benski
Active member
Well, IIRC their expansion plan was approved after years of fighting. So Vail might be interested in doing that.
Vail has small ski areas in the midwest, to complement there major resorts.
Welcome to AlpineZone, the largest online community of skiers and snowboarders in the Northeast!
You may have to REGISTER before you can post. Registering is FREE, gets rid of the majority of advertisements, and lets you participate in giveaways and other AlpineZone events!
Well, IIRC their expansion plan was approved after years of fighting. So Vail might be interested in doing that.
Vail has small ski areas in the midwest, to complement there major resorts.
Lmfao dude you ever go to okemo on the weekends or just weekdays? That place is as bad as Stratton for the snob factor, maybe even worse because at least Stratton has to bring in tons of employees that are relaxed locals. Vail buying okemo makes ALL the sense in the world for corporate and will be viewed as a major moment in the business someday when the whole thing falls apart.I agree with you that these towns already receive tourism and people from out of state. However the ownership of a resort attracts a certain type of people to it. For example MRG gets hardcore visitors, while Killington might get "party-skiers' and Stowe might attract wealthy people from New York.
A change to Vail resorts might change the demographic in Ludlow. I've been to Vail (the actual mountain) a few times, and the people it attracts are obnoxious "powder-hounds" in porsche cayenne's and not the usual vermont "subuaru local" crowds
Super Rich? The Epic Pass is actually LOWER than most pass products. What they are doing is getting city skiers and riders to subsidize their operations while only skiing maybe 10 days a year.
Super Rich? The Epic Pass is actually LOWER than most pass products. What they are doing is getting city skiers and riders to subsidize their operations while only skiing maybe 10 days a year.
On the flip side their day ticket prices are 2x higher than most day tickets and (at least in my limited experience) the food / lodging price is as well.
We did a day at Park City last year and IIRC a single slice of pizza was $14 in the lodge. No thanks.
This is great news.
I'm all for MTN adding more debt to its' balance sheet by purchasing crappy hills, thus decreasing the likelihood they'll buy Smuggler's Notch.
Yes the Epic Pass is low--for now! Not for long though. Once they have complete control it will be whatever they desire.
Monopolies are never a good thing. Just see Comcast.
Also, I like quality over quantity. I'm willing to pay a couple hundred more dollars for a pass if I don't have to put up with such aggressive rich wannabes from New York in Porsche Cayenne's and Chevy Suburbans thatplay loud music from their bluetooth speakers while skiing.
I'm willing to pay a couple hundred more dollars for a pass if I don't have to put up with such aggressive rich wannabes from New York in Porsche Cayenne's and Chevy Suburbans thatplay loud music from their bluetooth speakers while skiing.
most of the Boston market does not view Stowe as an option as it is just too far
Totally agree.Lmfao dude you ever go to okemo on the weekends or just weekdays? That place is as bad as Stratton for the snob factor, maybe even worse because at least Stratton has to bring in tons of employees that are relaxed locals. Vail buying okemo makes ALL the sense in the world for corporate and will be viewed as a major moment in the business someday when the whole thing falls apart.
On the flip side their day ticket prices are 2x higher than most day tickets and (at least in my limited experience) the food / lodging price is as well.
We did a day at Park City last year and IIRC a single slice of pizza was $14 in the lodge. No thanks.
I thought it was odd to put Suburbans and Porsches in the same category too (although Suburbans have become pretty crazy in terms of price, but still not something I'd equate with "rich" people driving...if "rich" people are driving them, those are the ones that don't want to show off driving a fancy foreign luxury car and prefer to just get something that fits their needs)If you're going to have a such a deep animus & jealousy for the rich, you should at least know your target.
Rich people do not drive Chevy Suburbans.
I dont know about "most", perhaps that's true, but Boston is a big town and I can tell you there are tons of Bostonians who ski Stowe each weekend. Loads of them.
It's summer. It's called the "silly season" for a reason.I thought it was odd to put Suburbans and Porsches in the same category too (although Suburbans have become pretty crazy in terms of price, but still not something I'd equate with "rich" people driving...if "rich" people are driving them, those are the ones that don't want to show off driving a fancy foreign luxury car and prefer to just get something that fits their needs)
Thought that was odd too...Stowe is under 4 hours from Boston itself. I would be thrilled with a 4 hour drive to a ski resort like Stowe.
Consumer: Cheaper pass costs and increased ski areas to choose from on one pass is a positive. But do other costs increase (food, bev, lessons, etc)? What does this do to weekend/holiday crowds (key worry of my Stowe friends). Does monopoly power eventually result in increase costs?
I think this is a valid concern. Although I think the industry in general has been making it more difficult/expensive for non-passholders to participate in the resort. Mega-mergers are one contributing factor, but I think this is an industry "concern" overall.And what about the non-pass holder? Does this consolidation effectively remove a large selection of areas from consideration because day ticket prices are so high? And I would expect less package deals and other incentives for the non-pass skier, especially if crowding does become an issue.
Good question...I think we need to see if the Stowe earlier than normal closing was an aberration or a trend. Always possible it was just a weird one off timing issue with the way the dates/weekends/calendar fell this year.Operations: How does this change the operations and character of the mountain? Does it become homogenized? Does the ski season get truncated (Stowe closed April 15th at 100%).
Agreed. Even if the resorts themselves offer lodging, if they price it higher that could still drive people to other local businesses instead.Local business: Assuming Vail doesn't start building lodging (Note that lodging at Stowe was NOT part of the purchase) I would think increased skier visits would help the local business.
Smaller areas. They could be the losers. Why ski an independent mountain, even if reasonably priced, if you can ski several areas effectively for free (or no incremental cost). Sure, many Epic/Ikon pass holders will surely not stick 100% to the pass areas, but its the trend away from independent areas and toward the "pass" areas that at the margin will hurt.