Pimpin' Da Changes

Justus the Snow Phone girl sent me this photo so I could help spread the word about this Summer's changes at Crystal:

 

The most dramatic change will be installation of a gondola--the first in the Pacific Northwest (if you don't count the one in downtown Spokane)--going from the base area, about where The Market currently is, up to the summit ridge near the top of Rainier Express chairlift. 

If you don't already know, a Gondola has a bunch of smaller cars that cycle continuously, as opposed to a Tram which only has 2 larger cars which run opposite each other.  I think I heard that the plan is for our cars to hold 8 people.

It should be great for sightseers--I don't think there's any prettier view of Mount Rainier than the view from the summit of Crystal Mountain!

 

The other big news is installation of a Terrain Park on Magoo, the trail that runs underneath the Forest Queen Express chairlift.  It's going to be what we in the biz call a "progressive" park, meaning it'll have beginner and intermediate scaled features, mainly rails, boxes and jibs.

 

Imagine the possibilities!

 

 

 

 

Man-Made Feature Philosophy

We recently got another "Terrain Park & 1/2-Pipe" comment/question.  I realized that a response from last year, from General Manager John Kircher, was buried in a "Comments" section post so I'm reposting it here because it explains Crystal's philosophy about man-making terrain features. 

I am the General Manager at Crystal Mountain and I also oversee the daily operations of four ski areas across the West. Alas the true reason for the recently removed half pipe was due to the fact that it sat on the mountain in a spot that we don't get enough snow early-season to keep it open consistently.

I have a philosophy that people come to the mountains to get away from the city. Bringing it, and its manufactured skate board parks to a place like Crystal just isn't necessary. However, when we built one of the country's first terrain parks in 1989 at Brighton, UT, we realized that in the future smaller mountains would need a helping human hand given the coming trend for urban hardware.

Crystal has one of the most modern lift systems in America. How one negotiates all that fantastic terrain is up to them.

What's the deal with the 1/2-Pipe?

As you see, Kim & I are trying to answer questions we're getting, as posts, so everyone who's interested can see the answers.  This one's to Peter, James, et. al. about Crystal's (lack of) half-pipe.   Answer #1 is about Crystal, and answer #2 is about national trends you might find interesting.

#1)     Did you notice that the half-pipe  that used to be in the ground on Quicksilver was in kind of a screwy place?  It didn't get enough snow (wrong elevation, wrong aspect) to consistently be useable.  It wasn't as easily accessed chairlift-wise as customers usually expect for pipes, and it made the Quicksilver trail unaesthetically narrow.   I don't know how much those things figured into the bosses' decision to fill it in, but those are the guest complaints I've been harangued about on the chairlift.  In the future, if Crystal builds a half-pipe, it'll probably be in a different location and made from snow.

#2     Let me mention some national trends:

Across North America, half-pipes are gradually fading from favor because they don't make great business sense.  "How can that be--they're always so crowded," you ask?  

Generally, half-pipes require lot's of staff-time to cut, shape, maintain, rope-off and supervise, compared to the business they generate.  20 -30 jibbers hanging around a pipe makes it seem pretty popular, doesn't it?  But if you compare that to the--I dunno--probably around 1000 passengers-per-hour of the average chairlift, you see that they're not always such an efficient use of acreage. 

People assume "liability" figures into it, which is kind of right and kind of wrong.  Yeah, of course business dislike lawsuits.  But more importantly, the nice people that run most ski resorts hate seeing other people suffer!   Some injured guests get out of the hospital and they're right back up doing what they were doing before--they (and probably their families) embrace adventure and risk, and view their recuperation time as "healing" rather than "suffering".

But others are (from families) adverse to adventure and risk.  Yeah, it sucks when they try to blame others for the decisions thay made.  But it sucks worse to know another human is so miserable about something the rest of us find so dang FUN!

As time goes on you'll see more and more resorts having signage, rules & supervision aimed at keeping people OUT of half-pipes and larger terrain parks unless they (and their parents if they're minors) really understand the risks they're taking and embrace the responsibility and consequences of crashing.  Some big resorts that have enough resources already require that park & pipe users--and their parents--sit through a class and take a test before they're allowed access!