Anybody else been following along at the shit show going on at PCMR with the ski patroller's strike?
But truly taking their life in their own hands. Reports of 35 working patrollers who are not familiar with the mountain compared to the normal 200 per day. No local knowledge of avi terrain after over two feet of snow. This isn't east coast terrain.On the flip side - people that don't mind poaching probably got some great runs.
Anybody else been following along at the shit show going on at PCMR with the ski patroller's strike?
I have to admit I am a little embarrassed that it took me this long to do this. But here it is...
I have to admit I am a little embarrassed that it took me this long to do this. But here it is...
I have to admit I am a little embarrassed that it took me this long to do this. But here it is...
I have to admit I am a little embarrassed that it took me this long to do this. But here it is...
I read somewhere today that Vail resorts stock value is down close to $500 million.....obviously this is a great strategy.....Next they should reduce the lift operators salaries to "bits of string"But truly taking their life in their own hands. Reports of 35 working patrollers who are not familiar with the mountain compared to the normal 200 per day. No local knowledge of avi terrain after over two feet of snow. This isn't east coast terrain.
Looks like fun with 18% of the mountain open:
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Curious to see how long their strategy lasts for. Force the regulars into an Epic Pass, but alienate all the casual skiers with outrageous prices for the non-passholders. Make all your money up front, the rest of the season becomes an exercise in spending as little as you possibly can on operations to maximize profit. I'm sure that means cutting back lift operations and trail closures on days when attendance is low. I've already seen some of this. Upside is since Hunter has gone Epic, no where near as crowded as it used to be.I read somewhere today that Vail resorts stock value is down close to $500 million.....obviously this is a great strategy.....Next they should reduce the lift operators salaries to "bits of string"
And in the old days when King Con was a fixed grip triple, never saw a line half that long lol.
One reason, among others is because they don't blow snow like they used to. No longer the "The snow making capital of the world."Upside is since Hunter has gone Epic, no where near as crowded as it used to be.
truly mind blowing that anyone would pay that....im sure deer valley had to go over $400 if podunk park city is $328 😂People were paying $328/day last week to ski PCMR.
truly mind blowing that anyone would pay that....im sure deer valley had to go over $400 if podunk park city is $328 😂
But, no more. People who booked an Xmas week vacation to PCMR to use their cheap Epic Pass weren't going to find any discounts to hit a different mountain that week.This was before the multi-resort passes.
All this makes non epic /icon mtns looks ideal for family trips.Curious to see how long their strategy lasts for. Force the regulars into an Epic Pass, but alienate all the casual skiers with outrageous prices for the non-passholders. Make all your money up front, the rest of the season becomes an exercise in spending as little as you possibly can on operations to maximize profit. I'm sure that means cutting back lift operations and trail closures on days when attendance is low. I've already seen some of this. Upside is since Hunter has gone Epic, no where near as crowded as it used to be.
33,000 people up the hill per hr is insane!
Gotta love Pico!All this makes non epic /icon mtns looks ideal for family trips.
My daughter almost had a panic attack when she saw how many people were at stratton on a weekend day. This after two days at Pico with mostly untracked fresh snow and likely 100-ish people on the hill vs tens of thousands of people at stratton:
On a busy day at Stratton Mountain Resort, with a lift capacity of 33,928 people per hour, you could expect several thousand skiers to ride the lifts throughout the day, though the exact number would depend on factors like lift lines, skier turnover rate, and overall resort capacity; a conservative estimate for a very busy day could be around 5,000 to 10,000 skiers.
Key points to consider:
- Lift capacity: Stratton's lifts can move 33,928 people per hour.
- Peak times: The busiest periods are likely to be weekends, holidays, and school breaks.
33,000 people up the hill per hr is insane!