ϳԹ

Skier making turns on a sunny powder day at Mount Bachelor Ski Resort.
Skier making turns on a sunny powder day at Mount Bachelor Ski Resort. (Tyler Roemer)

Inside Line: Key Mountain Resort Expansions of 2014

Your favorite slopes—bigger, better, and ready for winter

Published: 
Skier making turns on a sunny powder day at Mount Bachelor Ski Resort.
(Photo: Tyler Roemer)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

As skiers increasingly seek out new terrain, resorts are stepping up with expanded acreage, guided trips, and new lifts. Peak 6, at Colorado’s , is adding two new chairlifts, providing access to 543 additional acres across three high-alpine bowls—boosting the resort’s skiable terrain by 23 percent—and offering private, guided tours above the tree line (from $730).

This winter, Crested Butte begins guided tours of a new back-side, experts-only zone called Teo 2, featuring 60 acres of north-facing chutes filled with cliff jumps and pillow lines.

(Kristal Kraft/Flickr)
Crested Butte

In Montana, Big Sky and Moonlight Basin . The two have always shared a mountain, but now one lift ticket lets you access 5,750 acres of steep, varied terrain—the second-highest acreage in the country—and an enormous 4,350 vertical feet from top to bottom. Advanced skiers can even sign up with a professional mountain guide and be shown around the newly combined terrain (from $460).

(Fisherga/Flickr)
Moonlight Basin

And last spring, the U.S. Forest Service approved a 646-acre expansion off the southeast side of Oregon’s . A new chairlift won’t be installed until 2014, but it’s great news for avalanche-savvy skiers willing to hike in and DIY the still-uncontrolled, gladed slopes.

From ϳԹ Magazine, Dec 2013
Filed to:
Lead Photo: Tyler Roemer

Popular on ϳԹ Online