rib and lamb shanks for less than $20 each were excellent at Wildwood. We had good food in the Aubergine Grill, respectable bar food in Earls (perched at the bar watching ice hockey), and, the discovery of the week, great Japanese ‘pub food’  at Izakaya Harajuku. There’s some genuine, excellent Japanese food in Whistler, and Harajuku is up there with the best. A special 3 course menu for $19 per person was a great deal. So good, we went twice.

Hotel: We booked a 2 bed/2 bathroom condo in Bear Lodge from ownerdirect.com for C$900 for a week. What a bargain. A 5 minute walk to lifts, spacious and comfortable, and entertaining views of the (small) crowds outside Garfinkels at weekends as a bonus!

Costs: A helluva lot cheaper than in winter. Get the weekly paper and follow the nightly specials in all the restaurants and bars, and there’s serious money to be saved.

Conclusion: I love Whistler in spring. The skiing is still extensive and superb, the slopes are quiet, prices low, and the weather generally excellent (less so on this crazy La Nina year though, where spring skiing everywhere is as elusive as an Alex Ferguson apology).  One day I’ll spend all May there. One day …

Skiing stats:

7 days: 11900m,  7900m,  10200m,  12200m,  8900m,  9200m,  7900m vert

Season totals:

70 days, 23 powder days, 605, 000m vertical

2011 Closing Weekend at Whistler

It seems almost criminal to close down a ski hill as good as Whistler with a 3.5m base. But that’s what happened on the last weekend of April of this epic La Nina season. While the Telus Festival attracted big crowds, drinking seemed a bigger attraction than the superb snow conditions. We skied long and hard, lapping Harmony and Symphony Bowls virtually all weekend, with occasional excursions to the Peak and even a top-to-bottom down a soft, bumpy and absolutely deserted  Peak-to-Creek. Crowds? They were in the GLC and Tommy Africa’s, leaving us the almost unheard of luxury of skiing straight on to every lift. Now that’s an indulgent skiing weekend of the highest order!

Saturday 11900m, Sunday  7400m vert

Season totals:

63 days, 22 powder days, 536,800m vertical

Crazy Spring Bachelor Weekend

Mid-April, Friday morning, it’s dumping snow. 4-8 inches of light freshies blanket the mountain. It’s fine skiing. For 2 hours. By noon, it’s raining at the bottom of Northwest, and getting warmer and sloppy up high. After lunch, Northwest closes, it’s raining top to bottom. We drive to Bend at 2pm, soaked.

Saturday morning is damp and soggy. Like skiing inside damp cotton wool. We go in for lunch at noon as huge snow flakes fall like small rocks from the sky. By 3pm we’re skiing 3 inches of creamy freshies everywhere on a totally deserted mountain. We drive down to Bend, somewhat soaked.

Sunday is clear and sunny with 3-5 inches of vanilla-y soft serve everywhere. We luck out about 10.30 as Outback opens, and score 4 runs down untracked dreamy groomers and through the open, old growth forest that makes up so much of Bachelor’s charm. It’s insanely good skiing until it gets too warm by 1pm. We leave about 2pm, dry, tired and smiling ear to ear.

3 days: 7400,  9400,  8900m vert

Season totals:

61 days, 22 powder days, 517,500m vertical