soulskier":3gok8212 said:
Here's one for you guys. If June was a stand alone ski area, what would you chose for a daily lift ticket? Last year it was $72, and big brother Mammoth was $92.
The short answer, which I suspect applies to 90+% of intermediate or better skiers making the 5-7 hour drive from SoCal and paying for lodging, is Mammoth.
I've analyzed Mammoth's ticket pricing before. The $90+ price is a single day or holiday price. Non-holiday weekenders get a 2-day price of ~$5-6/day less. For the most avid skiers the MVP is a great deal, paying off with respect to that weekend price in 8 days.
I analyzed Mammoth/June visitation on the big Mammoth Forum thread:
First issue, since Dave McCoy bought Mammoth in 1986, what percentage of skier visits come from June? There was a blip up in 1986-87 to 11%, no doubt due to all the upgrades installed that summer. FYI you may recall 1986-87 was an awful snow year, second worst in my Sierra data going back to 1967. So Mammoth skier visits fell 51% vs. the excellent 1985-86 season, which set a record that lasted until 2005.
1988 through 1998, when Dave McCoy was sole owner of MMSA, June visits averaged 62,389 and were 6.8% of MMSA’s total. 1999-2005 MMSA was jointly controlled by Dave McCoy and Intrawest. June visits averaged 70,215 and were 5.3% of MMSA total during that era. During the Starwood years of 2006-2011 June visits averaging 59,452 have been 4.7% of the total. The dip from 5.3% to 4.7% can all be explained by MMSA closing June Mt. at the end of January during the 2007 drought season.
In terms of raw skier visit numbers, the 95,023 in 2005-06 is the highest since Dave McCoy bought June in 1986. There have been 7 years over 80,000, the first 3 under Dave McCoy 1987 through 1989 and the 4 between 2003 and 2006, which are also the 4 highest in Mammoth’s history since 1986. All of this IMHO undermines the June locals’ argument that June’s attendance issues are due to MMSA’s marketing neglect. Unless you want to say the neglect started with Dave McCoy. And I doubt June’s attendance pre Dave McCoy was better considering the old facilities. Without Dave’s 1986 upgrades and ownership I think June would have died long ago.
Second issue is season pass visits. Mammoth did not have the capability to break out season pass visits through 1996 and assumed they were 9.1%. From 1997-2000 season passes were 15% of total skier visits. The cheap MVP’s started in 2001 and since then they have comprised 40% of MMSA visits. During the MVP era June season pass visits have been 4.6% of total season pass during 2001-05 (vs. the 5.3% of all visits) and June visits have been 4.5% of total season pass during 2006-10 (vs. the 4.7% of all visits).
So MVP use of June is slightly lower but really very similar to day ticket use. Therefore the June locals can’t make the case that MVP’s are disproportionately punished by June’s closure. However MMSA should not be subtracting out MVP revenue from June’s income statement either as June is very close to pulling its overall MVP proportion of visits. Therefore the annual loss attributable to June in that 7-year comparison chart is the $703,583 cash flow line, not the cash flow without MVP line of $1,578,186.
Aside from the accounting issue in the last paragraph, the numbers support Rusty's comments about June's visitation. It's been in a fairly consistent range since Dave McCoy bought the area. Visitation has risen/fallen in tandem with Mammoth visitation due to good/bad snow years, introduction of the MVP, the economy, etc.
Severing the relationship between Mammoth and June means to me that a lot of those MVP June visits would go away. I'm sure there are a few MVP's who preferred June and skied a high percentage of total visits there, but the aggregate MVP visit numbers lead me to believe that lost visits from the large number of MVP's who ski June occasionally will outweigh the extra visits from those who choose June over Mammoth.
The above lends credence to my view that June's survival is most likely as what someone on the Mammoth Forum called a "ski/snowboard hatchery." That plan works best in a cooperative arrangement where Mammoth provides incentives for beginners to utilize June, a scenario not so likely under the current environment of financial pressure.
FYI the big June thread got up to 73 pages and has been quiet this week. I would be very surprised to see June open in 2012-13. I will be interested to see what happens next year after a presumably normal or better season at Mammoth in terms of visits/revenue.