NORTH
CREEK — All the snow Mother Nature’s dumped on the region
in the last two weeks has made life heavenly at Gore Mountain.
In welcoming people to an event
Gore hosted today, Marketing Manager Emily Stanton gushed that it’s
been one of the mountain’s "best early seasons ever."
But what makes this season so
great isn’t just the snow.
"Today is such a special
day," Stanton said this morning. "We’re opening the Village
Chair today and Gore will once again return skiing and snowboarding to
the Ski Bowl."
While there’s been tubing
in the North Creek Ski Bowl on Route 28 for several years, skiing has
pretty much been absent since about 2002, when a small T-bar shut down.
The new Village Chair, a triple
chairlift, provides skiers and snowboarders with access to the family-friendly
Village Slope trail and the adjacent terrain park and half-pipe.
In August, during a previous
interview with The Post-Star, General Manager Mike Pratt estimated that
the lift and terrain park amount to $1 million worth of improvements to
the Ski Bowl.
Tickets good for all Gore Mountain
trails, not just Village Slope, can be purchased at the Ski Bowl, Stanton
said. A yurt has also been erected at the Ski Bowl to give people a place
to warm up between runs.
In addition to tickets, Stanton
added that foods like pizza and soup will also be available for purchase
at the Ski Bowl.
During the event on Friday, Stanton
and Pratt also gave a tour of Gore Mountain’s new Northwoods Lodge.
Gore began converting its old
gondola loading barn, which stopped operating in 1999, into the lodge
in June.
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"Sixty-five
percent of the existing walls, floors and roof of the loading barn were
retained and used in the lodge," Stanton said. "It’s a
cool way to celebrate the history of the old gondola and be environmentally
friendly."
The Northwoods Lodge also features
rubber flooring made from recycled material, Stanton added. And material
salvaged from the old loading barn has been used to build a small roof
for the box office attached to the Gore’s original base lodge as
well.
Skiers and snowboarders, like
the environment, also stand to benefit from the new 20,000-square-foot
facility.
Gore’s equipment rental
shop, day care and ski school programs have all been moved from the base
lodge to the Northwoods Lodge.
This has opened up an additional
7,500 square feet of space in the base lodge for seating and lockers,
Stanton said.
It also means Gore’s Kids
Klub program has a much better headquarters in the Northwoods Lodge.
For one thing, the Kids Klub
is located in a large room that opens right out onto the slopes.
"This makes it real easy
for instructors to get all the kids out there," Pratt said.
Gore’s self-improvement
quest won’t end with the Northwoods Lodge and Village Chair, however.
About this time next year, Stanton
said Gore expects to open Burnt Ridge Mountain to skiing.
The Burnt Ridge area will feature
five new trails, totaling 6 miles, and add about 60 acres of skiing to
Gore, a press release said.
To get skiers to these trails,
a new chairlift will be added.
"The lift lines are already
in," Stanton said. "This summer we’ll be ready to install
a high-speed quad lift."
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