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25-26 Season Passes

machski

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Agreed. I look at the alternatives and am 100% happy in the Boyne ecosystem. They continue to invest in all 3 resorts - Sugarloaf's snowmaking definitely seems to have stepped up over a few years ago. While SR is my regular spot, I always go for some day trips to Sugarloaf in late April/early May. There's almost always still a ton of natural coverage at that time, including the trees - see photo below from last year.

New England Pass pricing is out and it's not as bad as I feared. Renewal prices on the gold are only up $60 ($1389) and junior price is the same is last ($599).

View attachment 65507
Yeah, and you get an extra area this year for the price on the Gold too if you chose to use Pleasant. Interesting that Loon has 12 blackout dates but SR and SL only have 10 on the Silver (they both drop 12/26 and 2/16 that Loon carries as Blackouts). Probably Silver's for us given my likely work schedule wipes out the Christmas blackout period.
 

deadheadskier

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My guess is that's because Loon is the easiest day trip from Boston if any major ski resort. They also have fewer lifts and terrain to spread crowds than SL & SR.
 

BenedictGomez

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That’s actually cheap. You guys have gotten too used to multi resort pricing. I paid $1000 in the 90s for one mountain.

I'd rather pay $1,500 for one mountain and keep single day ticket rates elsewhere at $65 - $90, rather than paying $750 for one mountain and a kidney for tickets elsewhere..
 

machski

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I'd rather pay $1,500 for one mountain and keep single day ticket rates elsewhere at $65 - $90, rather than paying $750 for one mountain and a kidney for tickets elsewhere..
Honestly don't think ticket rates would be that low at major resorts if we didn't have mega passes. Things have just gone up too much. But they should be half what most window rates are at their peak. But less than three figures is wishful dreaming. Do you see tickets in that range or even a bit less? Yes, but those areas are usually fixed grip chairs, likely older equipment.
 

drjeff

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Honestly don't think ticket rates would be that low at major resorts if we didn't have mega passes. Things have just gone up too much. But they should be half what most window rates are at their peak. But less than three figures is wishful dreaming. Do you see tickets in that range or even a bit less? Yes, but those areas are usually fixed grip chairs, likely older equipment.
Agree!

Given that say 10 years ago a new high speed lift was often in the 3 to 5 million range, and now it seems like it's more in the 7 to 10 million range, I agree that finding major areas with a day ticket that's only in the 2 figures range would be at best the exception to the reality of things
 

AdironRider

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I agree that most skiers really don't comprehend just how expensive it is to run a ski area, let alone all the accompanying fluff that most customers expect.

Even in threads like the Cooper one, I can pretty much guarantee they are losing money at 45 bucks a day ticket, they are just losing less money than if they didn't sell a day ticket at all.

Its a tough business where you make money three years out of ten, breakeven three years out of ten, and lose money three years out of ten, so you ride or die based on what that last year turns out. God forbid those three money losing and breakeven years don't all happen in succession.
 
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