Solvista and HH mentioned in Los Angeles Times

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Solvista and HH mentioned in Los Angeles Times

Postby Phil » Mon Feb 28, 2005 8:02 pm

The Travel section in the Sunday L.A. Times (Feb 27) had an article on Solvista, with brief mentions of HH and the ski school program. Hopefully, this link to the article still works.

http://www.latimes.com/travel/la-tr-sol ... &cset=true

Phil
Phil
 

Postby *SCSA » Tue Mar 01, 2005 4:14 pm

Phil,

Way to go.

It asks for a registration -- nope, not me. Can you paste the text of the article here?
*SCSA
 

Postby Billy Dee NJ » Tue Mar 01, 2005 6:48 pm

*SCSA wrote:It asks for a registration -- nope, not me. Can you paste the text of the article here?


Yeah, what he said!

I actually started to register....what a pain in the you know what. :evil:

Please copy it here, thanks.
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Billy Dee NJ
 
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Location: Philadelphia area

Postby Phil » Wed Mar 02, 2005 9:33 pm

Billy Dee NJ wrote:
*SCSA wrote:It asks for a registration -- nope, not me. Can you paste the text of the article here?


Yeah, what he said!

I actually started to register....what a pain in the you know what. :evil:

Please copy it here, thanks.



Hmm, I can still access the link and I'm not registered....Anyway, here's the text of the article.

Regards,
Phil

DESTINATION: COLORADO
Hot cocoa and bunny slopes at SolVista
# The resort isn't chic or flashy. It's homey, kid-friendly, a good value -- and a nice place to introduce the next generation to skiing.

By Chryss Cada, Special to The Times

I had almost forgotten what skiing could be like. Three decades after I first set skis to snow, I had grown to accept the epic shuttle rides from parking lots to the slopes, the winding lift lines that seemed to stretch for miles, the $15 bowls of chili and other apr?s-ski excesses.

Then I pulled up to SolVista and was reminded of another era. A time when I could park, for free, just a few steps from the lift. When I could chat with the lifties before they loaded me up. When I could eat in a lodge and see more brown-bag lunches than lattes.

It was a time I'd nearly forgotten and, to be honest, the kind of place that wasn't really my style anymore. I have become what the old-timers call a "hot dogger." To me a blue (intermediate) run is just a means to an end, a path I blast down to reach the goods: trees, powder, backcountry, steeps and moguls. Green (easiest) runs are peppered with beginner skiers, an obstacle course to be avoided at all costs.

At SolVista, only 20% of the runs are marked black (advanced) ? and those are bluish-black at best. Half are intermediate trails, and 30% are for beginners. About 85% of the people buying lift tickets take lessons, the director of the ski school told me last season.

The resort, officially called SolVista Basin at Granby Ranch, is tucked between two mountains in the Rockies 80 miles northwest of Denver. The convenient location and low-key atmosphere are big draws for families.

What was a thrill junkie like me doing at a place that has the motto "Fueled by hot cocoa, not adrenaline"?

Research.

I was skiing for two when I visited SolVista last February. Now I have a 6-month-old daughter, and I can think of no place better for her to learn to ski than SolVista. It's not all that different from Eldora, the resort on the other side of the Continental Divide where I learned to ski.

Eldora and SolVista are a part of a group of Colorado resorts informally known as "the gems." Others include Monarch, Powderhorn, Ski Cooper, Loveland, Arapahoe Basin and Sunlight Mountain. Their small size, traditional approach and beginner-focused ski schools make them the ideal first mountains for the little ones.

*

Smaller is better

I first hit a small hill at Eldora when I was 3 or 4. I was night skiing with my dad, and the intermediate run had iced over. I was so freaked out that I popped out of my pint-sized bindings and started walking down the slope, crying every step of the way. To add insult to injury, the run was ? and still is ? named Bunny Fair.

Dad brought me my skis. I put them back on and made my way slowly down the slope, one snowplow-turn at a time. To celebrate my accomplishment, I had a congratulatory cup of cocoa in the lodge, looking out the frosted windows at my personal Mt. Everest.

When you're small and learning to ski, even the littlest of mountains is more than big enough.

Resorts like Eldora and SolVista will never be as big as mega-resorts such as Aspen and Vail, so they focus on being good at being small.

SolVista is composed of two hills, each with about 1,000 vertical feet. All 33 trails end at the central base area, making it easy for families to stay together.

The East Mountain's terrain is gentler, excellent for beginners and intermediates; the West Mountain has intermediate and advanced terrain. The five lifts include two quads and one triple. Beginners have their own surface lift leading to a learn-to-ski park.

The ski school, known as the Accelerated Learning Center, is the heart of the resort. The day I visited, I felt as though I had walked into the busiest day-care center in town. It was lunchtime, and children had traded mittens and hats for sandwiches and bananas. The smell of sunscreen filled the room, as every child was required to stop at a big pump and slather some on before heading outside. Children talked excitedly about their adventures on the snow.

"Now I can turn," one said.

"I can slow down," chimed in another.

"I can turn and slow down," added a third.

SolVista's children's program takes potty-trained kids from 3 through 12. "Little Rustlers" (as the 3- and 4-year-olds are called) hit the snow for an hour in the morning and an hour in the afternoon; they spend the rest of the day playing inside.

Little skiers and snowboarders spend most of the day in the protected learning area serviced by a magic carpet, a moving sidewalk that runs to the top of the beginner hill. From there they graduate to the Quick Draw Express on the East Mountain. One side of the hill is predominantly greens that weave through the trees; the other is a network of wide-open blue cruisers.

The Guaranteed Start to Ski or Snowboard program for adults covers two 2 1/2 -hour lessons and a promise to have novices on their feet and down the slopes by the end of the day. The $99 price includes not only your ticket for the day, the lessons and rentals, but also a pass valid for the rest of the season.

"Most people are able to link together turns down a beginning hill by the end of that first day," said John Raney, manager of the Accelerated Learning Center. "The great thing about the package is that it not only gets people started, the season pass keeps them going."

Other "gems" have similar learn-to-ski promotions. Arapahoe Basin has a $200 program that guarantees students will be able to ski or snowboard down beginner-groomed runs or they get their money back. It includes a season pass, up to four two-hour lessons and equipment rental ? all valid for ages 12 and older.

For many, though, SolVista is a favorite. David and Linda Lake of Denver thought the resort was the best place for their four grandchildren to learn.

"The vertical drop [1,000 feet] isn't something that newer skiers couldn't handle," Linda said. "It gives kids the chance to become more proficient before they move on to more difficult terrain. And at the same time, there is plenty that will give them a challenge at a future date."

For the last seven years, SolVista's ski school has eschewed the traditional "snowplow" or "wedge" learning technique for a method created by internationally known ski instructor Harald Harb.

"We teach people to parallel ski right from the beginning," Raney said. "That way they don't have to unlearn the wedge and learn parallel. It allows people to progress much faster."

If a skier progresses to an "advanced" level, black trails await on the West Mountain. The mountain's longest advanced trail is called Widowmaker, a bit of an overstatement. But SolVista does hold some challenges ? and advantages ? for advanced skiers. Six inches of powder fell the first night of my visit, and while skiing laps on the West Mountain's black trails, I encountered no tracks other than my own all day.

*

Focus on families

Off the slopes I found other things to like. SolVista's lodge is a tribute to days past. Rocking chairs sit in front of the fire, and families stake out tables during the day.

One thing you won't find: a raging apr?s-ski scene. Families walk or ski back to their condos for a hot beverage or a soak in a tub. Overnight guests will discover a camp-like ambience. At the resort's Inn at SilverCreek, the scent of chlorine from hot tubs fills the air outside, and children run about everywhere in their pajamas.

Other lodging options include condominiums and rental homes. I stayed in a two-bedroom, two-bath condo that was part of the Kicking Horse Lodges. It had a full kitchen and a living room, with plenty of space for a family to gather. I checked in at night and was pleased the next morning when I found a ski run steps from the front door.

Most nights I cooked in the condo, as many families staying here do. (Groceries are available in Granby.) I did enjoy an above-average seafood dinner at the Creekside Grill in the Inn at SilverCreek.

But recreation remains the focus. Cross-country skiing and snowshoeing on 25 miles of backcountry trails are options, as are ice skating, snowmobiling and sleigh rides ? all less than an hour's drive away. The resort is close to Rocky Mountain National Park.

Skiers who learn quickly and conquer the bluish-black runs here can head over to nearby Winter Park. There they will find a mega-resort that is only 20 minutes down the highway ? but about 30 years away from SolVista.
Phil
 

Postby Rusty Guy » Wed Mar 02, 2005 9:47 pm

nice press for PMTS and Solvista.

I don't think there is a nicer place in Colorado than Grand County, although the writer plugs my home Eldora as well!
Rusty Guy
 

Postby *SCSA » Thu Mar 03, 2005 8:21 am

Wow, that brings back some memories.

I learned at SolVista when HH and company were setup right at the mountain. They had this little shed off on the side, with their name on it. I think that was their first retail operation. :)
*SCSA
 


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