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Not Just a Season Pass

by cadgate 2. April 2009 18:28

The BOYNE Season Pass. Those of us who can get to Boyne Highlands and Boyne Mountain more than a few times a winter know what a great value that pass represents. There's skiing and riding, of course. And then all the other benefits like discounts on other BOYNE products. Then there's the convenience – just hang it around you neck and head for the hills - no daily transaction to deal with. This is especially important if your route to the lift doesn't happen to pass by a ticket window.

Ok, so there's all that. But my experience this week has revealed to me - or more correctly reminded me - what a fantastic bargain that pass is. My family and I are spending this week in Salt Lake City. Being tourists, shopping, we'll see an MLS soccer game, AND by the way, we are enjoying some of the best skiing of our lives. You see, we have been skiing at  Brighton Ski Resort which has received the better part of four feet of new snow in the last week. Steep tree skiing in deep powder. Rolling intermediate groomers. Zero lift lines. Just a 30 minute drive up from the city. And all we had to do was present our BOYNE Passes to receive our daily lift tickets at no charge.

No question, if you can take advantage of even a small portion of the benefits available, the BOYNE Season Pass is an incredible bargain. I haven't even mentioned places like Sunday River, Loon Mountain, Sugarloaf, and Big Sky! And between now and April 30th it's even better. I won't explain it in this space - just click here to see what I mean.

 Cary Adgate - BOYNE SnowSports Ambassador 

Locals Take It For Granted

by cadgate 20. March 2009 08:53

The runaway leader for information requests through boyne.com in recent days revolve around whether there will be skiing and riding through the end of March and into the first part of April. In some cases, people ask whether we have skiing now! A quick glance at this photo which I snapped yesterday addresses that.

Not only do we have snow, but some - myself included - think that this is the best time to ski and ride. The list of reasons is long - and I have hit upon them many times here. Sunshine. Elbow room (not that that is ever much of a problem). Suntans. Carve-able snow. Did I mention that we get lots of sun this time of year?

I live in Boyne Falls, and I occasionally forget that many of our customers live and work in places a few mile south. You know, where the climate is just a little different. You are looking at brown golf courses and little piles of dirt where snowbanks used to be. We look at quite a different sight every day (again, reference photo). And virtually every year, we see a white hill until at least the middle of April.

So, for locals, snowsports is just a part of our natural consciousness until the first or second weekend in April. Some years longer. So, come and live the local life for a few days - you'll be happy you did.

Cary Adgate - BOYNE SnowSports Ambassador 

The Winters of Our Content

by cadgate 26. February 2009 07:05

It's been a 'winter of olde' — with plentiful and frequent doses of new snow adding to paradise for those of us who like to slide on snow. This evening promises another 6 inches of new snow and perfect temperatures for another weekend on the white playground. Even the recent warm spell hasn't completely erased the huge snowbanks which evidence nature's contribution to this old fashioned winter. Now the banks will be growing again and they'll be painted that blinding white by the March sun.

A few years back, I was starting to wonder if all the amazing improvements in ski resort technology - from snowmaking, to lifts, and grooming - and the even more impressive improvements in equipment and clothing - would go for naught because it wouldn't be cold enough to freeze water. But the string of long, old-fashioned winters we are notching for the last few seasons has me excited to renew my commitment to the sport. Seems the nightly news folks aren't the climate experts they pose as after all.

Who knows what the future will bring. But until Nature shows me otherwise, I'll be be making winter plans and investments of our family's recreational dollars based around the premise that there will continue to be a white wonderland to enjoy. It's been a great one this year — and it's not even close to being over with. In BOYNE country, we are content with the state of the weather and the sport. An attitude not to be confused with that of Richard III back in the Sixteenth Century.

Cary Adgate - BOYNE SnowSports Ambassador 

Video Game

by cadgate 10. February 2009 00:03

I'm always interested in what ski businesses do to promote the sport. I know what they should do. They should produce inspiring stuff which communicates what resort life feels like. For people who have never skied or boarded, what it feels like when you slide away from the lift and down the slope, tethered to nothing but gravity — and for the experienced who have drifted away from the sport, how technology has changed the rules in their favor.

So I occasionally peek around the web at the promotional writing, photography, and video content on the websites of equipment manufacturers and ski resorts. There is some really good stuff out there — stuff that excites even a somewhat jaded ski carver like me. But the stuff I like is more about communicating the feeling you get when you do the sport right (right being a highly flexible term), and not so much yada yada about the facts and figures of the product. I mean, a guy standing in front of the halfpipe, saying "this is our halfpipe" loses my attention right there — even if it is a pretty cool halfpipe. I want to feel the feeling — the magic — the fantasy — that we resort people experience as we are dropping vertical feet by the hundreds and thousands, and sharing it with our friends without needing to say a word.

Which brings me to a shameless plug for our own video offerings. We recently found this seventeen-year-old kid who has a camera and a laptop and who enjoys playing with visual images. He is a storyteller. Most importantly though, he understands what it means to experience a resort — from skiing & riding, to friends and hot tubbing, to good food and just hanging out waiting for the next cool thing to happen. He doesn't have anything to sell, just stories to tell. And you never know what to expect. Check them out here.

Cary Adgate - BOYNE SnowSports Ambassador  

Read the Directions

by cadgate 4. February 2009 10:05


Boyne Mountain skiers got a cool new toy for Christmas this year — a brand new shiny high speed fixed grip chair lift  on the Meadows — and it's the optional model with the cushy seats!! Hey, didn't we get another "big gift" this year - the new Low-E snow guns? We're clearly a spoiled lot.

But about this chair lift — flush with delight, we tore open the package and did what every red-blooded kid does with a new toy — we hopped on without reading the directions. Thankfully, it's a well-designed toy, and it pretty much worked like we expected. But it is the new model, with new features and performance. It's about time we pull out the owner's manual and learn how to use it right. Disclaimer: so as to avoid tears of boredom the following addresses only the aspects in which this lift is different, and assumes you are experienced with chair lifts in general.

 

MEADOWS CHAIR LIFT OVERVIEW — HOW TO USE FOR MAXIMUM ENJOYMENT AND SAFETY:

 

Getting on: Am I the only one who feels like George Jetson when I hop on this baby? Pretty cool. The only thing you have to know is that you have to enter the little starting gate so the lift knows you are there — oh yeah, it knows . . . and then when the gate opens, simply (and immediately) let yourself slide down onto the conveyor belt. And then . . . just stand there. Don't scooch, don't shuffle — just look back and wait for the chair to scoop you up. The only thing missing is a mechanical arm to swing out and squeegee off your goggles and hand you a hot chocolate.  You're on.

 

Getting off . . . er, offloading — uh whatever, you know what I mean: The nature of this chair lift design is that that the chairs are moving faster at the off-load than any other type of chair lift you have ridden. So the timing of the offload is more critical and provides for a smaller time period in which to stand up and glide away from the chair. This helps explain why even experienced skiers have had some problems  — we are experienced (a tad overconfident?) — but not experienced with this exact setup. Obviously, many of us draw experience from detachable high speed chair lifts, like the Mountain Express — but with those, the chair slows down for the offload, lulling us to sleep a bit.

This chair is different. The higher chair speed means that if you do not stand up and offload promptly, you may reach the point where the ramp drops away — and you will find yourself having to 'hop' down. The same could be said for any chair lift — it's just a little quicker timing with a fixed-grip high speed chair. Just as it took me a few rides to become comfortable with the conveyor belt loading at the bottom, I think we all need to realize that the higher chair speed means that the offload at the top is different than what we know — even though it looks the same.

 

Additional points: We thank Michelle Murphy — who we hereby name 'Customer of the Month' — for bringing to our attention some minor difficulties at the offload. One of her observations has led us to adjust the shape of the ramp. Another leads me to the final advice for departing the chair cleanly: remember that the chair's higher speed makes the transition from sitting to skiing more critical. That means that you do not have as much time to get your poles organized an disentangle yourself from your neighbors when you depart. Start a little earlier with getting yourself organized and ready for your arrival. And then — this is a four-lane off-ramp — make sure you don't engage in creative lane usage, which would create difficulty for those beside you.

 

Even though the new lift is a little different in some respects, I personally like it for at least two reasons. First, it allows me to get in more skiing on the beautiful terrain we have in the Meadows area - especially that medium-pitch shoulder that drops to the south toward Thunder, and then dog-legs to the left down toward the base of the lift. Second, it provides that quicker ride to the top without the ticket-price increase that might have been necessary if a much more expensive detachable high speed lift had been chosen.

Cary Adgate - BOYNE SnowSports Ambassador 

60th Party Worthy of the Milestone

by cadgate 12. January 2009 17:24

Wow - can we have another one of these sooner than the 100th? Like - how about the 65th - or 70th? If this sounds like begging, you are understanding me perfectly.

Saturday night, the Kircher family and the Boyne Mountain staff and management outdid themselves.

Everett Kircher must be proud. And I think Tom Symons is smiling, too.

I can't remember an event when people were so obviously enjoying themselves. And so much going on. Live mannequins in period ski garb. A perfect book documenting the legacy being celebrated. Great food. Awesome music & dancing. Bathing beauties out of the 50's by the poolside and skaters on the rink. A majestic torchlight parade and killer fireworks. And a house full of fun people - old friends of Boyne and new ones - creating a memory that they will still be talking about when the 100th comes around.

Oh, and Warren Miller was hanging around.

Yes, THAT Warren Miller.

 

 

 

 

Yours truly and son/budding filmmaker Sterling getting tips       >>>     from the master.

Cary Adgate - BOYNE SnowSports Ambassador 

History Please . . .

by cadgate 7. January 2009 19:48

You were there and now is the time to prove it.

I wish I was around to experience the very first days of skiing on Boyne Mountain. But I did become a regular in the early 60's, so I have a pretty solid feel for most of the history of this proud resort. But I would like to hear YOUR stories — especially if they pre-date my first years here. In the run-up to this weekend's 60th Anniversary celebration, I've had several very enjoyable conversations with other 'old timers'. It's amazing how hearing selected memories of others seems to jar loose long-forgotten ones of my own. Usually it only takes a word or a name to bring back sights and smells and feelings that can be very difficult to explain in words.

Not trying to be profound, but just stating the facts: the past is the foundation for the present. What we are doing today takes on more meaning if you experienced — or at least learn about and appreciate — the past. So please help me out by using the 'Add comment' area below and post some of your own memories here for all to see. 'Meaningful history', as defined by you, can be something from 1949, 2008, or last week for that matter; person, place, or thing — just as long as it had an impression on you. 

 Here are a few words, in no particular order, to jog your memory — please fill in the gaps for us all to enjoy.

Kneissl White Stars and Kastle Snow Princes — the old North Boyne double chair — T.W. Ellis of Boyne — those long red licorice whips from Symons General Store — John Miller — Head Standards with Cubcos (I never could find the DIN settings on those things) — Hans Q — watching the likes of Anderel Molterer and Christian Pravda race for money on Hemlock — Jill… (ok, that's personal, and you probably don't know her, but I'll bet you might remember your first love on the Mountain) — Mr. Moll — parking in the back of the lot (right about where the MGL pool is now) — long thongs (let's hear some theories as to what those are from some twenty-somethings) — do I remember a rope tow somewhere near where the new Meadows chair is  — years of NYE torchlight parades, complete with a couple of tipsy Austrians — BIG moguls on Hemlock — big red and white Coke machines with returnable 7 oz bottles — Don Thomas — the hemlock on Hemlock . . . and for more stuff to jog your memory, click here for photos, a video, and a Boyne Mountain chronology.

Please contribute — Scroll to 'Add comment' below — thanks.

Cary Adgate - BOYNE SnowSports Ambassador

That's A Wrap!

by cadgate 21. April 2008 08:55

 

What a winter. This one should shut up the old timers (ok, yes, like me) with their tired diatribes that always begin with, "You know, when I was a kid . . . " And it will give you young folks something to bore the grandkids with in 40 or 50 years - although, despite Al Gore's screeching, I think this winter is a sign of things to come.

Let's get financial for a second. In a more average year, a BOYNE Pass is a great bargain, especially if you have the ability to get out and use it frequently. This year it was an absolute steal - a person could have skied for pennies per hour if they wanted to. All this on snow that rated from very good to "it doesn't get any better". And it was great from late November until late April (you would have had to go to the western U.P. to ski as late as we did at Boyne Mountain). With late season extended night time hours and mid-week days that weren't part of the bargain when you bought your pass. Additionally, don't forget that along with having full run of the two biggest resorts in Michigan, you get free or deeply discounted skiing and riding (depending on which pass you buy) at world class resorts around the country like Big Sky, Montana and Sunday River, Maine.

Next year the pot is sweetening for Silver and Bronze Pass holders: gone are the blackout dates for skiing at Boyne Highlands! [Note to '07-'08 pass holders: you have through April 30 to save up to $50 dollars on next season' s pass.]  Find details here: BOYNE Season Passes   and here: FAQ

What's up for next year? Among other things, a continuation of upgrades to the snowmaking infrastructure which will further improve the quality, quantity, and duration of our winters (please refer back to the photo above, and to my January 24 post called "No 'Chance' of Snow", for proof of our ability to have winter when we want it.

Until later . . . check back once in awhile over the summer for news about all things snowsports at Boyne Resorts. 

 Cary Adgate - BOYNE SnowSports Ambassador