ending the lottery for season passes at Alta degraded the experience there more than words can ever hope to convey.:frown:
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ending the lottery for season passes at Alta degraded the experience there more than words can ever hope to convey.:frown:
too lazy to find onehotchili's quote in the other thread, but I've been to Squaw multiple times and at different times of the season. He's spot on with the parking, no complaints there. However, the SV lift lines are the most retardedly set up corrals/maze's this side of Keystone. Lift lines on "uncrowded" days are inexcusable.Quote:
Originally Posted by gageyk
but, then again, I overlook minor details like that when it's a mountain like SV.
Yeah, well I was in the lottery for a few years without getting the coveted pass, so I'm glad I can up'n buy one these days. And Alta seems less crowded now than it did then.Quote:
Originally Posted by Woodsy
Open Alta to snowboards...there will be so many pissed off crusty locals that refuse to ski there anymore, the place will be empty!
This argument about comparing Squaw to other resorts honestly makes no sense.
Tier 1 resorts such as Squaw have many reasons for higher pass prices. The operating costs of large resorts are a lot higher than smaller resorts such as Alpine, Mt. Rose and Kirkwood. Your paying for access to all the infrastructure, more electrical drain for lifts and employees.
When you're comparing the Squaw pass price of ~$1300, you can't compare Squaw's price to Alpine or Rose. It's just apples to oranges. It's like comparing fat chicks to thin hot chicks, they might both be fun to ride but at the end of the day, we all want to be with the hot thin chicks :)
Squaw is 2x the size of Alpine, 3x the size of Rose. More lifts, more bars and just a better mountain.
When comparing Squaw prices you need to look at the below season pass prices. These are the resorts that Squaw views as competition.
Aspen - $1,579
Jackson $ 1,595
Whistler - $1,329
Snowbird - $1,250
Sun Valley - $1,950
Telluride - $1,375
Mammoth - $1,500 (unless you got in on the MVP)
The lower price season pass model that kicked in a few years back (Winter Park was first to do it at a trade show in Denver) was in response to declining tickets sale numbers due to economic factors following 9/11. A bunch of resorts that tried the lower price model have realized that the cost/benefits don't add up and they have raised their prices back up. For example, Mammoth had lowered their prices just to raise them a couple years later. Vail resorts lowered their prices and added more black out dates. So you can find a cheap deal but if the 'day of days' come during your black out dates you'll be bummed.
Those of you that think large mountain resorts are killing it and making a ton of money on lift ticket sales when compared to operating costs, honestly don't know shit about the cost of mountain opps.
The big issue here is long term sustainability of the industry. For example, most CO resorts are now charging a daily fee for parking. This really kills me! How can a family of 4 go on vacation when it's going to cost them 300 a day just for tickets. Resorts need to think about pass prices in an entirely different way, in a way that drives long term growth while taking care of the core audience - the local population. One idea could be a locals only pass where residents that are with in a specific zip code receive deep discounts. I'm not sure of the ideal solution but the current pricing modes just suck for everyone...
The bottom line - No Skiers = No Ski Resorts
:rolleyes: I'm not surprised you don't get it. Skiing. I pay to ski - I don't care if you have more lifts, more bars, whatever, as long as I don't wait in line. Kirkwood offers the same skiing fun at 1/4 the season pass price.Quote:
Originally Posted by GreenRun
That's a great idea.Quote:
Originally Posted by Conundrum
You're wrong, The 'Bird is $950, the AltaBird pass is $1,200, it may be a little pricey, but for two awesome ski areas that get a shitload of snow & sweet terrian I don't mind paying it.Quote:
Originally Posted by GreenRun
I just grabbed the price off this web page where it says combo pass:Quote:
Originally Posted by Altaholic
https://store.snowbird.com/season_tickets/
I'm not saying the price is out of whack, I'm just saying that it's priced accordingly with the market for similar resorts. As is Squaw, Jackson and other top resorts.
I agree with much of what you wrote, but I do think that the market for Squaw passes is different than the market for, say, a Jackson pass. The folks who buy a Jackson pass (or T-Ride or Whistler) probably live in the area.Quote:
Originally Posted by GreenRun
I know Squaw considers itself a tier one or "destination" resort, but I think that justifies their day rate. There's alot more *nationwide* competition (e.g., between Squaw, Jackson & Aspen) for the Smith family's week-long ski vacation than there is for season passes more than a few hours outside of the ski area.
(E.g, Bay area skiers might worry about whether to buy a Squaw, Alpine or N-star pass, but they're not throwing Sun Valley or Winter Park into that decision.)
exactly my point: I rally early (like reeall early) on pow days, score front row parking @ Alpine, grab a coffee and wait for the bell to ring. I then typically bail early before the traffic builds up on 89. But ther is always a line heading into Squaw and not Alpine (well, at the early hours I travel).Quote:
Originally Posted by cj001f
In CO the first to lower the pass was Winter Park for the 98-99 ski season around $250, not after 9/11. Then Copper and Vail Resorts jumped into the mix, there is no doubt that it has degraded the skiing expierence. The skiing is still the same but the traffic to and from the mountain is what has been affected, which in turn ruins the rest of your day and skiing expierence.
I am all for charging more for the season pass, but the CO market is very different than any others.
I don't think this is correct. Vail Resorts offered the cheap passes the season before 9/11. I'm not sure of the years before 1999 because I was not a skier.Quote:
Originally Posted by GreenRun
The cheap season passes killed some of the smaller resorts like Geneva and Berthoud.
those places were on life support well before "cheap" season passes cam into vogue.
I daresay expensive lift tickets killed places like that. As places started to escalate their lift tix prices and upgrade their facilities people stopped going to resorts like Geneva and Berthoud. I'm not disparaging either, I used to love Berthoud, but for whatever reason they missed the boat. however, havin Berthoud as a backcountry playground is good times, not bad times.
I love the cheap pass, I skied more last year than I have in a while. If I didn't have the pass I would have gotten about half the days in I did.
As far as Kton being crowded..it has always been crowded. I it also easy to find lifts that you can ski right up to any weekend, it is just about being smart.
One of the best powder days I've ever had was on the slide side of Rose.
Wednesday morning, blue sky, no wind, 2 feet, and untracked lines until early afternoon. I tell people about this day to discribe that Rose is a cool hill. Then they started selling $250 passes. I don't have any stories since they started doing that.
That's cool, glad everybody is going skiing rather than the mall. But I bought a splitboard.
More people going more often means more good skiiers.
Fat skis make powder easier.
More good skiiers with fat powder skis = tracked out powder wicked fast.
And Rose doesn't allow you to have your dog in your car anymore.
The only reason I bought a cheap season pass was to hit Rose on the way up to powder days, then hike. Or stop by after spring skiing up at old hourglass. But now they call animal control if you have your dog so there is absolutely no reason on earth for me to go to Rose now, except shop monday.
But if you ask me if it's a good place to ski, I'll tell you about this one wednesday morning.
thats why I ski here
http://www.skialpenglow.com/?q=home
and best of all, its free
Please tell me that all you JONGs didn't read this entire thread without looking at the date. How was this even found anyway?
Can't believe I'm doing this, but in akpm's defense. Volunteers ski free...
And even dirty knee dropping hippies can have fun there
http://i24.photobucket.com/albums/c4...h/IMG_0232.jpg