Powder Ghost Towns. Peter Bronski

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Powder Ghost Towns - Peter Bronski

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style="font-size:15px;">      Lift Line: From the top of the lift line, ski straight down. End in the meadow. 30 degrees.

      Main Run: From the top of the lift line, make a descending traverse to skier’s right for 50–75 yards before beginning your descent. You’ll soon intersect the open run. As each stretch of open run closes out in the trees, stair-step to skier’s left to link up with more open runs. Eventually, this will funnel you into the largest ski run, which overlaps at the bottom with the lift line. End in the meadow. 25–30 degrees.

      Glade: The Main Run and the Pitch are separated from one another by a stand of trees open enough to enjoyably link turns. 25-30 degrees.

      Pitch: From the meadow, trend to climber’s left until you intersect a narrow open slot that leads up through the trees. Follow this slot up—it gets steep for skinning. When it seems to peter out, continue up and right, emerging into a much more open area. Follow the run up to its topmost point. 35 degrees.

      Gully: From the top of the Pitch, continue up to climber’s left, intersecting an open, treeless gully. 40 degrees.

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      Looking down the lift line at Libby Creek

      EXTRA CREDIT

      Ski one of the other lost Snowy Range ski areas, which you pass on your way to Libby Creek if using approaches 2, 3, or 4. Refer to the topo map for their specific locations.

      THE APRÈS SKI

      The après ski scene isn’t exactly thriving in Centennial (population: 100), but the town has an authentic Wild West feel and you can find a beer and steak when you need ’em. Try the Old Corral Steakhouse (2750 Highway 130, 307-745-5918, www.oldcorral.com).

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      Trip 3

      SEVEN UTES MOUNTAIN

      THE ESSENTIALS

      Nearest Town Gould

      Distance 2.6 miles

      Vertical 2000’

      Season December to April

      Elevation Range 9418’ to 11,453’

      Difficulty Rating Moderate

      Skiing Rating image

      SNOTEL Station Joe Wright (551)

      Forest Zone Colorado State Forest

      CAIC Zone Front Range Mountains

      USGS Quad Mount Richthofen

      Weather COZ033

      THE HISTORY

      Over the years, the Cameron Pass area has hosted a number of relatively small ski areas—rope tows and the like. The earliest documented lift-served skiing in the vicinity of Seven Utes dates to 1946, when the North Park Ski Hill operated on the north side of Highway 14 directly across from the old M-M Cabins and the trailhead for Seven Utes Mountain. A 1947 issue of the Jackson County Star reported that on March 21, 1946, 75 skiers showed up for a Sunday of skiing. The rope tow, which was operated by the North Park Ski Club, was 1100 feet long and gained about 600 feet of vertical. A warming hut was in the making. For members of the club, a season pass cost $5 for children, $10 for adults, or $15 for a family pass. Nonmembers could pay $1 per day for a lift ticket.

      The North Park Ski Hill wasn’t the only or earliest lift-served skiing in the area, however. On the east side of Cameron Pass, 5 miles below the pass and 2 miles above Chambers Lake, another ski area got its start in the winter of 1938/1939. It is generally known as the Chambers Lake ski area. In that first season, skiers and members of the Colorado Mountain Club cut test runs, checked snow depths, and obtained funding for a new ski area. The county agreed to keep the road open in winter. The U.S. Forest Service and Civilian Conservation Corps took over cutting more ski trails. Meanwhile, the Cameron Pass Ski Club converted an old cabin at the base of the area into a shelter house for skiers and ski patrol members. Hot lunches were served on weekends. The area had two primary runs, each with 300 feet of vertical drop: one a quarter mile long, the other three-eighths of a mile long. Some 125 people eventually joined the ski club, and the area probably remained open until 1951. At one point over those years it extended one of its lifts onto an adjacent ridge to access more terrain.

      But the North Park Ski Hill, Chambers Lake ski area, and others like it, were nothing compared to what would have been built on Seven Utes Mountain. Rumors of a large, potential ski area on Seven Utes first publicly surfaced in 1968. Denver was anticipating making a bid to host the 1976 winter Olympics. It needed sites for the downhill and slalom ski races, and the state set its sights on a number of potential areas. Seven Utes was one of them.

      A January 1969 report stressed the “recreational and scenic importance” of the Seven Utes-Cameron Pass area. Meanwhile, potential investors in the would-be Seven Utes ski area came to the table claiming $25 million in available funds to start the project. Updated reports estimated that only $3 million was needed to actually start work on the new ski area. But throughout the 1970s and 1980s, a series of additional studies—environmental, skier, wetlands impacts, socioeconomic—held up the process. Over that time, the earlier investors lost interest and walked away.

      Even so, the state considered Seven Utes a great site. It had a north-facing aspect, good snow, favorable terrain, and more than 2000 feet of vertical. On the spectrum of potential locations for new ski areas statewide, the Forest Service rated Seven Utes “exceptionally good.” The agency estimated that the ski season could run from November to April, with a natural 50-inch base in February, an average annual snowfall of 250 inches, and a maximum annual snowfall of 450 inches.

      Then, in 1993, California developer Fred Sauer unveiled a new plan. Sauer’s idea was to build a new ski resort, Seven Utes Resort, on the north face of Seven Utes Mountain. In addition to skiing, the development would have included a major hotel, ice-skating rink, golf course, spa, tennis facilities, and more. The base area would have been located near Ranger Lakes, close to the site of the present-day visitor center. The sum total of the development would have been an incredible 4500 acres, putting it almost on par with Vail for sheer size.

      Almost from the beginning, though, the proposed ski resort was mired in challenges. The land on which Sauer desired to build was located within Colorado State Forest. In other words, if he wanted to build, he would need to buy some prime real estate outright. The sale of state trust land is prohibited, however, and the execution of Sauer’s plan would have required a complicated land exchange of 1200 acres. In addition, the resort would have bordered both Routt National Forest and Rocky Mountain National Park, further complicating the legalities. The Poudre Canyon Group of the Sierra Club rose up against the project. Also, despite the likelihood that the development would have brought an economic boost to the region, nearby residents of tiny, rural Gould fought Sauer. Led by Don Ewy, a self-employed logger, the group of community activists, environmentalists, ranchers, loggers, and residents successfully opposed the resort.

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      Skinning up to the saddle between Seven Utes

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