Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Mount Snow was co-host of the first Extreme Games in 1995 and host of the X Games in 2000 and 2001. Carinthia at Mount Snow claimed home to the second stop of the first annual winter Dew Tour as well as many other events including the Freeski Open and Carinthia Classic. In the summer of 2011, Mount Snow installed a brand new Leitner-Poma high ...
Okemo Mountain Resort, Ludlow. Okemo Mountain Resort has several events lined up for this year, including a Family Adventure Run sponsored by Toyota running all winter. There will be fireworks for ...
The mountain features 600+ skiable acres, 100 acres of trails and 500 acres of skiable woods. [4] Averaging 200 inches (5.1 m) of natural snowfall annually, [5] additional snowmaking covers nearly half of all trails, including most terrain served by the Worth Mountain and Sheehan chairlifts. The Snowbowl's eastern face, colloquially known as ...
Location: 7231 Mountain Road, Stowe, VT (top of the mountain gondola) The INN Restaurant & Bar Taking the third place spot for best ski restaurant is the restaurant at The INN , a quaint inn in ...
Defunct ski areas and resorts in Vermont (4 P) Pages in category "Ski areas and resorts in Vermont" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total.
Sugarbush Resort is a ski resort located in the Mad River valley in Warren, Vermont, owned by Alterra Mountain Company. It is one of the largest ski resorts in New England . The resort encompasses more than 4000 acres (16 km²), including 484 trail acres (2.34 km²) skiable, 53 miles (85 km) of trails, and 16 ski lifts .
With the new lift and vertical drop expanded to some 675 feet, Prospect Mountain became a mid-sized ski area. Morse sold the ski area to Bennington attorney Joseph Parks in October 1978. Night skiing and cross country skiing (the former Timberlane Trails touring center) operations were added for 1979–1980. [1] Prospect Mountain has over 35 ...
Magic Mountain is a ski resort located on Glebe Mountain in Londonderry, Vermont. It features a 1,500-foot vertical drop. The summit is at 2,850 feet and the base at 1,350 feet. Magic has a long history, dating from the 1960s when ski instructor and film-maker Hans Thorner founded the area as its terrain reminded him of his native Swiss Alps.