USA - Colorado - skiing

October 02, 2007 - Permalink - 1 comment

As a European, skiiing in the USA is not only expensive, but also not so evident. Instead of 7 hours driving, we have to sit during 10 hours in a narrow airplane seat !

Anyway, some people convinced me that the adventure was worthwhile doing it.

We made a program so that the slopes of some major Colorado ski areas would be skiied in only 7 days.

To work this out easily, we had to stay in 2 different places for respectively 3 and 4 nights.

The first condo where we stayed was at Breckenridge, the seond in Vail.

The weather was very bad (allways snowing like hell), but we could do almost every planned area.

Day 1 : Brenckenridge.
Day 2 : Keystone
Day 3 : Winter Park
Day 4 : Copper mountain
Day 5 : Vail
Day 6 : Aspen
Day 7 : Vail (planned Beaver Creek - but snoww cover on the road was too thick)

Altough it was snowing most of the time, the fact that the trails where amid forest, gave us enough visibility.

We enjoyed this trip. We can encourage every European to ski in the US for at least 1 time.

There are no cozy chalets on the slopes like in Austria, but the trails and runs are very special and from an outstanding quality.

Another negative point in the US are the expensive daily skipasses. Unless an exception every area has his own skipass. Interchangeability would be appreciated (like in Euope).

We will certainly go back for another adventue.

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TruTV Hits the Slopes with All-Access, High-Adrenaline
Rescue Series SKI PATROL

Half-Hour Series to Focus on Brave Men and Women from Crystal Mountain, Wash.,
And Blue Mountain, Pa., Who Put it All on the Line to Keep the Slopes Safe

Premieres Monday, Oct. 20, at 8 p.m. (ET/PT)

Millions of skiers and snowboarders hit the slopes every year—in fact last year the nation’s ski resorts saw a record number of visitors. While snow sports enjoy an excellent safety record, injuries and deaths occur on the slopes each year. With the ski season about to kick off, truTV is set to launch a high-adrenaline, high-stakes series called SKI PATROL. Premiering Monday, Oct. 20, at 8 p.m. (ET/PT), the series follows an elite group of patrollers whose special training makes them part mountain rescuers, part medical technicians, part cops and part good Samaritans.

In SKI PATROL, truTV follows two teams of men and women who work in some of the most extreme environments in the country. Whether they’re performing high-altitude rescues, splinting a broken arm or busting unruly snowboarders, these brave men and women put it all on the line to keep the slopes safe.

The half-hour series gives viewers unique access to patrol units at Blue Mountain, Pa., and Crystal Mountain, Wash., as they respond to everything from injured vacationers and missing children to out-of-bounds snowboarders and skiers careening out of control. truTV also follows the patrollers after hours, as they seek to unwind from the day’s events.

In episode one, a young man faces paralysis after taking a ski pole to the chin while attempting a difficult stunt. When an avalanche blocks an emergency vehicle from scaling the mountain, an already demanding rescue becomes nearly impossible. Also, one young girl shatters her wrist after a spill on the mountain but falls even harder for the patroller who helps her.

In episode two, the extreme sport of paraskiing takes over Crystal Mountain. Extra patrollers are called in to monitor dozens of paraskiers flying above. Later, a patrol mobilizes to treat a snowboarder who suffers a severe head injury and broken vertebrae after a flip goes wrong. When married patrollers Andrew and Michelle perform a routine avalanche control mission, the day turns disastrous as Michelle is buried alive.

SKI PATROL’s Crystal Mountain episodes are produced by Varuna Entertainment, Inc. for truTV and executive-produced by Jason C. Morgan and Robert A. Zazzali. The Blue Mountain episodes are produced by Bunim/Murray Productions for truTV and is executive produced by Jeff Jenkins and Jonathan Murray. For truTV, Robyn Hutt is the executive in charge of production. Tony Horn is executive producer and Madelyn Brudner serves as associate producer on the series.

truTV is television’s destination for real-life stories told from an exciting and dramatic first-person perspective. Currently seen in 91 million U.S. households and enjoying more than a year of solid and consistent ratings growth, truTV features high-stakes, action-packed originals that give viewers access to places and situations they can’t normally experience. Among truTV’s primetime fan favorites are the original series Smoking Gun Presents; Most Daring; Speeders; Ocean Force; Principal’s Office; Forensic Files; and Dominick Dunne’s Power, Privilege and Justice. During the daytime, the channel features expert trial coverage under the name IN SESSION.

Turner Broadcasting System, Inc., a Time Warner company, creates and programs branded news, entertainment, animation and young adult media environments on television and other platforms for consumers around the world.
CONTACT:
Zoë Meltzer truTV zoe.meltzer@turner.com
Jaime Yandolino truTV jaime.yandolino@turner.com

stephen morgan on September 22, 2008 @ 14:41

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