Showing posts with label Mountain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mountain. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

History of Schweitzer Mountain and Skiing in North Idaho

!±8± History of Schweitzer Mountain and Skiing in North Idaho

While the art of winter sports has now evolved to fantastic levels, early Indians in North Idaho were adept at ice fishing and certainly made snow shoes to facilitate the winter hunt and travel. Our area was settled much by German and Scandinavian stock, as well as the early French trappers, priests, and settlers. So, it was a natural that the descendants of these settlers followed with skiing the area. Snow skiing originated from two geographic groups: Alpine and Nordic, much like our ancestors. Nordic skiing is the oldest category and includes sport that evolved from skiing as done in Scandinavia. Nordic style ski bindings attach at the toes of the skier's ski boots, but not at the heels. Alpine skiing includes sports that evolved from skiing as done in the Alps. Alpine bindings attach at both the toe and the heel of ski boots. These two categories overlap with some sports potentially fitting into both. However, binding style and history indicate that each skiing sport is more one than the other. Some skiing sports such as Telemark skiing have elements of both categories, but its history in Telemark, Norway and free-heel binding style place Telemark skiing firmly in the Nordic category.

Now, our area has much more to offer than just traditional skiing. There is cross country skiing, ice skating, hunting, sledding, snowboarding, snowmobiling, and a bevy of other winter sports. Still, Schweitzer Mountain has become one of the nation's premier ski resorts, and that is the primary winter activity. However, Schweitzer Mountain was not the first ski area in Idaho. The first was in Ketchum, Idaho in 1936, and Sun Valley has the further distinction of having the very first chair lift.

Our area saw its first skiing in the Schweitzer basin in 1933, but those intrepid fans did so by hiking to a point, then sliding back to the foot of the mountain, often on wooden slats tied to their boots. In the 1950s, a group of friends, ski enthusiasts, and volunteers cleared the wooded hillside two miles west of Sandpoint around Pine Hill. They rigged up a rope tow powered by the wheel rim of a jacked up car, and the area's first groomed ski slope became reality. Unfortunately, skiing conditions at Pine Hill were less than perfect. Even though the crude rope tow was soon replaced by a permanent two-chair lift powered by an old Dodge engine, the hill was not high enough in altitude to guarantee a season-long coating of snow, and a warmed-up car and thermos remained the only amenities skiers could expect following a run down the slope.

While many might have seen the bowl-shaped potential of Schweitzer as a possible ski haven, the idea of a ski resort came when Dr. Jack Fowler, a Spokane dentist, was returning from a ski outing at Big Mountain Resort in Whitefish, Montana. From Highway 200, Schweitzer looms up clearly, and displays the bowl during mile after mile of the drive. Awed by the beauty of Schweitzer Mountain's snowy mountaintop, the picture of a premier ski resort came shortly after. In 2002, Jack Fowler celebrated his 80th birthday. As a tribute to Schweitzer's founding father, a new run, "Jack's Dream," was built close to where the first handle tow was built some 40 years ago

Fowler's companion on that skiing trip was Grant Groesbech, a Spokane architect. These two, along with Sandpoint businessman Jim Brown, and others, began developing Schweitzer in 1963. The partnership was formed, and they went on a mission to secure loans, investing their own money, and raising additional funds from the people of Sandpoint. Fowler generated support with ski enthusiasts, and Groesbeck went to other ski resorts gathering info and knowledge to help with the new Schweitzer Mountain Ski Resort. They pooled their resources to buy the acreage encompassing the bowl, packed in equipment and provisions to establish a base camp at the foot of the basin, and began exploring the slopes to map out future runs. Construction on the mountain began in 1961 on the ski runs and road up the mountain. The tubular steel towers to support the mile-long double chair was constructed, and electricity was brought up the mountain for the lodge and lift motors. By the summer of 1963 before construction was finished, Canadian ski enthusiast Sam Wormington had been named as the first manager of the Schweitzer basin. He had built and managed the North Star ski area in Kimberly, British Columbia. It was through the knowledge and tireless efforts of Wormington that the foundation was laid for the Schweitzer of today. On November 30, 1963 the resort proudly opened with a day lodge and a mile long double chair lift. With the exception of one good year, the resort/area made no profit. It was supposed to be operated as a weekend resort, but ended up opening seven days a week.

By the end of 1963, over twelve hundred acres of the bowl were groomed and ready with three 2,000' runs from timberline to the lodge, miles of trails, and parking for 500 cars. The Sandpoint News Bulletin devoted their entire weekly issue to the resort's upcoming Thanksgiving Day grand opening. Renowned international ski racer Tammy Dix was set to christen the slopes with the first downhill run of the day. And, Idaho Governor Robert Smylie sent out invitations to dignitaries around the world, including two notables who shared the resort's name, Pierre-Paul Schweitzer, then Chairman of the World Monetary Fund, and Dr. Albert Schweitzer, who had won the Nobel Prize for his humanitarian endeavors in Africa. The latter being, of course, one of our great figures in history. And one might think, hearing the name 'Schweitzer,' that it is named after some royalty, or great person or family, but the truth is something else.

(The following in segment is taken from Sandpoint.com's The History of Schweitzer Mountain)

An Encounter with a Strange Hermit

It was on a summer morning in 1893, while riding her well-mannered little filly, Nelly, to work, that Ella Mae first encountered a strange individual, dressed in some sort of well-worn military uniform, standing trailside at strict attention, musket at his side, as she passed. This went on for a few days, until one morning, he instead stepped out onto the trail, and taking Nelly by the reigns, led the pony about a half a mile along the path, before letting go and disappearing back into the woods.

When she told her husband and son Earl about this strange occurrence, young Earl said that it sounded a lot like a "friendly old hermit named Schweitzer" who lived alone in a small cabin near where he and his friend Harry Nesbit liked to fish. This took the edge off of Ella Mae's concern, but she took to running Nelly through that section of woods anyway.

Then, not long thereafter, the man showed up at the railroad station during Ella Mae's shift. Speaking in a thick Swiss accent, he informed her that he had come to seek her advice regarding his intention to kill a local settler, and take the settler's wife as his own. Ella Mae made eloquent argument intended to dissuade the man from this plan, and after he had left, sent a warning to the settler that he was the target of a murder plot.

The next morning, Schweitzer came back to the station to tell Ella Mae that he had decided to take her advice and not follow through on his plan, and that because Ella Mae was both younger and prettier than his other intended bride, it was his intention to carry her off instead.

Unarmed and alone at the little station, and not a soul within earshot, Ella Mae decided to put on a front of bravado.

Standing up, she began loudly berating the man. "Schweitzer, you know I have a husband of my own, and am a respectable woman, and you cannot talk to me as you are doing!" she exclaimed. "Let me tell you my husband and the railroad company will fix you if you carry me off." He stood there silently for what seemed an eternity. Then, tipping his hat to her, he politely answered. "Well, for the present, we will drop the matter."

From that day forward Ella Mae kept a six-gun alongside her bible in the drawer next to the telegraph machine, and L.D. immediately contacted the nearest railway agent at the Spokane office who, accompanied by the County Sheriff and a doctor from Rathdrum, arrived the following day to look into the affair. Upon entering the recluse's cabin, located near where Bronx Road now crosses Schweitzer Creek, they found the hides of numerous cats nailed to the walls, and a pot full of cats boiling on the stove for the man's supper, thereby solving the mystery of the recent disappearances of numerous of the town's pets. Schweitzer was taken into custody, remanded to the "county farm" for observation, and later committed to an "insane asylum" where, as Ella Mae put it, "He lived out the rest of his life a dangerous and raving lunatic." And, to this day, Earl and Harry's favorite fishing spot has been known as Schweitzer Creek, and the mountain above, Schweitzer Mountain.

The Jim Brown Years

Brown had long been aware of Schweitzer's potential as a ski area. He had been skiing the area since the age of 16. As a young man he would hike the Schweitzer and Colburn bowls in the early 1930's. He had few doubts about the potential of the area for skiing.

A few years after Schweitzer's modest beginnings, Jim Brown bought out his partners and began to expand the resort, and Schweitzer became a family run business. Over time more lifts were added, and in 1971 the Colburn basin was developed. He added a double chairlift, built the Red Cricket apartment complex, and constructed a day lodge at the base of the mountain. Brown greatly increased the attraction of Schweitzer and the surrounding Sandpoint community. During his ownership, he was credited for starting Schweitzer summer lifts for mountain bikers and other outdoor enthusiasts in 1985, and for hosting the first Festival at Sandpoint in 1986, our world-famous annual music festival showcasing international and local composers, as well as performing artists. Two years later the resort was offering hiking trains and mountain bike rentals.

Before Jim Brown died in 1989 he had spent three years training his daughter, Bobbie Huguenin, to take over the family business. While running the family business with her husband, Pierre and others, many additions and improvements were implemented at the resort. Her focus was on making Schweitzer a destination resort; she removed the old lodge and replaced it with a new three story Headquarters Day Lodge. The Great Escape detachable quad chair was installed in 1991, and lights were installed for night skiing. Huguenin also saw the construction of the 82 room Green Gables Lodge. Revenues never increased to levels anticipated by the Brown family, and the resort eventually was turned over to its institutional owners. Schweitzer didn't have another private owner until two years later.

The Harbor Years

In November 1996 the resort was put into receivership, filing for bankruptcy the following year. On December 31, 1998, Harbor Properties purchased Schweitzer Mountain Resort from U.S. Bank for the sum of million. The Seattle-based company, operators of Stevens Pass Ski Area and Mission Ridge (sold in 2003) ski areas in Washington, made immediate improvements by providing equipment for slope management. It spent the summer of 1999 remodeling Selkirk Lodge (formerly called the Green Gables Lodge), rebuilding and lighting the Terrain Park, installing two new handle lifts, improving local roads, and expanding the beginner ski area. A six-passenger chairlift (Stella) was installed in the summer of 2000 serving the base of Colburn Basin. The lift, housed by a 19th century cable carriage barn complete with steaming boilers and spinning gears, takes visitors back in time as they anticipate their ascent of Schweitzer's summit. Stella greatly improves guest access to more than 150 acres of Schweitzer terrain called The Northwest Territory. More than that, it provides Schweitzer visitors a unique visual and emotional experience. The one-mile ride to the top climbs more than 1,500 feet in just five-and-a-half minutes. Along the way, visitors have plenty of time to take in the striking Idaho scenery. With the addition of Stella, Idaho's only high-speed, 6-passenger chairlift, the resort totaled 2500 acres. Finally, for the 2005-06 season, Schweitzer added a T-bar to Little Blue Mountain, a locals' favorite hike-out. The expansion added 400 acres and five new runs.

In May 2001, construction began on White Pine Lodge, formerly Headquarters Lodge at the resort. The 75,000-square-foot guest lodge, which opened in August 2002, features 50 luxury condominium units, various shops and restaurants, and two floors of underground guest parking.

Harbor made other improvements to Schweitzer's facilities, and resort operations, service and amenities, and on-mountain food and beverage. They renovated the Chimney Rock Grill, a full-service restaurant in the heart of Schweitzer Village, then added the Schweitzer Activity Center, which offers year round mountain activities for younger children, and refuge, a new center for pre-teens and teens, as well as guided tours of Schweitzer's backside, where an estimated 300 inches of powder fall each year.

Schweitzer Mountain Ski Resort Today

A new group of Seattle investors took over the resort in 2006-07 season, bringing the resort to even greater prominence. That year Schweitzer had a record season in attendance and revenue, while worldwide ski resorts suffered from lack of snow and skiers.

Schweitzer's village currently has two lodges: The Selkirk Lodge (owned by Red Lion Hotels) and The White Pine Lodge. There is one day lodge housing Guest Services, a Cafeteria, and a coffee shop. There are numerous condos, both privately owned and available for rent. There is a Chapel with a youth center available for groups that sleeps over 40, and a new restaurant by the chapel called St. Bernard.

On February 15, 2007, Schweitzer announced an ambitious expansion program. Included is a Million lift expansion. This includes replacing the original lift, Chair One, with two lifts: A high speed detachable quad and a fixed grip triple lift. The names of the new lifts are Basin Express and Lakeview Triple. The Basin Express uses the old Chair 7 liftline. Also included is a Lakeview Lodge remodel, increases snowmaking and new grooming capacity, not to mention Million in spending for future expansion to the resort.

So, what had been a small mountain above the ramshackle cabin of an old hermit named 'Schweitzer,' is now a world-class resort just named to the Top 25 Resorts in Ski Magazine. This largest and most highly rated resort in the Inland Northwest has over 2,900 acres, the new Little Blue Ridge run offering almost 2 miles of continuous downhill skiing, and nine different lifts including: a high-speed six-pack; a high-speed quad; four double chairlifts; one handle tow; a new T-Bar, and a new Magic Carpet that will gently whisk beginners up to a gradual learning slope, without ever having to take their feet off the ground. There is no shortage of skiing variety either, with 67 trails, open bowl skiing, and 32 kilometers of cross country ski trails maintained daily.

Plus, present-day Schweitzer offers year-round fun. There are miles of hiking and mountain biking trails, huckleberry picking, and scenic chairlift rides, Frisbee golf, paintball, as well as a variety of concerts and other events, not to mention superb cuisine ranging from gourmet pizza to world-class dining. Schweitzer Mountain Ski Resort has become a year-round destination for locals and visitors alike.

More than that, the one constant that inspires and rules is the awesome lake view, with multiple ranges in the background. Skiing is great, the people are among the world's friendliest, and life is good on Schweitzer Mountain, just above Sandpoint, the Best Small Town in the West, overlooking majestic Lake Pend Oreille.


History of Schweitzer Mountain and Skiing in North Idaho

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Monday, October 17, 2011

The Seven Cataracts Adventure Hike: A Mountain Sliding, Canyoneering Exploration Into Willow Canyon

!±8± The Seven Cataracts Adventure Hike: A Mountain Sliding, Canyoneering Exploration Into Willow Canyon

Arizona is an incredibly gorgeous, wildly diverse state with topography ranging from low level desert landscapes, to high mountain peaks and alpine forest ranges. More than any other geologic feature though, Arizona is widely renowned for its many beautiful and remote rock canyons, deep slot gorges, water falls and pools which are scattered throughout the state. However, what I find even more amazing, is that many of these backcountry wilderness canyons can be accessed through "non-technical" canyon hiking routes which don't require ropes and are literally within a single day's trip from either Phoenix or Tucson. For an excellent late summer to early fall day trip and hike, if you're up for more of an exciting challenge and an extraordinary and scenic day trip, then take a mountain sliding, canyoneering hiking adventure to Seven Cataracts, and explore Willow Canyon, Tucson, Arizona.

It was the Labor Day holiday and early on Sunday morning that I left Phoenix, about 6am, heading out of town on I-10 East and arrived in Tucson by 7:30am. At the Ina Road exit, I swung off the freeway and took a left, heading east 8 miles, and met up with the TLC Hiking Group, led and organized by Eric Kinneman, at the Westin La Paloma Resort and arrived by 8am. Because the parking was said to be limited at the trailhead for this hike, we carpooled it together and set out for the day's hike and journey heading east on Sunrise Blvd. by 8:25am.

The beautiful drive on Sunrise Blvd across the northern stretches of Tuscon and through the rolling foothills of the gorgeous Santa Catalina mountains has always been a favorite of mine. The Santa Catalina Mountains are Tucson's highest mountain range reaching all the way up to 9157 feet in elevation at its very top, Mount Lemmon. To get there and to reach the trailhead for our hike, we zig zagged it across Tucson, driving east on Sunrise Blvd to Swan Road, turned right (south), to River Road, turned left (east), then a right onto Sabino Canyon Road, left onto Tanque Verde Road and headed east on Tanque Verde Road till we reached the Catalina Highway, aka the "Mount Lemmon Scenic Byway", and then turned left again.

It was about 4 miles or so after making the left turn onto the Catalina Highway that you enter the Coronado National Forest and start the winding ascent up into the rugged Santa Catalina mountains. Although it's been a long time since I was last there, I was still amazed at just how beautiful and gorgeous this drive really is. Immediately as you head on up in elevation beginning at 3000 feet, the views are absolutely breathtaking with each switchback and hairpin curve offering a new and amazing rock formation or gorgeous canyon vista off to the distance. If you like to stop and take a lot of pictures, as I always like to do, you have plenty of opportunity to do so because this drive offers a number of vista points to enjoy along the way. However, at about mile marker 5, just past the Molino Canyon Overlook, there is a pay station where you must purchase a Coronado National Forest day use recreation pass if you're planning on stopping anywhere further along the drive. We purchased the day use passes, one each per vehicle and journeyed on for three more miles until we reached the Seven Cataracts Vista Point, just past Thimble Peak Vista and roughly at about mile marker 8 and about 1/3 of the way up to Mount Lemmon.

We pulled into the Seven Cataracts Vista point, and our trailhead, parked and started out on our day's hiking and canyoneering adventure by 9am. The view looking down into Willow Canyon below was absolutely beautiful, but also incredibly steep too! Immediately, right from the beginning, the drop off into Willow Canyon on this "day use" trail was intense, to say the very least. Estimated to be roughly about a 1000-1300 feet descent straight down with a 60% grade on all loose dirt, gravel and rocks, each one of us had to literally drop down to the ground on our "butts" and from section to section, slide it on down for about a total of a ¼ of a mile until we had made down to the bottom. What a site it was to see too, really exciting and a lot of fun! However, this "non-official" trail, mainly used by experienced canyoneers, is rated very difficult, some even say treacherous or dangerous, so I would not recommend doing this hike on your own unless you are an experienced canyon hiker or have an experienced canyon hiking guide with you.

Once we had all safely slid our way down and reached the bottom and after a quick group photo, Eric began leading our group on our canyoneering exploration further down into Willow Canyon, scrambling, boulder hopping and class 3 climbing through partially running water falls. Really gorgeous and spectacular scenery all the way down too! We continued on for about a ¼ mile where we had reached a really nice running falls and enjoyed the opportunity to cool off, rest and enjoy the peaceful tranquility and beauty of this remote and lesser known wilderness canyon. Meanwhile, Eric, along with several other adventurous members, journeyed on for another 1/3 to ¼ mile, and after more scrambling, boulder hopping and class 3-4 climbing, reached a gorgeous 100 foot water fall and a larger swimming hole deep enough he said that even with a jump off a 10 foot cliff, they could not hit bottom! Amazing!

After about an hour or so break, we decided it was time to start making our way back. Now it was time for the most challenging part of our canyoneering adventure, making it back! So we began our trek back through Willow Canyon the same way we came, scrambling, boulder hopping, wading through the pools, then climbing it back up through the water fall. It only took a short time though and within minutes we had all made it safely back up and to the base of the side of the hill we had originally "slid" down on earlier. It was here that we met back up with Eric then broke up into two groups. You could decide to either make the ascent in the same place you came down with the 60% grade on all loose dirt and gravel, where Eric said it was for every 3 steps up, a slide of one or two back. Or my friend Dan decided it looked like if you took it up a little further down to the left, you could more easily climb it straight up the rocks and cliff and up to the top. So myself, along with several other members followed Dan's lead and hand over foot, we slowly and carefully climbed it, section by section until we safely reached it back up to the top. Wow, for me and someone who's scared of heights, and not experienced at rock climbing, it was challenging but a lot of fun and incredible workout too!

Once back at the top and at the Seven Cataracts Vista parking lot, we waited for the final members to safely return, then by 12:15pm we got back into our cars to drive the rest of the way up to Mount Lemmon for lunch at the Iron Door Restaurant. The views along the way were again, spectacular as you make your way from elevation 5000 feet on up to the Mount Lemmon Sky Valley, elevation roughly about 8200 feet. Although the signs of the devastating 2003 Aspen fire were noticeable, it was still very beautiful and the temperatures by this time of day, low to mid 80's and very cool and refreshing.

However, with the 2.5 hour wait at the restaurant, due to it being a weekend and also a holiday, we decided it was best to turn around and head back instead.

We arrived back in Tucson at about 2pm and after an excellent lunch at a little restaurant called Renee's Organic Oven on Tanque Verde Road, we arrived back at the Westin La Paloma Resort by 4pm, where those of us who had just came down for the day, headed back to Phoenix from there to return home again by about 6pm.

In all, it was really an extraordinary canyoneering exploration and waterfall hiking adventure with the TLC Hiking Group, carefully researched, well planned and thought through to the last detail by Eric Kinneman himself. Really had it all, amazingly beautiful, exciting, yet also very challenging. I think that this hike is best summed up though in Eric Kinneman's own words in which he quotes, "The Seven Cataracts Waterfall Adventure Hike is an amazing hike that I highly recommend people taking. It will test your fears, give you an incredible workout and take you through some magnificent canyons, and a 100 foot waterfall and swimming hole, seldom seen by anyone. What more could anyone ask for!"


The Seven Cataracts Adventure Hike: A Mountain Sliding, Canyoneering Exploration Into Willow Canyon

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Thursday, September 8, 2011

Blue Mountain History

!±8± Blue Mountain History

Blue Mountain Alpine skiing was founded in 1941 by Jozo Weider and Peter Campbell. Jozo Weider and his family emigrated to Canada from Hungary at the beginning of World War II. He was a master of the house, a mountain guide and photographer. After emigrating, he was a ski instructor in Quebec, where he worked with a developer named Peter Campbell, and the two partners of Blue Mountain.

Jozo Weider his family moved to the foot of the mountain, and supports them through agricultureduring the summer months and work on hill slopes in winter. The three original songs had to be manually deleted. They were shot, grandmother, and called Kandahar. The elevator consists of two carriages, which were drawn up on the hill by a cable, the cable and was powered by a truck.

Milestones

1948: An agreement with the Ski Club of Toronto for 999-year lease for the use of its chalets has been signed. Weider also bought another of 150 acres and opened in sequence to a different skiArea called the Apple Bowl.

1949: The barn, which was removed at the base of the bowl of Apple has been activated at the Ski Barn. This was the Lodge Primary Day.

1955: The Ski Barn has been sold at the cost of a ski lift that runs between the shot and Gramma was placed to finance.

1959: The first ski hill, Blue Mountain in Ontario has been to open a chairlift. This chair has been called The Old South chairlift.

At this point, the ski slopes now covered 2 miles and a half.

In the development of skiHill, Jozo Weider had noticed that the ground was mostly clay. As a hobby he started the production of ceramic clay. This was finally a new company called Blue Mountain Pottery.

1960: with improvements in ski equipment and business, skiing was a great sport in Ontario. As a result of increased turnover, a score of rooms have been opened guest house.

1966: Blue Mountain pottery Weider sold to finance another major expansion at Blue Mountain. Three double chairlifts have been installedand a new casino called the central loggia of basic opens.

1971: Jozo Weider died before the expansion project was completed. His son took, George Weider control of the business. George later became president and responsible for the daily management of the station Jozo's son-in-law, Gordon Canning.

1973: opened a ski rental and repair facilities, and a snowmaking system was installed large.

1977: They built a landslide around Blue summer activities. Two2,000 feet (610 m) were built along the tracks for mini-bob-Bobs, the runners were placed on Teflon or one wheel.

1979: The lights have been installed at the Big Baby and O-Hill is running to allow night skiing.

Until the end of 1970, there were 17 lifts, five double chairs, six Pomas, a T-bar and rope tow included.

1980: It is once again expanding with the opening of the chute Slipper Dipper. This new slide with the original slide intertwined Blue MountainLaughs.

The shop has bought the Georgian Peaks Club, ski club was smaller in the north-west of it. It has the highest proportion in Ontario and is for experienced skiers. This project was not a successful venture and the peaks have returned to a private ski club in 1987.

1981: The Blue Mountain Inn, opened to accommodate the ever increasing number of tourists.

1984: A subway ride was added to the existing water activities in summer.

1988: The central base lodge and South BaseLodge has been renovated.

1997: The Ride tube was called a raft riders around improved water replaced.

1999: The Blue Mountain has been closed scroll around forever.

Significant changes

The year 1999 was that Intrawest Corporation has acquired 50% stake in Blue Mountain Resort. As a result of acquisitions, has started another important enlargement process.

With Intrawest Corporation in the image, the Blue Mountain Resort has expanded:
Four high-speed six-personChairs have been established to eliminate traffic jams to the ski lifts.

Blue Mountain Village was built by a European touch Intrawest signs. The village is made up of condominiums, hotels, a convention center, restaurants, shops and many other services.

Mountain biking in the hills open during the summer months and a climbing wall, hiking, private beach, water park and golf course.


Blue Mountain History

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