Chedoke Ski Area – Last Run

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chedoke
photo: HAMILTON SPECTATOR

“We had a couple of hundred kids skiing every weekend day,” recalls Ron Weston, former manager of Chedoke Ski Area in Hamilton, Ontario, and longtime owner of the longtime iconic ski shop Sam Manson Sporting Goods.

For 40 years the Steel City ran a quintessential “breeder” ski area with three T-bars and a chairlift on Hamilton’s piece of the Niagara Escarpment. Two of the slopes were recognizable as part of the contiguous golf course. But one infamous run, the Senior Hill, dropped down steeply through a blasted-out gully in the lip of the limestone escarpment. A short, icy Intermediate run was often adorned with gates where the Chedoke Race Team as well as high school ski teams trained. The Senior was something for the kids to work up to, but the beginner runs are remembered by skiers from the Hamilton area as magic.

Weston recalls the city buses with ski racks on them. “Kids could come from the worst areas of Hamilton and ski for a few dollars,” he says.

Sadly, in 2003, The Hamilton Spectator reported it cost the city $250,000 annually to run and a decision was made to stop investing in winter sport and leisure. Union rates paid to city employees at weekend and nighttime rates were given as part of the reason, but Weston also blamed a few bad snow years. For 40 years, though, Chedoke’s 87 vertical metres were a mountain of fun for beginners in Hamilton and indeed helped launch the ski careers of several influential professionals in the ski industry across the country.

by IAN MERRINGER in Buyer’s Guide 2017 issue

Ian Merringer
Ian Merringer has been a managing editor for Ski Canada magazine since 2022. He is the former editor of Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots magazines and has also written for The Globe and Mail and Canadian Geographic. He started writing for Ski Canada in 2001, but his career in the ski industry goes back to 1998, when he loaded chairlifts at Red Mountain on a “part-time casual” basis.
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