| BEST OF SKIING IN CANADA 2010
Each year Ski Canada collects
kudos and accolades from
across the country about what
makes us the best.
COMPILED BY LESLIE WOIT
FIRST OFF THE MARK
November 2, 2009. Recently beleaguered and
now as strong as Hercules, Mount Norquay was the first ski area to open in Canada in the
fall. Three days later, big sister Louise opened,
thanks to both Mother Nature and a massive
snowmaking system. This season, Jasper skiers
were happy early birds with six lifts and 43 runs
open by November 11, Marmot Basin’s earliest-ever
opening day—and welcomed a record
number of skiers and boarders for the first day
of the season, too. Sunshine benefited from
a bumper pre-week snowfall of 71 cm in the
four days before opening day, also November
11. Across the border, Big White was the first
destination resort in B.C. to offer skiing on
November 14—beginning at the bewildering
hour of 7:45 a.m. Whistler jumped the gun on
opening date by almost two weeks with record
early-season snowfall. By mid-November, the
resort had more snow than some in the Western
U.S. receive over the entire season!
BEST WAY TO SQUEEZE
THE LAST CENT FROM $53
MILLION AND CHANGE
First it had its own website—now it’s the subject of
a major(ish) motion picture. Whistler-Blackcomb’s latest film creation, On the Shoulders of Giants, tells
the tale of the Peak2Peak Gondola—and slices in
such crowd-pleasers as local Mike Douglas and
legendary Jim McConkey.
THINNEST LINE
The difference between on-piste and off-piste
at Red Mountain can be hard to
decipher sometimes with all the powder— more importantly, it all feels good.
BEST NEW MAGIC BUS
Banff’s all-hybrid electric bus system
is easier on the environment, reduces
emissions, and lowers fuel and lifecycle
costs. Ditch the SUV and hop on!
EASTERN STORM
In just 48 hours last
February, a whopping
95 cm of snow fell at LeMassif—topping up the more
than five metres it had already received
and making March Break truly massif.
BEST FIREWORKS
DISPLAY
There’ll be 125 candles on the cake as Banff
National Park celebrates its anniversary this
winter. Canada’s first national park, established in
1885, is of course home to the national hat trick of
ski areas: Lake Louise, Mount Norquay
and Sunshine Village.
BEST OFFER WE ’VE
HAD LATELY
The saucy-’n’-sweet website invitation to “Meet
Tiffany on our Snow Phone” from Hudson Bay
Mountain, formerly known as Smithers. All we
ask is, where’s the webcam address?
BEST RUN WITH A
LITTLE ONE
Top-to-bottom at Kicking Horse Mountain
Resort. Ride to the top of Stairway, take the
cruisers down through Crystal Bowl, stop for
lunch at Heaven’s Door Yurt Café, then hop
on the bottom of It’s a 10 to the base for a
day-ending hot chocolate at the Horse Thief
Café to swap burning-thigh stories.
BEST, LONGEST (AND
MOST HARD WON)
NEW LIFT
It’s not easy building stuff in a national
park. Kudos to Jasper’s Marmot Basin for its
new high-speed quad, the Canadian Rockies Express. It took $8 million and about as
many years to deliver us a quick ascent,
longer runs, more terrain, no lift lines and
more time on the slopes. Just one of its 26
towers weighs more than 2,600 kilos!
BEST SKI CITY
With Mont-Sainte-Anne, Stoneham and Le
Massif so close to historic Quebec City, the
area is truly a destination that you should
visit at least once in your lifetime.
BEST MOUNTAIN
BEAUTY PAGEANT
The Kokanee Crew search at Mount
Washington packs them in at Fat Teddy’s
Bar and Grill every January during the
Kokanee Winter Festival.
BEST DEAL FROM THE
MOST SURPRISING
SOURCE
Whistler’s early-bird adult unlimited
season pass was $1,099—the lowest
priced early-bird pass in a decade and
a whopping $430 less than last year.
And yes, it was available only until
October—you missed it.
BEST-LOOKING
50-YEAR-OLD
Not a wrinkle in sight at Mont Sutton—only
gorgeous glades and Eastern powder coming
out of its yinyang. And Sutton’s best bistro,
Bistro Beaux Lieux, offers some of the most
creative and delectable treats around.
BEST TIME TO MATE
You barely have time to put away the kilt and digest
the haggis before you start speaking Strine. Get a
little Aussie in ye’ at Silver Star (and Big White, both
Aussie-owned) and bust out the Green and Gold on
Australia Day January 26, with snow rugby and cricket
in the village—a late evening is an understatement.
NEW NIGHT PARK
The Okanagan Run terrain park
is under the lights at Apex,
and wows rats with a new
park concept of rails down the
middle of the halfpipe. Enough
tunes, kleiglights and serious
jammin’ keep the patrons of the
Gunbarrel well entertained.
BEST PLACE TO
GET DISCOVERED
It’s all rock star treatment at
Fernie’s Ultimate Rockies’ Rock Band contest. “Best Rocker
Hair” and “Best Rock Star Holla” challenges take place during the
day. Later on, bring your Rock
Band team and battle it out for the
Ultimate Rockies’ Rock Band title.
BEST PIPE-DREAM
An $800,000 investment into
Stoneham’s Olympic halfpipe
(including what’s sort of a
permanent mould) makes it possible
to open it at the beginning of the
season rather than the end.
TASTIEST MONTHLY MEETING
Super-dooper food and views to
be had at Kicking Horse Eagle’s
Eye Restaurant Wine Maker’s
Dinner. Once a month all winter,
there’s live music, wine pairing
and dinner…delicious dinner…
BEST REASON
TO TAKE YOUR
MONEY OUT OF
THE MARKET
If people can buy chairs on credit, it
was only a matter of time until your
ski season could be financed. Doing
its part in the financial meltdown,
Big White offers a plan so locals can
carry season’s pass payments over
three, four, five or six months.
ADDED
VALUE
Tremblant skiers
who stay in the
village receive
a host of free
perks such as first
tracks, tubing,
inflatable games for
kids, entertainers, mini-snow-park
visits and skating.
BEST GAME PLAN
FOR A FULL MOON
Meet at the Big White cross-country
cabin for poker.
ADDED
VALUE
Tremblant skiers who stay in the
village receive a host of free perks such as first tracks, tubing, inflatable games for kids, entertainers, mini-snow-park visits and skating.
RETRO SKI CULTURE
With Rossland harbouring a big population of closet retro-ski
lovers, it’s no wonder Red Mountain has more organically
sprouted retro events than just about anywhere-though Fernie and Mount Washington are fierce competitors for the title.
BEST GROWTH
INDUSTRY
It’s hard to believe with record early-season
snowfalls, but Whistler-Blackcomb doubled
its snowmaking crew for this Olympic season.
All hands needed to tend a network of 270
snowguns that could fill a football fi eld with a
snow pile 200 metres high.
BEST PLACE TO
REMEMBER
Nestled in the trees between Memory Lane and
Tranquility runs at Blue Mountain, Memory
Lane Legacy Park is a serene and quiet place
where one can go to remember and celebrate
the lives of those who have passed on.
NEW LIFT-ACCESSED
CAT-SKIING
If you like Haig Bowl powder at
Castle Mountain but don’t want to
hike, meet the cat at the top of
Huckleberry Chair and take your
seat for a ride even farther up.

MOST CONSISTENT
FALL-LINE STEEPS
Alberta’s Castle Mountain and B.C.’s Red
Mountain offer hair-straight-back, merry-go-round
laps.
BEST AL FRESCO
ETHNIC LUNCH
Perogies and kielbasa with pickled peppers
from Cecil’s lunchwagon at the Black Forest
lift at Big White.
BIGGEST ARSENAL
Tremblant’s 1,037 snowguns cover the
mountain’s infamous cruisers lickety-split.
BEST
COMMEMORATION OF
A LOCAL LEGEND
A new run at Red, Captain Jack’s Trees,
honours Captain Jack Carey, a long-time
friend of the mountain community who
died in a cycling accident last summer.
Captain Jack was an icon of the ski industry
and the event director of Red’s annual
Canadian Open Freeskiing Championship.
BEST
BADGE
Whistler’s “ASK ME!
I’m a Local” button-wearers deliver a
friendly ambassadorial passe-partout to the
best directions and advice—in English,
French, German, Spanish, Gorbie, Jibber
and Japanese (though not necessarily all
languages from each button-wearer).
BEST TRACKING SYSTEM
Each Tremblant snow school kid now wears
a Flaik GPS so adults can keep track of their
sprogs. The device charts their day online and
gives fun facts like how many runs, which
runs and lifts, and top speeds.
BEST WAY FOR AN MP TO
GET IN TOUCH WITH HIS
CONSTITUENTS
Located in Gatineau Park, Camp Fortune nightskiing is only 15 minutes from
Parliament Hill. Home to one of the oldest
ski clubs in Canada, the Ottawa Ski Club (now
Camp Fortune Ski Club) turns 100 this year.
BEST JAM NIGHT
Hit the Jasper Royal Canadian
Legion every Saturday this
ski season and check out the
entertaining home-grown talent,
live music and old-school
saloon vibe.
BEST SKI-IN/SKI-OUT
FIRE HALL
No need for a fireman’s pole, Big White’s Fire
Department is conveniently located on Easy
Out near the Village, allowing local volunteers
to ski in for calls and, faster than you can say
Smokey the Bear, they’re back on the slopes.
BEST CHEF ’S TABLE
The private table in the kitchen at
Isidor’s is Silver Star’s newest hotspot to
sit, sip, eat and watch a real pro at work.
Dinner with all the libations and extras
isn’t the cheapest in town, but in this
kitchen there are no dishes to wash either.
LARGEST PLANE
TO LAND IN B.C.SKI
COUNTRY
A massive Russian carrier landed at Kelowna
Airport this summer, testing out the new
runway extension that increased length from
7,300 feet to 9,000 feet. Let the Moscow ski
tour charter fl ights begin!
BEST OF BOTH
WORLDS
Sunshine Village’s
Lookout Mountain covers
two provinces in one run, so
skiers can experience the best of both Alberta
and British Columbia.
MOST LEGITIMATE
OVERUSE OF THE WORD “AWESOME!”
Can’t the guests signing the book at Panorama’s Elkhorn Cabin think of another
way to poetically describe the rustic charm of
these cozy, displaced, high-mountain digs?
Can we offer them a spare thesaurus?
BEST STAFF
RECOGNITION
Legacy Trail is a tribute to employees who
have dedicated more than 25 years to Blue
Mountain Resort. Salute!
BEST PLACE TO SKI
NUDE
One weekend, two words: Slush Cup. Okay,
so the nudie stuff isn’t sanctioned, but that’s
never stopped Sunshine Village revellers
from stripping down and making a splash in
the ultimate honour to Queen Victoria on her
birthday. We are amused.
LONGEST POLES:
FERNIE
BEST VALUE BEER
It’s a world away from Tommy Africa’s, but
the Chateau Whistler’s Mallard Lounge on
Fridays is a surprisingly good deal: beer and
cocktails (and free nibbles) for $5.
BEST LOCAL TIPPLE
Ski Canada Testers agreed, the only brew pub
in a national park, Jasper Brewing Company,
maintains its founding principle, “to create
the absolute highest quality beer possible.”
BEST NEW GOURMET
RESTAURANT
Ontario ski countryites have been licking
their lips and putting their phones on
speed-dial to secure a table at über-chef
Michael Stadtlander’s long-awaited
restaurant, Haisai, just 20 minutes
from Collingwood in the backwoods of
Singhampton. No table? Stopping at their
bakery makes the remainder of the Friday-night
drive a sweet slice of heaven.
NEW APRÈS
IDEA
Downhill at Dusk begins
mid-mountain at Lake Louise’s
Whitehorn Lodge at the ski day’s
end. Except it’s just beginning: drinks,
appetizers and live music in a majestic
setting, then first tracks down a freshly
groomed run. Then more food and drink at
back to your Lake Louise or Banff hotel.
BIGGEST AIR-ER
CORRECTION
Back by popular—very popular—demand:
terrain park air features at Lake Louise.
When Resorts of the Canadian Rockies
removed all jumps two years ago, jibbers
were screaming-mad in several provinces.
One of the many changes with the return
of chief bottle-washer Charlie Locke this
year was to convert the rail park back to its
historically lofty position.
BEST VIEW FOR LUNCH
The Lost Boys Café at the top of the Timber
Express chair at Fernie has a perfect
panorama and, this winter, features live
music.
LONGEST SKI SEASON
(NON-GLACIER)(SO WE ’RE TOLD)
With a season that starts in early November
and goes until Victoria Day, it’s hard to deny
Sunshine Village has one of the longest ski
seasons in North America.
DRESSIEST EVENT
Powder Cowboy’s infamous Tickle Trunk Parties: we’ve always said cat-skiing offers unique memories.
BEST DISTRACTION
FROM POLITICS
Mont-Sainte-Marie, the highest peak in the
Gatineaus at 380 vertical metres, is less than
an hour from Ottawa.
BEST NEW ONE-STOP
OUTDOORS SHOP
Revelstoke Outdoors Centre, at the foot of
the Gondola at Nelsen Lodge, is the central
location to book snow school, cat- and heli-skiing,
backcountry/slackcountry touring and
avalanche awareness courses.
BEST SPAS
› Taman Sari in Summit Lodge Whistler feels
as if you went to Thailand for a few hours
› Willow Stream Spa, Fairmont Banff Springs
› Balnea near Sutton, Quebec
› Scandinave Spa, Collingwood and Tremblant
10 BEST NON-SKIING
ACTIVITIES
› Skating on Red’s new rink
› Cross-country skiing at Silver Star’s
national training centre
› Doing both in front of the
Chateau Lake Louise
› Bingo at the Revelstoke Ladies Auxiliary
› Dogsledding in Quebec
› Wine-tasting in the Okanagan
› Surfing in Tofino after skiing Mount
Washington
› Snowshoe the Mountain Descent at
Kimberley
› Take an avalanche course in Nelson
› Get lucky at the Tremblant Casino then
lose your shirt at P’tit Caribou
BEST DETERRENT
A 20-minute hike plus a traverse across the
ridgeline is necessary to access Consequence,
the farthest chute on Kicking Horse’s
Terminator Ridge, bettering your chances of
finding deep and soft and a couple of easy-access
one- or two-metre drops. Yummy.
: we’ve always said cat-skiing offers unique memories.
BEST SCENERY
› Le Massif
› Georgian Peaks
› Banff, Lake Louise and Jasper
› Peak2Peak, Whistler
› Panorama
› Virtually all heli- and cat-ski operators
OL ’ LIFT INTO THE
BACKCOUNTRY
Red Mountain’s Motherlode
Chair easily accesses Mount
Roberts, White Wolf Ridge, Grey
Mountain and Kirkup Mountain.
MOST ROMANTIC HUT
HOLIDAY
Tucked away from everything else is the perfect
place for just the two of you and nature. Ski
or snowshoe the 11-km trail to Skoki Lodge,
enjoy incredible amazing scenery in the
backcountry of Banff National Park—and sit
down for afternoon tea on arrival.
BEST NEW
COMBO-SPORT
Grab a pair of snowshoes and a golf club and
hit the powder at Sun Peaks—but not as
we know it. Snowshoe Golf packages include
snowshoes, golf clubs, a course map and
coloured balls.
BEST NEW GLADES
Panorama’s opened a whole new area
between View of 1000 Peaks and Stumbock’s,
promising perfect trees and powder. And
over on V Island, Mount Washington celebrates its 30th anniversary by opening
the Goodtime Glades, well-spaced, gentle and,
curiously, groomed—perfect for novices and
intermediates.
BEST VENUE FOR
RUBBER AND SPANDEX
Forget The Lodge in Golden, the Subaru
Velocity Challenge FIS World Cup Speed
Skiing at Sun Peaks is a far safer bet.
BEST PLACE TO IGNORE
THE OLYMPICS
Cypress will be busy to say the least, but Mount
Seymour is open all winter with no closures or
blackout periods. Fabulously normal. And despite
the pack of wolves circling Whistler’s marketing
team all year, the area is 90 per cent open during
the three weeks of the Games, and of course 100
per cent the rest of the season
BEST APRÈS-SKI (EAST)
With so many hip bars and restaurants
within stumbling distance of one another, a
storybook car-free village (so you won’t lose
your licence or get run down) and now a
casino, getting up to actually ski Tremblant in the morning is your only challenge.
RECESSIONARY TREND:
SHORTER HELI PACKAGES
Gone are the days when you had to sell your soul for a heli seat. Economic
pressures and exchange rates are resulting in more empty seats in B.C.
choppers—and more flexible offerings for the skier of any level, intermediate
or above. New for 2010, Last Frontier Heliskiing guests can choose from shorter four- and five-day
tours, and a new Heli-Access ski touring program and Lodge-to-Lodge Safari. Purcell, Great
Canadian and Mike Wiegele now offer packages that combine resort skiing at Kicking Horse and
Sun Peaks. At Revelstoke you can step out the door at Nelsen Lodge to where your helicopter
waits. Skiing cruisers one day and powder the next in Panorama or Whistler is a no-brainer. And
CMH has heaps of new variations on the old seven-day heli-week: “Just ask” is its motto.
BEST PLACE TO RUB
MUSCLY SHOULDERS
(AND LEGS)
Nakiska, a national training centre crowned by
Alpine Canada and the former host of the 1988
Winter Games, is a major staging site for Canada’s
medal hopefuls in advance of the 2010 Olympics.
Athletes are expected to partake in camps at the
resort over the course of February 2010.
MOST LOWERING
SALES PITCH
For those who really don’t want to learn how
to ski, Grouse Mountain’s (and Whistler’s)
personal “Sno-Limo” Chauffeur will let the
non-participating “experience the sights,
sounds and thrills of gliding on snow trails
in comfort, without learning any new skills.”
Next step: just watch it online.
UPGRADE IN
ONTARIO
Blue Mountain’s South
Base Lodge has been
renovated to feature an
enhanced 980-seat dining
and food court area, and a
dedicated loft picnic area for those
wanting to bring their own lunch.
MOST AWAITED
SLICE-O ’-CHEESE
SKI FLICK
Fernie is soon to be known as the site of Hot
Tub Time Machine. With release scheduled
for February 2010, this retro ski-movie both
starring and directed by John Cusack features
Fernie locals and the all-things-retro town as
its main backdrop.
MOST GRACIOUS
HELI-SKIING
Eagle Pass’s 1,000+-sq-km slice of
Monashee powder near Revelstoke is
accessed only four skiers at a time, not
12. Small groups mean no pushing,
shoving or sharing bum or bowl space
with type-A personalities from Stuttgart
or New York—just you, a guide and your
three BFFs.
BEST INDOOR GARDEN
Stuffed with tropical plants and exotic trees
soaring more than 18 metres, the centre
atrium at the Sawridge Inn in Jasper is a
great place to think about warm Caribbean
islands, particularly while soaking in the
indoor pool and hot tub.
MOST GOURMET
CAT-HOUSE
Island Lake Lodge’s dining-room rep matches
the view, and for that matter, its spa, its
fancy digs and its powder.
BEST NOTE OF
REMEMBRANCE
Sunshine joined the ranks of Lake Louise and Marmot Basin in observation of
Remembrance Day by shutting down for two
minutes of silence on November 11.
MOST DRAMATIC
LIFESTYLE CHANGE
The ski-instructor owned, but not CSIA-sanctioned,
infamous Roadhouse Tavern (aka
The Lodge) in Golden, B.C., is looking for a new
owner. The MLS listing reads: “included, Eastern
European phrase book and shiny set of poles.”
WAY TO AVOID
AWKWARD
HOT-TUB TALK
Keeping in mind that you
don’t always want to rub
calves with a stranger you
just met, Sunshine’s giant
hot pool is four times the size
of your average hotel bubbly tub.
FRIENDLIEST LIFTEE
Castle Mountain’s Marie Cameron, aka the
hug lady, warmly embraces every single
visitor as she does the ticket checking. The
occasional chair may go up empty as she
makes her way through the corral on a busy
day, but management tells us the hug lady
has made friends the world over.
BEST SKI-TO-YOUR-OWN
DOOR IN ALBERTA
Castle Mountain is the province’s only ski area
with privately owned ski-in/ski-out real estate.
BEST NON-OLYMPIC
OLYMPIC WATCHING
More than 10 countries and 26 teams will be
training at Mount Washington this winter— and you don’t have to pay to see them!
BEST SKI-IN/SKI-OUT
REFURB
The new wing at the Sunshine Mountain
Lodge is a 30-room addition with ski-to-your-door
convenience. The energy-efficient two-storey
lofts offer the height of luxury.
BEST DOUGHNUT
OPPORTUNITY IN
ONTARIO SKI COUNTRY
Grey County’s first roundabout—located at
the intersection of Grey Road 19, Grey
Road 119 and Mountain Drive,
at the south end of Blue
Mountain—is sending
locals spinning. Some 17,000
vehicles can pass through the
intersection in 24-hour peak
periods. Better tighten up
the roof box.
CHANCE TO
HAVE DONE
SOMETHING
YOU RARELY
GET TO DO
When does once in a blue moon
really happen? How about New Year’s Eve
that just past! December had two full moons,
the second on December 31st. The next blue
moon isn’t slated until 2048.
BEST-LAID PLANS
A big spend of $230 million is planned between
now and 2013 at Le Massif, with a rail shuttle
to Quebec City and close to 400 lodging units,
including a 150-room bioclimatic hotel. All
lovely until the marketing bumpf suggests
rather threateningly: “The site is destined to
become a genuine experimental laboratory for
tourists.” Bring your protective gear.
BEST CELEBRITY MOMENT
When Senator Nancy Greene Raine told Rick
Mercer at Sun Peaks to “Shut up and ski.”
BEST SNOW (EAST)
Family-favourite Mont Grand-Fonds in
Quebec welcomes an annual snowfall of 650
cm of light and fluffy.
BIGGEST LITTLE
FILM FEST
The Rossland Mountain Film Festival in
November is a four-day focus on local talent.
Filmmakers, artists and new media workers
showcase their creations to a Kootenay
regional audience.
BEST CHANCE TO MEET
A BALDWIN
Robert F. Kennedy’s Annual Celebrity Sports
Invitational sounds like a mouthful, but
so is the cuisine served at this posh event.
Proceeds from the on-mountain shenanigans
and the après $500-a-plate gala dinner in
Banff go to raising money for environmental
protection and awareness. Helping Mummy
Nature tastes so good.
HISTORY
IN THE
WEST
Within its résumé,
Red Mountain had
the first chairlift in
Western Canada, the first ski
descents in the 1800s, the most amount of
gold extracted from one of its mountains and
the first World Cup alpine ski race in North
America (1968).
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