Snow Summit, Dec. 30, 2006

Tony Crocker

Administrator
Staff member
SoCal has been very dry so far, but in mid-December we finally had one of those small storms where it stayed cold for several days after, and Snow Summit went from 20% open Dec. 15 to 50% open by Christmas. The past week was cold too, so by the time I got out there Saturday about 2/3 of the area was open, with only Chair 6 (the Wall) not open and snow was being blown there until about 9:30AM.

Saturday was the first warm day in a while so it was good timing in terms of conditions. The morning was uniformly packed powder, and there was just a little soft snow in liftlines mid-afternoon and some firming up of the surfaces late in the day, but nothing even close to frozen granular.

In terms of crowds, the Saturday between Christmas and New Year's is obviously not an ideal time to be in Big Bear. So I got up early to grab a parking spot by 7:45 and not be relegated to a shuttle from a remote lot. I was also not tempted to split the day with Bear Mt., as has been my normal practice since the merger in 2002. The long Geronimo run on Bear Peak wasn't open yet, and I can only imagine the flying bodies everywhere on the open intermediate runs over there, which all have park features. I saw 2 ambulances on their way to Bear around 4PM.

The early start allowed wide open cruising from 8AM to about 9:30. From then on I spent most of the time on the less crowded east side of the mountain (chairs 7 and 10). Since Snow Summit took over Bear Mt. the park features have been concentrated at Bear while Summit is mostly, and today nearly all, groomed cruisers. Ego Trip was the only run with park features, and they were small enough that even I could hit the jumps. November and early December were very warm, so when the cold weather finally arrived management obviously tried to get as many runs open as possible for Christmas and defer park building until later. At Bear these priorities are reversed. Visitors at Summit were about equal skiers and boarders, while I was told that Bear Mt. is 90+% boarders.

Around 10:15 the reality of Christmas week set in as two consecutive chair rides were delayed for several minutes by people couldn't load properly, fell off and needed assistance from the lifties. But it was still a good opening day of 23,800, about half of that before 11AM.

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It does not look half bad.

So has Bear Mountain just become one big snowboard park?

Do you think the skill level is lower at the Big Bear areas than - say - Mammoth?
 
Yes, Snow Summit does a remarkable job of snowmaking and grooming given the local climate. Once it's 60+% open crowds management is good too. But if you're looking for bumps or steeps, you won't find it here.

Bear Mt. can indeed be described as one big terrain park. Except for the Geronimo run on Bear Peak, which is the last to open. There is good tree skiing between the peaks, but with average natural snowfall of about 6-8 feet it's not open often. And when it is Baldy will have twice as much snow on its more extensive and steeper terrain.

Average skill level is much lower than Mammoth IMHO.
 
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