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Bye Bye, Hotel Jay

May25

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Some major work going on here at the mountain.  Not much new there, the difference this time being we’re pulling things down rather than raising ‘em up.  In one of the first (visible) steps toward getting Hotel II underway, we’ve started to raze the old Hotel Jay.  We knew it was coming and still, we’ve had some mixed feelings here about the deconstruction – sad to see the old relic go whilst simultaneously looking forward to the new construction.

Several thousand words in the form of pics, HERE.


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Is it an ice rink or a circus?

May13
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Center ice at the Jay Peak Ice Haus.

We may have gone a *little* over the top planning the Ice Haus opening weekend (Memorial Day Weekend - May 28-29).  Plenty going on at the mountain that weekend from all-you-can-eat BBQ and Brunch at Alice’s Table to, of course, plenty of skating in the Ice Haus.  Plus a little face painting, some (free) Ben & Jerry’s and a Tram ride to round out the day.  Click through for a full listing of events.  And if you want a sneak peek there’s a good chance we’ll be open for skating as of May 21st - stay tuned for updates.


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Re. Opening.

Apr26
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Dry those tears, we're still going.

We were planning on reopening this coming weekend, May 1 and 2 to give folks one last shot at lift-serviced terrain here in the state. Then we got an e-mail from two of our forecasters verifying that big snow is headed our way-most likely for Tuesday and Wednesday. Seems like opening up for Thursday and Friday (along with Saturday and Sunday) makes some sense. So we’re going to offer up $69 pp/pn/do rates for either our Slopeside Condominiums or our Tram Haus Lodge for any time Thurs-Sun. If your time is limited and you’re unable to work in an overnight stay, we’ll have lift tickets at $39 for Adults and $29 for Juniors - and we’ll throw in lunch at Tower Bar just to say thanks for spending one more day with us.

We realize that most folks skiing and riding this time are Jay Peak Season Pass holders and they’re pretty local so these offers won’t carry much interest to you all. But for those closed-resort ex pats looking for a place to lay your head and raise a pint (Tower Bar will be open) after getting in to what’s looking like (forecasted at least) 8-15”, it feels like a fair offer.

Anyway, golf course is scheduled to open up May 15th, new Jay Peak Ice Haus Arena opens up Memorial Day Weekend and the new Golf Clubhouse shortly thereafter. But we all make our bones here in winter and as long as the Universe keeps sending us storms, we’ll keep finding a way to get you access to it. So there.

Want to book? Call toll free 800-451-4449. Or head here and use the special code LASTRUN.


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Give Us Your Best Shots

Apr9

We’re putting together assets for the 2010/2011 Jay Peak Magazine and want to offer up space to amateur photographers (and if you’re gauche enough to call yourself a pro, you too-just no dough involved) for a ‘Here’s how you see it’ sort of photo spread.  It can reflect your thinking on what Jay Peak is, what it was this past season or what it can be in the future.  Be literal, be metaphorical, be suggestive.  If we like what we see, we’ll run it in next year’s magazine and give you something wonderful.  Like a t-shirt, or a mug - that sort of thing.  Thanks in advance and let’s see what you’ve got - send them along to swright@jaypeakresort.com.


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The View From The Top

Apr1

Craig Parrish, head of Lift Operations here at Jay Peak, was kind enough to give me a lift to the top of the mountain on his snow machine early this morning.  What was pure overcast and gray skies at the base gave way to brilliant blue overlooking a sea of clouds as we ascended to the summit. Enjoy.


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It’s hard to compete with a moose.

Mar26

OK, I admit, I am fascinated by these quiet, majestic creatures. Where we live in Central Vermont, tourists come during mud season for moose viewing. There’s never a guarantee you’ll see a moose, but local proprietors certainly have suggested to their guests over the years that “there’s a chance.” At Jay Peak, your odds are pretty damn good. Meet JAYne, Jay’s resident moose. You hear stories about “running” into moose, grabbing a quick glance at them as they stand by the side of the road in low-lying swampy areas of Vermont. How about “skiing” into them? OK, not literally into them, but at Jay, if you ride The Metro Chair, when you load at the bottom you’re greeted with a sign, “JAYne is in Moonwalk today. Please leave her alone.” At the top, another, more firmly stated sign reads, “Leave the moose alone.” Clearly skiers and riders must be warned that there is a moose on the loose, but the signs make experiencing a moose sighting that much more desirable. Sure enough, JAYne was hanging out, eating branches off a fir tree, in the trees at the bottom of Moonwalk. Full Moon, Half Moon, Quarter Moon. Queen’s Highway. It really didn’t matter which path you took. You were bound to see her. And stop. And be in awe of this magnificent creature. And then feel a bit sad for her because everyone was stopping and gawking at her, taking pictures. So after I took mine, we skied on. Jay Peak officials confirm that they have had the Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife to the mountain to make sure JAYne was OK and not sick. She’s fine. So each time I hopped on the Metro with my 6-year-old daughter and asked her “Which way next?” she looked at me, rolled her goggle covered eyes, and said, “You know, Mommy.” You really can’t compete with that.


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Jay Peak ruins your sleep.

Mar24

It certainly wasn’t because of the luxurious bed in the new Tram Haus Lodge that was like quicksand as it sucked you in for a good night’s worth of zzzzz’s. I think it was the fact that when we looked out our sliding glass doors, past the private deck, there were two lifts—and a huge mountain staring down at you. When our 6-year-old daughter went to bed on the pull-out couch on Friday night, she knew this too. So it’s only logical that I felt a tap-tap on my shoulder at 3:30 in the morning, right? “Mommy, let’s go skiing.” No, it’s the middle of the night. Then again at 4:30. No, hop in to bed with us (thank goodness for the king). 5:30. No, not until the 7 (that’s our family code for, “Do not wake us before 7 a.m.). Inevitably the 7 arrived. “Mommy, the lifts are open.” No, they’re not, they don’t open until 8. “No, Mommy, there are guys down there getting on the lifts, let’s go.” No, those are the lift workers that have to check the lifts for safety and to make sure they’re running correctly before they let skiers on. “Oh. Well, if they’re getting ready can we get ready?” For those ski areas that have night skiing, it’s traditionally from 6-10 p.m. or thereabouts. Perhaps Jay could start a new trend? After all, there were eager skiers ready to go at 3:30 a.m. and it was still dark.


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Mommy, can we move here?

Mar22

Out of the mouth of babes—specifically my 6-year-old daughter as she walked to The Metro Chair for the first time. Perhaps it had to do with the box of Lake Champlain Chocolates that lay on our bed upon arrival in the new Tram Haus Lodge. More likely it was the fact that she had just put her ski pants on and buckled her boots in our one-bedroom suite, grabbed her skis out of the locker, and walked just steps to the chairlift. After I explained that if we moved to Jay Peak we wouldn’t actually live in the Tram Haus Lodge, she settled into to Day 1 of her first Jay Peak experience. Because we live in Central Vermont, traveling for skiing takes about 15 to 20 minutes and our daughter had never skied anywhere other than our “home mountain.” But for years my husband and I have made an annual pilgrimage to Jay, for what we all know is a ski experience like no other here on the East Coast. It was time to officially induct our daughter into our own Jay Peak family experience.

So here’s just a glimpse of one of the many moments of amazing “firsts” with our daughter at Jay. After a few warm-up runs on Interstate, we headed down to ski school, where Lauren became our new family goddess. Once she had reassured our daughter that she would not have to ride the lift without an adult (her first lesson experience this season at another resort consisted of a 40-something instructor who thought he was “cool” and just doubled the kids up and put them on the lift, so needless to say our 45-pound wisp of a girl was a bit fearful of high speed quads and chairlifts in general), we were gone and off to the Jet. For two and a half hours we cherished every moment of free skiing, and then headed back for a family lunch and afternoon of laps off the Metro. The problem was our daughter didn’t have the same vision. You see, Lauren rode the lift with our daughter (go figure) and took her to places at Jay that we didn’t even know about. And she wanted to go back out for more. In the trees. With Lauren. Not with us. If that isn’t raising ‘em Jay, I’m not sure what is.


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Make It In March

Mar16

In like a lion, out like a lamb, they say, but for us, March means something altogether different. Quite simply, the oft-underappreciated third month means SKIING, at least in our family. And because our roots first took hold one recent March, I can’t help but cast back to the beginning. I know I’ve hit on our family’s short history as Jay Peak skiers in previous stories; please bear with me if the next couple of paragraphs seem familiar. In my 9-5 life (or whatever the hell the hours are in a boarding school), I’m a teacher. Combine this with the fact that my wife Yupin and our eight-year-old son Luke are students of skiing, and you get a lot of repetition clanking around in this ole skull.

Two years ago, Yupin and then six-year-old Luke pizza-wedged their first ever turns down Interstate and Raccoon Run and the Moonwalk. It was 2008, their first winter in New England; my first back in the vicinity of home since 1998. I had gone a decade without skiing; prior to our move back up north, the most snow Yupin and Luke had ever seen had been three inches of wet sticky stuff that lasted a day on the ground in North Carolina. I was determined that their first day skiing would be perfect. Though we could have headed to the mountain over Christmas, 2007, I had urged patience. December skiing is just too boney and frigid. Then we passed on two powder weekends in February, one of which would have been fairly epic, but again, a little cold. I was building suspense, see? That, and I was afraid. Yupin had grown up and lived in Thailand until she was about twenty-seven; I was scared she would freeze in the early Jay ski season, that her first day would be her last on the lifts and slopes.

“Just wait till March,” I said. “You’ll see. It’ll be warm, the snow will be nice and soft, and there won’t be any ice.”

Not so, back in 2008. Our first day brought a chilling mix of rain, sleet, snow, freezing rain, and wind. The skies were grayer than a flock of Canada geese. The conditions could not have been more miserable. I managed to shuffle Yupin and Luke off to their respective lessons—I wasn’t so stupid as to think that teaching them myself would improve the situation—but as the foul precipitation continued to blanket me, I struggled to maintain even the slightest glimmer of optimism. I could not have picked a suckier day to introduce my family to the sport.

Fast forward two years. It’s Friday, March 5th, and it’s like the friggin Who out there: “I can see for miles and miles and miles and miles and miles.” Skies as blue as the waters off Yupin’s native Phuket. Not a breath of wind, not even on the Freezer. Plenty of snow after the previous week’s dump. It’s not fresh powder, but it’s the first real corduroy I’ve seen on the groomers all year, so perfect that I can teach Luke.

“Why do you think they call it that?” I ask.

“Because it looks like the pants,” he says, barely stifling a “DUH, Dad!” He looks at this new creature, perfectly formed wide-wale, with just a few S-slashes down its surface. “It looks like white corduroy pants.”

Soft as oft-washed cotton. Nothing like those chunks of man-made granola the groomers were coughing up a few weeks back.

This fancy new snow isn’t the only thing new in March 2010. With Luke’s Eight-Week Program behind him, after a Saturday make-up session—when, for a sort of graduation, he got to ski the FACE!—we spend Sunday morning skiing together as a family, not on the green circles of yesteryear, but on the runs I cut my teeth on back in the 80’s, on the very same Jet where Olympian Hannah Kearney famously claims to have learned to master bumps.

While both Yupin and Luke will still revert to the dreaded “pizza” in moments of uncertainty, they’re slicing parallel turns down some of the steepest runs on the mountain. And it’s all thanks to the Jay Peak Ski School and the Eight-Week. It’s not that I take my son’s progress for granted—I’m proud of his effort and growth—but it’s Yupin that makes the tears well up. There’s something about watching her ski down the lower part of U.N. that nearly overwhelms me with pride and gratitude. I realize that this section of the hill is easy, but her turns are fluid and confident. She looks like a skier. Part of it, I think, goes back to that initial fear of failure, to that first March day in 2008, in the sleet and rain and wind, when my inner pessimist told me that she would never learn to ski.img_0401

As I write, we’re approaching our mid-March break. Our ski vacation time. The week. It’s hard to believe, what with all of the great days we’ve had this year, all of the development we’ve made as a family raising ourselves on the mountain, that the meat of our season is still yet to come. Yupin will be tackling moguls and glades lessons, reaching for that next level. Luke, despite having skied, and tumbled, down the Face last Saturday, still has some habits to correct, some others to develop. Instructor Mickey told him to focus on keeping his hands up to better maintain forward pressure. “Think of your dad’s hands on the steering wheel,” he said.

Only I’m not sure if I’m really behind the wheel at all. My best laid plans, my steering if you will, led us to bypass powder for sleet back in the early days. It was other forces that kept us on the proverbial road. Caesar’s ghost, maybe, in the Ides of March. Or maybe it’s just that skiing is fun, though I know it’s more than that. Perhaps it’s the mountain itself, or the cloud, or its northern exposure, or some kind of karma built up over years of catering to skiers and riders rather than resort Gumbies. I don’t know. The only thing I do know, however, is that March is no time for platitudes, no time for casting about for esoteric answers. March? It’s time for skiing.


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A Blog Post. From JAYne.

Feb26

My name is JAYne.  I’m a moose.  A female moose. And while I have no access to a scale (I used to have one and it really dictated my moods which clearly wasn’t healthy), I know I’m big.  I’ve been hanging around Jay Peak lately, mostly because lots of folks are paying attention to me.  Actually that’s not it, I do enjoy the attention but, and here’s my subconscious talking again, what I really enjoy is the food.  Sure, what I’m mostly getting is apples, the odd banana and lettuce, but a few folks have been giving me hot dogs which I really enjoy.  I don’t really give a shit about the fillers either to be honest.  What concerns me is that when people get close and start snapping pictures and offering snacks, I can get a little excited.  And when I get excited, well, sometimes I’ll just haul off and trample someone to death.  And then eat their snacks.

This weekend, some idiot hit me in the ass with a ski pole.  He said he wanted to get a good head shot of me.  I sort of let that one go, but I’m hoping to run into him again.  And again.  And possibly again.  I’m thinking of moving on soon but as long as people keep feeding me, I’m likely to stick close.  And the closer they get, the more likely they are to spook me and get stomped.  Think I’m slow? Well, it’s relatable to my weight and I really don’t appreciate the crack.  Still, if I catch you, well, let’s just say it’s going to end poorly for you.

Best thing to do?  Appreciate me from afar and keep your snacks to yourself.  I can’t even believe I just said that.


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