You’ve likely never heard of the five ski areas listed below, but you should definitely consider them for your next adventure.
Vertical drop: 900 feet
Acres of skiing: 450 acres
Full day ticket: $54
Best for: Pow-hound Midwesterners who wish they lived in Colorado.
Nearby: Nothing. Greenbay, Wisconsin, is four and a half hours away.
Best deal: Buy your season pass on the first Saturday in December and it’s $99 for one year, $159 for two years, and that includes three days of skiing each season at Colorado’s Monarch.
No grooming, no beginners. That’s essentially Mount Bohemia’s slogan. Located in Michigan's UP, the ski area claims the longest runs in the Midwest, as well as the highest vertical and deepest pow.
The resort receives 273 inches of Colorado-quality snow annually and has no shortage of steep, rocky chutes and cliff drops. In fact, Bohemia claims the most in-bounds gladed skiing in the U.S. after Sugarloaf, Maine.
Après ski, head to the bar, which is yurt, or the restaurant, also a yurt. Then crash with nine friends in—you guessed it—a yurt. Your stay will come out to less than $20 per person per night. Flying solo? The on-mountain hostel costs $25 per night, and includes a pancake breakfast.
Vertical drop: 1,571 feet
Acres of skiing: 400
Full day ticket: $42, half price with a lesson
Best for: Tourists, locals out for a lunch run.
Nearby: Downtown Jackson Hole.
Best deal: $20 for two hours; $32 for three hours any time of day, $149 season pass
Snow King juts out of downtown Jackson Hole, a mere six blocks from the famous Jackson Town Square. Founded in 1939, Snow King was the first ski area in Jackson Hole and one of the first in the United States. Ever since, snow junkies seek out Snow King for an affordable taste of Jackson powder.
Skiing there almost feels like you own a private resort—there's never a line—and the terrain is exceptional, ranging from cruiser blues to bumped up gladed steeps. It's a mom and pop area on steroids, a town hill with a hardcore edge.
The steepness and the quality of the terrain are Snow King's greatest surprises. Unless you sign up for a lesson, and 82-year old Bill Brigg, the first man to ski The Grand, is your instructor.
Vertical drop: 1,400 feet
Acres of skiing: 640
Full day ticket: $38
Best for: Hard working Montana ranchers
Nearby: The middle of nowhere. The nearest supermarket is 65 miles away in Great Falls.
Whether you ski in Gore-Tex or Carhartts and a cowboy hat, you'll never get called out at Showdown, unless it's in praise of your tail grab, iron cross, backscratcher, or daffy. And no one cares if you like to slide on two planks or one.
Showdown is Montana's oldest ski area—open since 1936—and it's as much about the family friendly atmosphere as the low moisture consistent quality snow. No one is in a rush or too busy to shake hands, and no one cares about high-speed quads; . Showdown skiers like the slow lifts—they give you chance to talk to your neighbor and enjoy the view.
Showdown's 6,800-foot base area means the snow is blower top to bottom—Showdown skiers don't know about ice. The runs are short, but the steep trees are world class. And you can get Montana grit with a dash of class and a dump of powder for less than $90 for lift ticket, rental skis, lunch and an après beer. But you'll want to put that beer off til last chair. Even at the end of the day, there's almost guaranteed to still be untracked powder.
Vertical drop: 2,047 feet
Acres of skiing: 1,200
Full day ticket: $72; $82 for a SolBright pass, which gives you access to Solitude and Brighton.
Best for: Powderhounds with kids.
Nearby: Salt Lake City 15 miles away.
Best deal: The Inn at Solitude, often only $99 per night.
Located in Big Cottonwood Canyon, Solitude has natural terrain—runs that have never been bulldozed—for everyone. The resort is known for its advanced terrain, but has stellar groomers laden with legendary light, fluffy Utah powder. In fact, Solitude claims more powder per person than any other resort.
Solitude also boasts lift-served backcountry in Honeycomb Canyon. It's rugged and wild, and it'll stay that way. Solitude and Brighton are the only commercial developments allowed in Big Cottonwood by law.
And there aren't any crowds, which is great for locating your kids when you get separated or when it's time to meet up. Skip it if you're looking for nightlife—free ice skating in the village might be the most action in town.
Vertical drop: 1,200 feet
Acres of skiing: 1,200 acres; including 130-acre Mirkwood Basin
Full day ticket: $60
Best for: Rocky Mountain freeheelers
Nearby: 20-miles from Salida, 40-miles from Gunnison Airport, 120-miles from Colorado Springs Best deal: One Planet, One Pass—Monarch's $459 season's pass includes skiing everyday at Monarch, plus three days each at 31 other ski areas in Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, Montana, California, Michigan, Arizona, North Carolina, British Columbia, Germany, Austriab and Spain!, and Spain!
With a base at 10,790 feet, Monarch is the highest ski area in the U.S. and has the second highest snowfall in Colorado—about 350 inches annually. Bowls, trees, and chutes in every direction entice experts, but there are plenty of blues and greens for kids and beginners. And that's why skiers have been coming to the area since Monarch was started as a WPA project 73 years ago.
Après ski, Monarch's Sidewinder Saloon offers local brews and the self-proclaimed best lunch in Chaffin County.