Vail Archives

Topic: Skiing & Riding

Season Passes on Sale at Vail Nordic Center

Blink your eyes and the Vail Golf Course is suddenly covered in snow. The golf course is completing its metamorphoses into the Vail Nordic Center and from Nov. 10 to 14, you've got the opportunity to buy a discounted season pass for months of free access to the center's smooth, groomed trails.

Glide into The Vail Nordic Center

While downhill skiing and riding is Vail's big draw, nordic skiing offers a peaceful, more cardiovascular alternative. Although no alpine ski area can beat the deal of Vail Resorts' Epic Pass, the Vail Nordic Center's season passes can provide an entire winter of fitness for less than $100.

Between Nov. 10 and 14, the Nordic Center season passes are $75 for adults, $70 for Vail residents and $40 for students. Beginning Nov. 17, pass prices go up to $90 for adults, $85 for Vail residents and $50 for students. Without a season pass, the fee for daily use of the trails is $8 per person.

The center consists of 17 kilometers of groomed trails for skate and classic Nordic skiing and 10K of snowshoe-specific trails. The center rents classic, skate and telemark skis as well as snowshoes and offers lessons and clinics throughout the season.

The Nordic Center is owned and operated by world champion mountain biker Mia Stockdale and Shane Sluder. The trails are groomed by the Vail Recreation District, which just purchased a new SnowCat that will make for an even silkier glide through the valley. New this season, Happy Valley Grill, a fully operating restaurant inside the Vail Golf Club, will offer homemade soup and cookies at the Nordic Center.

The Nordic Center has not yet determined an opening date, but, with a few more inches of snow, it should be soon!

Vail's Session ... Over and Out

It’s time to kiss goodbye to Vail’s premier snowboarding event.

Honda Session Slopestyle

The Vail Valley Foundation announced on Tuesday, Nov. 4, that The Session will be no more.
The event, which consisted of rails and slopestyle contests featuring some of the biggest jumps of any snowboarding contest the world over, began in 2003, drawing an international star-studded cast of competitors.

Coupled with live music and camp of sponsors, marshmallow roasters, video game tents, jumbotron display and historical turnout of thousands of spectators, the Session podium was among the most coveted among pro snowboards. The slopestyle contest offered a grand prize of more than $30,000.

Although the event was supposed to end in 2009, the Foundation and Vail Resorts decided to “pull the plug now” in the interest of planning “new events and programs that will target an ever-changing marketplace,” according to Foundation president Ceil Folz.

Olympic gold medalist Shaun White cleaned house at the Session every time he attended, mentioning during his reign that the fireball wrapping up each run through the slopestyle course was a highlight of the event. He did not, however, participate in the 2007 or 2008 Session.

Norwegian rider Andreas Wiig, fresh off of beating White to a gold medal in the 2008 Winter X Games slopestyle contest, held onto his crown in last year’s Session, which also saw the first 1440-degree spin ever landed in competition, courtesy of third-place finisher Chas Guildemond.

Vail Resorts representatives said one of the initial aims of the Session was to put Vail on the map in the world of professional snowboarding, and that it has already achieved this goal.

Thus, kiss goodbye to the Session and enjoy more coverage of last year’s event and of the 2007 Session.

Ski Turning Style

November 4th, 2008 10:25am
Ski Turning Style
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Mountain Tips: Skiing Moguls

Athletic trainer Joel Rather makes skiing bumps look easy. Plum takes you to Copper Mountain, where Rather goes through moguls technique, beginning with choosing your line and how to bring your skis over and around the bumps.

Mountain Tips: Telemark Turns

Anyone who has tried it or even seen it knows that telemark skiing isn't easy. Plum reels you into Mountain Tips at Copper Mountain. High up on Union Peak, on a cold, windy and tricky snow day, tele skier Shauna Farnell offers pointers on the importance of hand positioning in making tele turns.

Operation: Ski Conditioning

Hey look! Vail's ski season is almost upon us. Again. Yes, we know the summer only lasted about five minutes, but we're making the best of it and want to devote our fitness regiment to training for skiing and snowboarding.

Ski Turning Style

Squats and lunges will condition you for strong turns on this hill this winter.

As your body has probably conveyed to you in the past, biking, hiking and running all summer and fall will not condition you for skiing and riding.

No, skiing and snowboarding each isolate specific muscle groups (you know - the ones that are always screaming those first couple of days on the slopes), and we've come up with some tips on how to strengthen and condition them so you're ready to hit the slopes with a mid-season fitness level.

Skiing

There's not much argument among skiers about where you feel the burn early season. If your thighs had a loud speaker, the mountain would be a pretty noisy place.

Strengthening the knees is key in preparing the body for skiing, and knee power comes from strong quadriceps and hamstrings. How do you make strong quadriceps and hamstrings? Start an every-other-day squat program, doing repetitions of 10 squats, then 20, incorporating weight as your days on the mountain draw nearer. For a little variety, begin to add some lunges into the routine, concentrating on these if you're a telemark skier.

A couple weeks into this practice, begin supplementing your training with some jumping and plyometrics. Ideally, if you can find a dry hill and have only a light sense of shame, this is prime turf for pretending you're on a mogul field. Put your pretend poles out in front of you, keep your feet parallel and start hopping down the hill.

Snowboarding

When snowboarding, your calves and shins do most of the work. To strengthen them, begin doing toe raises on stairs to condition your calves and toe lifts to strengthen your shins. For toe lifts, a mattress works wonders. Dig your feet under the mattress and pull up with your toes. If you do 20 reps, three times every other day of each, your legs will thank you once you strap into your board.

Alternately, if you have a skateboard ... USE IT. Skateboarding uses virtually all the same muscles as snowboarding.

Skiing and Snowboarding

Both sports require a good amount of core strength. Begin working sit-ups into your pre-bedtime activities. Crunches and bicycle kicks (lying on your back, kicking your legs as if you're cycling, bringing an elbow to the opposite knee) are most effective. To strengthen your back, try the Superman (or Superwoman). Lie on your stomach with your arms and legs out and simultaneously lift your right arm and left leg, followed by your left arm and right leg. Try to do at least 50 of these every other night.

Lastly, a few push-ups and tri-cep (on the back of your arms) lifts will do you a world of good, too. When you're poling down a catwalk, or pushing yourself off the ground after a face plant, you don't want your arms quivering.

Happy conditioning!

Vail Epic Pass Price Could Go Up After May 4

May 2nd, 2008 12:24pm

Rumor has it that the stellar $579 price for Vail Resorts' Epic Pass - the one that allows open access to six ski areas for the 2008-09 season - could go up after May 4.

Without specifying the amount of a possible price increase, Vail Resorts' Amy Kemp said, "Prices might go up after May 4. The moral of the story ... if you're looking to buy a pass at the lowest guaranteed price, buy now."

The price for a child's Epic Pass (ages 5-12) could also increase after May 4 from the current $279 price tag.

True to its name, the Epic Pass offers up an amazing deal - unlimited, unrestricted access to Vail Resorts' Breckenridge, Keystone, Vail, Beaver Creek as well as Arapahoe Basin in Colorado, plus Heavenly Resort in California.

For those not wanting to put the whole amount on your credit card right now, it's possible to put down $49 and the remaining amount will be added in September.

Regardless of a possible price change, the Epic Pass will be available through Nov. 15, 2008. To purchase an Epic Pass now or secure one for $49 down, click Vail Epic Pass.

The Secrets of Skiing Uphill

April 17th, 2008 3:20pm
Imperial Challenge on the Way

The ultimate uphill skiing event is the Imperial Challenge, which includes a six-mile bike ride, a 3,000-foot skin/hike up the mountain and a ski down to the finish line at the base of Peak 8.

Who said Vail’s ski season is finished? The chairlifts are no longer turning at Vail or Beaver Creek, but, as we can see, there are still powder turns awaiting those willing to work for them.

  • The first thing you need to ski uphill is a pair of telemark or AT skis (regular skis with bindings that lock and unlock and boots to match).
  • The second accessory you need is a pair of skins – straps that stick to the base of your skis so you don’t slide backwards when you climb.
  • The third and most important item would be a solid pair of lungs.

As some of us recently discovered during a hike up Vail Mountain, skiing downhill all winter doesn’t necessarily condition a person for hauling oneself up the ski runs in the springtime. Oh yes, if you want to know exactly how out-of-shape you are, skinning up the mountain is a sure-fire way to find out.

Although crews have begun pushing snow off of Vail’s service roads, we found a nice, untouched line up the Cat track leading down to Cascade and then up the slopes of Pride. Let us warn you that it’s slow going, especially on the steep areas, where we found it easier to hike up making our own switchbacks rather than straight up the steep pitch. If new snow has fallen, we recommend climbing up a snowmobile track or even someone else’s downhill line. Those uphill steps are much easier when you’re not loading up your skis with extra weight in snow.

Finally, if you’re skinning up Vail, Beaver Creek or anywhere in the backcountry and are planning on skiing down a steep area of with a vertical of 25 degrees or more, make sure you prepare for avalanche dangers.

Happy hiking!

Imperial Challenge on the Way

April 17th, 2008 3:13pm
Imperial Challenge on the Way
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Snow Clearing Underway at Vail

April 16th, 2008 11:42am

It’s a big job, and the crews at Vail have wasted no time in getting started pushing the snow off of Vail Mountain.

It’s not often that the ski area finishes the season with an 80-inch base, accumulating snow up until the final day.

Yes, Vail polished off the winter with about four feet of snow the last
week and needless to say, it’s going to take a lot of sun and spring
warmth to get rid of it all.

But the SnoCats were already out in force beginning the Tuesday after
Sunday Closing Day, and the mountain’s service roads are the first
areas the Cats are clearing of snow.

This doesn’t bode well for locals who enjoy skinning or snowshoeing up
the mountain and skiing or riding down, but perhaps it will expedite
the melting process and mountain-biking/hiking season, which, it’s
probably safe to bet, might come later than usual this year.

We shall see … All we know for sure is that we’ll be seeing snow on the
peaks for a long, long while. Mud season, we might be welcoming you in
June.

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