GrilledSteezeSandwich
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Why am I the only one who voted..You Can Ski in May..da,m
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Here's the question: what has fundamentally changed in the last 10 years that would make skiing into June unprofitable now when Killington made it work before? One is energy costs. Maybe now you need to keep a terrain park up and trails groomed. Maybe, because the skiers still going Memorial Day can probably handle bumps decently. But there may be more maintenance required. I doubt the level of passion among skiers has changed substantially.
I would ski Superstar Bumps at least a couple of days every May if it was available for $30 or less. Same could be said for Wildcat.
I'm not paying for a hotel room for spring skiing, so it would have to be daytripable. Sugarbush is a touch farther than I like to do for a day trip
Here's the question: what has fundamentally changed in the last 10 years that would make skiing into June unprofitable now when Killington made it work before? One is energy costs. Maybe now you need to keep a terrain park up and trails groomed. Maybe, because the skiers still going Memorial Day can probably handle bumps decently. But there may be more maintenance required. I doubt the level of passion among skiers has changed substantially.
energy costs are certainly a factor and maybe even warming. asc offering an all-east pass pretty much killed the day ticket sales when skiers from what was it 6-8 ski areas could all ski k on their passes. the final nail was when asc had the fire sale and slashed the price of that pass. it became totally unprofitable. i have to believe that for the 25 years or so that they did it, it was maybe break even or slightly profitable at best with the additional benefits trail boss mentions.
our modus was we'd ski every weekend in may except mother's day unless it was a washout. on a good weather may weekend, i kinda remember them drawing a "crowd" at least similar to last weekend. lots of bumpers, bump teams & bump clincs. on a good weather memorial weekend, they could almost fill the lot at kbl and they would draw 300-400 entrants for the triathlon. i think once they started closing earlier in 2004 that people sort of gave up on it and started doing other things. i still think now that they're a stand alone resort again, that's it's a business they could possibly rebuild.
I'm kinda with you on this. I think I'd pay up to $50. Has to be Superstar Bumps though.
See my below post. I'd bet that way more people would pay $50 to ski/ride a full length Superstar park than a full length Superstar bump run nowadays.
If you want to get this back, you just need to find a way to get the kids/teens of today out of the parks and pipes and into the bumps for a while to appreciate them. Good luck trying to do that on a large scale basis in the forseeable future.
I agree with you. If I were Killington and decided to push Superstar into Memorial Day, I'd probably go 50/50 bumps/groomed up top, 50/50 park through the middle section possibly leaving a line or two of bumps, and then 50/50 bumps/groomed lower. The problem here is now you need to maintain the trail every day, which changes the economics of operating longer. Plus during the summer groomed trails don't stay that way, which is a challenge in itself if you accept the need to groom.Maybe now you need to keep a terrain park up and trails groomed. Maybe, because the skiers still going Memorial Day can probably handle bumps decently. But there may be more maintenance required. I doubt the level of passion among skiers has changed substantially.
I agree with you. If I were Killington and decided to push Superstar into Memorial Day, I'd probably go 50/50 bumps/groomed up top, 50/50 park through the middle section possibly leaving a line or two of bumps, and then 50/50 bumps/groomed lower. The problem here is now you need to maintain the trail every day, which changes the economics of operating longer. Plus during the summer groomed trails don't stay that way, which is a challenge in itself if you accept the need to groom.
i honestly dont know if may skiing can work if too many areas are doing it. Lets face it here, the people posting on message boards are a tiny tiny fraction of the skiing populus. By april, all the kids sports programs are in full swing now so families simply arent skiing anymore on weekends. the savage nature of super competitive 7 year old soccer programs is a force that simply can not be stopped. I mean, if you miss one practice, your kid isnt gonna get that $50,000 a year scholarship to Duke or Stanford and will therefor ruin his or her entire future.....
seriously though, if one or maybe two places would stay open through may, there is probably a customer base to satisfy that financial outlay. beyond that, not enough customers.
Okay, I'll say it. Sundown has to build the Gunny Glacier. :lol:![]()
FWIW $500 is a conservative estimate. I've heard that SB (at one time) budgeted $1,000 per hour when considering electricity, water, labor, and equipment.
Here's the business owner side of me speaking now, NOT the ski addict side.
Could a "Gunny Glacier" (lets say one that could get to May 1st) financially support the probably extra tens of thousands of dollars just in snowmaking costs alone??? Since snowmaking costs is more than likely to be the largest expense associated with the "Gunny Glacier" when compared to lift operations and labor staff costs.
For simple math sake here, lets say that it costs $500 an hour to make snow on Gunny. And that to blow enough extra snow to make it 3 more weeks would take 50 hours of gun time. You've spent an extra $25,000 to make the "Gunny Glacier" over what you normally would spend. One would assume that Sundown would go with a weekends only operating scheme.
If tickets were $50, you'd have to sell 500 tickets to cover snowmaking costs, at $30 you'd need to sell roughly 830 tickets and at $25 you'd have to sell 1,000 tickets - for ease of math, we'll assume that your food + beverage revenue would cover the staff/lift ops costs.
Could you realistically get that many PAYING customers to Sundown over say 3 extra weekends to atleast cover your costs???
FWIW $500 is a conservative estimate. I've heard that SB (at one time) budgeted $1,000 per hour when considering electricity, water, labor, and equipment.
Here's the business owner side of me speaking now, NOT the ski addict side.
Could a "Gunny Glacier" (lets say one that could get to May 1st) financially support the probably extra tens of thousands of dollars just in snowmaking costs alone??? Since snowmaking costs is more than likely to be the largest expense associated with the "Gunny Glacier" when compared to lift operations and labor staff costs.
For simple math sake here, lets say that it costs $500 an hour to make snow on Gunny. And that to blow enough extra snow to make it 3 more weeks would take 50 hours of gun time. You've spent an extra $25,000 to make the "Gunny Glacier" over what you normally would spend. One would assume that Sundown would go with a weekends only operating scheme.
If tickets were $50, you'd have to sell 500 tickets to cover snowmaking costs, at $30 you'd need to sell roughly 830 tickets and at $25 you'd have to sell 1,000 tickets - for ease of math, we'll assume that your food + beverage revenue would cover the staff/lift ops costs.
Could you realistically get that many PAYING customers to Sundown over say 3 extra weekends to atleast cover your costs???
I know it's likely a conservative hourly figure, but we're talking 1 trail, roughly 2/3rds of a mile long, lined with low-e tower guns, not a full system.