It is bizarre (and entirely consistent with their management style) that they didn't announce to the folks in the Griz line, that they were not loading it due to high wind (hey Freak, remember when that tree fell across the lift cables a hundred feet in front of us?) and potential frostbite (and they were unsure whether they would run Griz at all), while beginning to load the Transporter (cringe, what a weak name).
Once the new lift started loading, the guy in front of me in line got a text from his dad, who'd gone to SB lodge, and learned at the office about the delay in opening, that certainly LaVelle, and likely Griz would not open today. At that point I, and the guy I'd been waiting with, went over to the new lift, and after about ten minutes was on the chair. We shuffled by the folks waiting for Griz, and I told some folks what we'd heard.
Then I skied a few laps on Snowpark, until the lines there got long, then vanished, then I knew that Griz must be loading. So I skied deep un-tracked wind buff down the East side of TV, and saw that there was no line on the Transporter, and a line on Griz, so I did a few more laps off the East side of TV, before finishing with a couple runs off of Griz. Great day at the bowl.
While I have often refuted the utter bullshit some people have posted about Snowbowl's operation, I have never shied away from calling them on their absurdity, and actual failings. It is a source of entertainment that they do so many things so very wrong. I am glad to hear when customers are so offended by the operation that they want to go elsewhere, there are too damn many skiers coming up the road, and I'm fine with the place without all the "improvements" that transplants seem to crave.
I have never been an employee of Snowbowl; I used to work in trade for season passes; I have held season passes at a very busy mainstream ski resort with a paved road; I have a sense of humor, and that's why I can see this as both funny and apt:
As for thinking one is a legend, well everyone loves their own opinions, so much so, that they post them on the internet, and roundly chide those who disagree.
If you want to run a ski area, first have a successful lucrative career, gaining the funds to buy a rinky-dink operation, spend millions improving the place over decades, take on roles in various departments, everywhere from mowing the lawn in the summer, to getting certified as a ski instructor and teaching lessons, stay in the black financially while more than doubling the skiable acreage, and then you have place to tell the guy, who's done all of that, how to run his business. Until then you are just a customer with an opinion at a business that has more customers than they have room to fit in their parking lot. They are not desperate for your business, people are literally lining up to give them money.![]()
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