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Happy Saint Patrick's Day. And while the official color of the day is definitely green, the bright blue of todays sky is a strong challenger.
Mary and I headed to the mountain a little later this morning. Weather conditions over the weekend promoted some surface melting. Temperatures in the area dipped into the teens last night. We felt going out a little later would give the sunshine some time to work it's magic... and it did! While surface conditions around the mountain were generally firm, the warm temperatures made them just pliable enough for a late morning of carving turns.
Skiing today at Bear Mountain was still limited while the resort cleans up from the weekends Chevy Grand Prix. Upper Bear Trap and Wildfire were in great shape. Lower Wildfire, on the other hand, was turning into it's typical spring time beach, as all of the skier and rider traffic coming to Bear Mountain was funneled down it's compound fall line.
The park on Middle Dream Maker was in nice shape. It was funneling out onto Great Eastern, again due to the Grand Prix cleanup. On a lark, when we got on to Great Eastern we decided to keep going all the way to the lower skyeship terminal on Route 4. Most of the way we took "Home Stretch", which had great snow coverage. It was just a beautiful day to cruise down the mountain.
From the Skyeship, I took Upper Dream Maker to Cruise Control. Mary took Skye Burst to Cruise. Upper Dream Maker was still firm on skier's right in the shade. Skiers left, in full sunshine, was nice and soft with little bumps forming. Mary reported that Skye Burst had nice soft snow coverage. It had been closed for a couple of days due to the Grand Prix so it did not get packed down with skier traffic like some of the other trails.
We finished up with several loops through Needles Eye, Bitter Sweet, Skye Lark and Super Star. Under full sunshine with warm temperatures and a bright blue sky, they were all do overs.. We did not want to leave...so it goes.
Let it snow!
Chevy Snowboarding Grand Prix Competitors wait their turn on Bear Claw below the Viper Pit at Bear Mountain.
The Chevy US Snowboarding Grand Prix at Bear Mountain, Killington, is wrapping up this afternoon. Under lightly overcast skies, the Men's and Women's Slopestyle competition was held on Lower Bear Claw on a park specifically created for the event.
The Halfpipe finals, originally scheduled for Saturday night, were rescheduled for this afternoon from 2:30 to 4:30 PM. Planned to take place under the lights on the half pipe carved on Lower Dream Maker,
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People getting into position to watch the Half Pipe finals. (Click to enlarge.) |
the half pipe finals were suspended on Saturday evening due to heavy fog obscuring visibility, limiting the judges ability to evaluate each competitor.
I skied over to Bear Mountain at mid day to watch the event for a few minutes. Crowds were just starting to form to watch the Half Pipe finals. Unfortunately, I needed to get back to the inn before the event took place, but it looked like it would be a fairly busy afternoon at Bear Mountain.
Let it snow!
While competitors took training runs, workers at the Killington Resort were busy putting the finishing touches to get Bear Mountain ready to host the Chevy U.S. Snowboarding Grand Prix this weekend.
For the last 10 days, Killington has been rebuilding the Half Pipe on lower Dream Maker and a "Slopestyle" course on lower Bear Claw. The amount of snow that has been created and moved around to build the competition venue is nothing short of impressive. When you add in the lighting, public address, and television camera areas (NBC will be providing TV coverage), you start to appreciate that the resort did a lot more than just sending a couple of grooming machines out to move snow around to get ready for the event.
The schedule for the Chevy Snowboard Grand Prix this weekend is: