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I'm one of those that drive past the Catskills to go to Gore. It's comparing apples and oranges as far as terrain and snowfall.
You're depriving yourself of some excellent terrain. Gore is a fun mountain which I plan on skiing this season, but if you want steeps there, it's basically Rumor, the (unnamed?) trail under Staightbrook Quad and Darkside Glades (I haven't skied Burnt Ridge yet). I'd put all of Hunter West/LowerK27/Racer's Edge/Crossover up against Gore any day for steeps. Plattekill has Blockbuster, Freefall, Plunge and glades. Windham has Wheelchair and Wedel, and Cathedral Brook, Dot Nebel, Onteora and the glades at Belleayre are a lot of fun. IMHO, you ought to give them a try sometime; you would save yourself time and gas.
It might be news to you but not them...
You're depriving yourself of some excellent terrain. Gore is a fun mountain which I plan on skiing this season, but if you want steeps there, it's basically Rumor, the (unnamed?) trail under Staightbrook Quad and Darkside Glades (I haven't skied Burnt Ridge yet). I'd put all of Hunter West/LowerK27/Racer's Edge/Crossover up against Gore any day for steeps. Plattekill has Blockbuster, Freefall, Plunge and glades. Windham has Wheelchair and Wedel, and Cathedral Brook, Dot Nebel, Onteora and the glades at Belleayre are a lot of fun. IMHO, you ought to give them a try sometime; you would save yourself time and gas.
Here's a question: does Gore get enough snow that the trees/glades have skiable coverage most of the season? In my limited experience, that's a big limitation for the Catskills.
They get 150" per year, measured (like all resorts) in a high-elevation, wind-protected spot. That's less than every resort in VT. Less than Whiteface. About equal to the Catskills (Belleayre and Plattekill), much further south.
Suicide Six is not a resort. It's a small ski hill. I intentionally used the "resort" terminology to exclude bumps like Suicide Six and Cochrans that are low elevation and not useful comparators.Just the facts, Tin Woodsman:
According to the highly scientific OnTheSnow.com, Bromley and Suicide Six actually get less (145 and 90 inches, respectively) annual snowfall, and Ascutney gets the same amount (150 inches). Take that, Vermont!
Per Belleayre's website, they get 141 inches, a scant 9 inches less than Gore. They are, for all intents and purposes, equal.Plattekill receives a whopping 200 inches, but its listing includes a suspicious footnote posing the age-old question: "If a snowflake falls in the woods and there is no one there to ski it, does it trigger a pre-season Alpine Zone kerfluffle?"
The other Catskills resorts all get less than Gore: Belleayre 120, Hunter 120, Windham 63 (don't be led astray by the discrepancy between Hunter and Windham...those eight miles make all the difference in the world).
;-)
At Gore you forgot 2 short narrow trails - Lower Steilhang and Upper Darby, and one longer steeper one - Lies. The trail under the Straightbrook quad at Gore is Double Barrel. I did not ski the BRQ at Gore that much, but has has some nice sustained steepness and is pretty long. It also has the awesome Cirque Glades. Lies is very much like the Catskills, steep at the top and mellowing farther down. Lies is also not as steep as Rumor but steeper than anything in the Catskiils except for Lower K-27. As much as I love Platekill, the 2 of 3 trails you mention (Freefall, Plunge) are not as steep as Lies and after the top 200 feet are pretty much blue trails. Blockbuster is not as steep as Lies either , but it does have more of a sustained steepness (when it is open).
Windham has a similar profile to Plattekill with a little longer steep section on the trails mentioned. Belleayre has a shorter top steep section than Plattekill or Windham. Hunter West has some nice long steeps and there are the mentioned trails on the front of Hunter.
K-27 is by far the steepest and it rivals Rumor. However the steep section is short.
The Catskills are my day areas. I enjoy all of them. If I am daytripping on the weeekend, Plattekill is my choice. When you try to compare them to Gore, Gore will always win. The glades are way better at Gore, there is more natural snow at Gore (except for Plattekill), and there is a lot more terrain( green, blue and black) to ski at Gore. As mentioned in the thread, there are less freeze/thaw cycles. Hunter is a zoo on the weekends and Windham can be crowded. At Belleayre and Hunter the blue runs are crowded roads. The Catskills do the best with what they have, but intermediate skiers have a lot more choices at Gore as do beginners (thanks to Ruby Run off the Gondola). I still will pound the black trails, but most of my family members do not. Trails like Showcase and Twister at Gore are 1500 vert feet of sustained blueness that just does not exist in the Catskills.
One more thing to remember about Gore: even when the cars are parked down the access road and they are turning people away, the lifts and trails will not be crowded. The mountain has lots of room. The only place in the Catskills that is never crowded is Plattekill and that is because it is a longer drive from the NY Thruway.
At Gore you forgot 2 short narrow trails - Lower Steilhang and Upper Darby, and one longer steeper one - Lies. The trail under the Straightbrook quad at Gore is Double Barrel. I did not ski the BRQ at Gore that much, but has has some nice sustained steepness and is pretty long. It also has the awesome Cirque Glades. Lies is very much like the Catskills, steep at the top and mellowing farther down. Lies is also not as steep as Rumor but steeper than anything in the Catskiils except for Lower K-27. As much as I love Platekill, the 2 of 3 trails you mention (Freefall, Plunge) are not as steep as Lies and after the top 200 feet are pretty much blue trails. Blockbuster is not as steep as Lies either , but it does have more of a sustained steepness (when it is open).
Windham has a similar profile to Plattekill with a little longer steep section on the trails mentioned. Belleayre has a shorter top steep section than Plattekill or Windham. Hunter West has some nice long steeps and there are the mentioned trails on the front of Hunter.
K-27 is by far the steepest and it rivals Rumor. However the steep section is short.
The Catskills are my day areas. I enjoy all of them. If I am daytripping on the weeekend, Plattekill is my choice. When you try to compare them to Gore, Gore will always win......
I'm aware of those other trails, having skied them many times, but if you check http://ski-degrees.synthasite.com you'll see that most of the Catskill trails I mentioned have a steeper pitch than Lies (Yahoo at Belleayre tops it too).
Btw, if Double Barrel is the trail under Straightbrook Quad, then what's the name of the trail between that and Rumors? Seems to me the trail map is missing one trail name, no?
Just the facts, Tin Woodsman:
Whiteface snags the Adirondack title, narrowly besting Gore with 163 inches to Gore's 150.
;-)
One more thing to remember about Gore: even when the cars are parked down the access road and they are turning people away, the lifts and trails will not be crowded. The mountain has lots of room.
Here's a question: does Gore get enough snow that the trees/glades have skiable coverage most of the season?
Thanks for reminding me of the steepness site. I forgot I had it in my favorites. There is one line in your quote I want to focus on:I'm aware of those other trails, having skied them many times, but if you check http://ski-degrees.synthasite.com you'll see that most of the Catskill trails I mentioned have a steeper pitch than Lies (Yahoo at Belleayre tops it too). Also, Lies always is flat when I'm there; perhaps if they let it bump up it would present more of a challenge. And if a blue run at Belleayre is too crowded, I just move one or two runs over and have it all to myself. Don't get me wrong--I've never not enjoyed a day at Gore, even after a thaw-freeze. And I agree that for blue cruisers, nothing compares to Twister, which offers a nice warm-down after skiing the upper mountain all day. I was merely pointing out that the Catskills have so much to offer that it's a shame some people blow past the region on their way north. One thing you didn't mention, though, is the great views from the top of Gore, especially facing the snow-capped "northern peaks."
Btw, if Double Barrel is the trail under Straightbrook Quad, then what's the name of the trail between that and Rumors? Seems to me the trail map is missing one trail name, no?
I'm with you on this X. I remember MLK in 2008 the parking lot was jammed to the point where they turned people away. I had a couple of great days at Gore and never felt crowded on the hill. If you've got the kind of mtn knowledge that Matt has...you probably never see anybody.
Gore's trees are open a lot. I have no real data, but I'm guessing some runs are skiable (vs."open") at least 60% of the season. I'd like to hear Matt's guess on that number. Would be interesting to keep data on that stat too.
With regard to how much snow Gore gets... because Gore doesn't do a season total, I kept track of reported totals in 08/09. I came out right at 150". While the early and mid-season was pretty good for snow and had limited freeze/thaw...March and April had minimal snowfall. And I checked those totals against numbers at our place (2000') when I was up there. I thought they were pretty legit numbers. I actually think they are measured at the base.
With regard to destination/day split of skiers...a very non-scientific study does seem to classify Gore as more of a day trip mountain. I think there were somewhere around 225,000 skier visits last year. If there were 100+ ski days you'd be putting up 2000+ people a night in the area. I don't see that the room inventory for that. Even if you include Indian Lake and Chestertown etc.
One thing I really like about Gore...I can't really imagine the whole mountain in my mind at once....there are so many nooks and cranies...if the whole mountain is open (and that's a big if midweek)....there is a lot and official and unofficial lift served terrain. I don't have a lot of experience at other mountains, but to me Gore has a lot to ski for what some consider a second or third tier mountain.
There is a huge mountain past Hunter called Bearpen Mountain. It was a ski area in the 1950s called Princeton Ski Bowl with 1900 vert feet. Here is a link to some info:http://skikabbalah.com/lostNY/BEARPEN STORY.htm
This could have set the standard that others could shoot for and maybe the Catskills would have been a mecca for eastern skiing instead of mostly day areas for the NYC metro region.