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  2. List of ski areas and resorts in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ski_areas_and...

    Naeba Ski Resort – With the longest aerial lift in Japan, 5.5 kilometres (3.4 mi). Muikamachi Hakkaisan Ski Area; Muikamachi Minami Ski Area; Myōkōkogen Ski Resorts - includes ski areas in both Niigata and Nagano (in Niigata) Akakura Kankō Resort Ski Area; Akakura Onsen Ski Area – The oldest ski resort in Japan, from 1937.

  3. Skiing in Japan: How, Why, and Where - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/skiing-japan-why-where...

    Fabrice Croise, previous AGEIST profile, founder of Scents of Wood, and experienced skier set off for a bucket list ski experience in northern Japan. He gives us the download on the details. Where ...

  4. Yamagata Zao Onsen Ski Resort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamagata_Zao_Onsen_Ski_Resort

    The Yamagata Zao Onsen Ski Resort (山形蔵王温泉スキー場, Yamagata Zaō Onsen Skī-jō) is the largest ski resort in Tōhoku region, Japan, operated by Zao Onsen Tourism Association (蔵王温泉観光協会, Zaō Onsen Kankō Kyōkai). The resort is mostly famous for its ski slopes in winter, but trekking is also popular sports in ...

  5. Hakuba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hakuba

    The ski resorts from north to south are: Cortina, Norikura, Tsugaike Kogen, Iwatake, Happo-One, Hakuba 47 , Goryu, Sanosaka, Kashimayari and Jigatake. Hakuba offers varied forms of skiing across the resorts but it is generally very well suited to beginners and intermediates with many long perfectly groomed runs and fantastic fall-line.

  6. SSAWS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSAWS

    The complex had three ski courses [3] —20.1° for skilled skiers, 15° for intermediate, and 10° for beginners — and two ski lifts. [1] The ski slope was designed to break even by 2018 by attracting 1.3 million visitors yearly, who would pay ¥4,300 (~US$50) for 2 hours of lift time and spend a total of $70 on average. [1]

  7. Shiga Highlands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiga_Highlands

    Shiga-kōgen has one of the longest ski seasons in Japan, with the official ski season commencing from mid-to-late November and continuing throughout April and until Golden Week, the first week of May. Christmas and the New Year's season is the peak period in Shiga-kōgen during the Japanese school holiday break.

  8. Rusutsu Resort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rusutsu_Resort

    Rusutsu Resort was the first Japanese ski resort to be awarded Best Small Resort by The Great Skiing & Snowboarding Guide, a British ski magazine. According to a 2003 survey by View Communications, Japanese NPO, skiers ranked the resort as the most satisfying among 48 ski resorts in Japan.

  9. I compared skiing and snowboarding as a beginner. There ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/compared-skiing-snowboarding...

    A beginner noticed some major differences between skiing and snowboarding. Stopping on a snowboard was easier, but ski poles were helpful. I compared skiing and snowboarding as a beginner.