
We
have ended our season at
Vail a few
fortunate times. While spring skiing can be hit or miss,
we struck Colorado Gold – abundant dry light snow in late April. I
highly recommend this western trip timing as a fabulous finale to your
Eastern season, providing big mountain skiing to look forward to all
winter long (just in case).

Simply put, April in Colorado is when the sun is high, the snowpack is
midwinter deep and the deals are cheap. As skier visits to
mega-resorts like Vail dwindle, you definitely get more acreage for
your buck - lift tickets and lodging prices hit season lows. The ski
conditions are typically excellent at high elevation areas, Vail’s
base is 8,200’ and summit is 11,570’. It can be wintry at the
mountaintop while its 60-degrees and sunny in the valleys below.
We
started our April ski week at beautiful
Beaver Creek ski resort, a
10-minute drive from sister resort Vail, on an interchangeable
multi-day lift ticket. Beaver Creek was celebrating closing weekend
with unbelievable ski conditions on most of the 1,625-acres (typically
closing date April 15, due to lack of skiers, not snow). Even on
closing day, we witnessed the groomers’ waltz as Beaver Creek’s
legendary fleet of 10 was out in perfect procession creating white
carpet for the fortunate few. Everything at 25-year old Beaver Creek
is posh, planned and near perfection– it’s the Deer Valley of
Colorado.
Beaver
Creek even offers an escalator to whisk skiers from the heated
pedestrian village up to the slopes. You have to experience The Beav’
to appreciate their slogan, “Not exactly roughing it.” It is one of my
faves, most of their 146 trails are well-pitched and their mountain
lodges are drool inducing impressive – you can even ski to the Ritz
Carlton for lunch. In the evening, treat your taste buds to Toscanini,
a fabulous restaurant overlooking the centerpiece ice-skating rink in
Beaver Creek’s classy Village.
Surprisingly,
Beaver Creek, Vail and sibling Breckenridge were all near full
operation right up till closing, with all but a few lifts running, and
trails blanketed in white, many groomed daily. Mind you, we lucked out
with record snow, and we followed the daily grooming report (a must
this time of year) and carved the cord trails first. It gets cold at
night at 10,000’ so unless you like concrete crud, stick to the
machine manicured until the sun softens the corn and the bumps on
Prima and Pronto (around 11am). Vail is notorious for its size, but
also for grooming up to1,600-acres each night with 29 groomers, more
than any resort on the planet.
come out to play. You know you’re in the
zone when there is sun, snow and locals on the slopes. Share a chair
with a native for a spot of sunscreen and tips on where to shop and
dine, and of course, drink.
r an après ski block party. Its
worth mention that Vail is amidst a billion dollar (yup, billion)
facelift to its Vail Square and Lion’s Head base areas.
Eisenhower Tunnel slice right through the ski area, so does the
Continental Divide. Loveland’s facilities are retro, so are spring
skiing tickets usually a deal. But locals love
Loveland for the 12,700’ high alpine terrain of 1,365-acres and the
long season. Be sure to check out the skiers tunnel under the
Interstate – a crazy contraption. The Rockies | Colorado | Utah | Montana | California | Oregon | Canada | New England
