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Bolton Valley, VT 2/19/2009

J.Spin

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Oct 26, 2006
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Location
Waterbury, VT
Website
JandEproductions.com
Date(s) Skied: February 19th, 2009

Resort or Ski Area: Bolton Valley, VT

Conditions: Medium-weight powder, 8-9 inches new at ~3,000', 5-6 inches new at ~2,000'; Moderate to light snowfall through the first half of the morning, temperatures around freezing at 2,000', 20s F up at 3,000'

Trip Report: By the time I’d left the house (495’) at 7:30 A.M. this morning, we’d picked up 0.6 additional inches of snow since the 6:00 A.M. snowboard clearing, bringing the event total to 4.1 inches. It had been snowing lightly at the house when I left, but when I arrived up at the Bolton Valley village area (2,100’) it was snowing moderately and still accumulating. The mountain had reported 7 inches of new snow as of their 6:45 A.M. update, but I suspected I’d find a bit more based on the way it was coming down. The lifts weren’t going to start loading until 9:00 A.M., so I kicked off the morning off by skinning for some turns, taking the route straight up Beech Seal. I first checked the consistency of the snow near the base area; I couldn’t quite make a snowball out of it in my hand, so I guess I’d describe it as medium weight powder. Beech Seal had been groomed at some point earlier, but I found about 2 to 4 inches of additional new snow on top of the groomed base.

When I reached mid mountain (2,500’) I checked the depth of the powder in an undisturbed location and it came in right at 12 inches. That should represent the combination of powder from last week’s midweek system (~6 inches) as well as whatever had come down up to that point with this new event, so that seemed reasonable. Wind doesn’t appear to have been much a factor with this system, so getting measurements was easy. I was thinking of skinning up in the Cobrass area, but there was enough powder to keep me following one of the snowmobile tracks for my ascent. At about 9:00 A.M. I’d reached the top of Vermont 200 (~3,000’), and when I checked the depth of the new snow there I that it was at 9 inches.

I enjoyed first tracks down Vermont 200, and this new round of snow had settled in nicely. The medium-density powder was just what the doctor had ordered in terms of getting the windswept steeps back into shape. I was on my Telemark skis, and found that the consistency of the snow made for really easy turns. After my initial descent I stayed around for some rides on the lift, and unquestionably the trail pick of the day for me was Spillway. Usually I avoid it like the plague between its man-made snow, exposure to the wind, and traffic, but today Spillway offered up some gorgeous steep powder. The fact that it has seen grooming in the past made the subsurface the most consistent and provided lots of nice bottomless turns, and since there didn’t appear to be much wind with this event, there were no issues on that front. I had to hit it twice because it was so good, and I’d say it was better than even Hard Luck or Vermont 200. The Wilderness Lift opened right around 10:00 A.M., and I was fortunate to catch one of the first few chairs. The way the steeper trails had been skiing so nicely, I opted for Bolton Outlaw from the Wilderness summit, and it was in great shape. After that descent I traversed back toward the main mountain. I followed a random set of tracks off New Sherman’s Pass and found a nice region of glades that I’d never explored before.

The mountain definitely had more than its usual midweek handful of people this morning. A lot of the extra folks I saw were children, and I think some of the schools in the Northeast have vacation right now because I heard what sounded like a Boston-style accent on a couple of occasions. It was really nice to see all the visitors getting rewarded with such a splendid day on the slopes.

The moderate snowfall had gradually tapered off through the morning, and when I left the mountain around 10:40 A.M. there was just light snow and the temperature at my car (~2,100’) was 34 F. The temperature stayed fairly stable through most of the descent down the access road, but at the bottom (340’) it was up to 35 F. The precipitation was light snow as I drove westward through the Winooski Valley to the center of Richmond. The temperature there was up to 36 F however, and I was surprised to see that Richmond appeared to have picked up little if any snow from this event. When I’d reached the I-89 rest area in Williston, the temperature was up to 37 F and the precipitation was over to rain, which was coming down at moderate intensity for a while. In the South Burlington area the temperature was up to 38 F, and when I finally arrived at the UVM campus it had hit 39 F.

Bolton was officially reporting 8 inches from this event as of their 10:05 A.M. update, so I don’t think we’ll have any trouble getting into Scott’s 10-20” inch prediction range with some upslope. It sounds like this is one of the best upslope setups we’ve seen this season, so it should be fun to see how it plays out for the mountains and even the mountain valleys over the next couple of days. It’s expected to start up tonight so I’ll certainly report on whatever makes it down to our elevation in Waterbury.

A few shots from this morning at Bolton Valley are attached below:

19FEB09A.jpg


19FEB09B.jpg


19FEB09C.jpg


J.Spin
 

Seriesnuns

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Jan 16, 2008
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J Spin I'm going to be at Bolton Valley tomorow for the first time, I usually ski the likes of Mad River and Jay.


I'm on the lookout for some good tree runs and off trail runs. Do you have any recomendations for Bolton, I see you put up a good amount of trip reports from there.

Thanks,

Steve
 

J.Spin

New member
Joined
Oct 26, 2006
Messages
112
Points
0
Location
Waterbury, VT
Website
JandEproductions.com
J Spin I'm going to be at Bolton Valley tomorow for the first time, I usually ski the likes of Mad River and Jay.


I'm on the lookout for some good tree runs and off trail runs. Do you have any recomendations for Bolton, I see you put up a good amount of trip reports from there.

Thanks,

Steve
Hi Steve, for the most part it's the typical Northern Vermont ski resort routine, where just about any section of the mountain between trails will offer up some good skiing, depending on how tight you like your trees. With that said, the resort's current trail map (attached below) does a nice job of highlighting where some of the more "cut/gladed" tree areas are located - see the tree icons in the first map below. For some reason, the new map doesn't show some of the backcountry glades, so I've added an old map below and you'll see them off to the right side of that map. One glade area that I can think of that is not on either map is what I call the Twice as Nice Glades. They're very popular and are off to the skier's left of Twice as Nice. They're easy to spot anyway as you'll be able to see people skiing in there.

BVmap0809crop.jpg


BVmapBCglades.jpg
 
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