Blue Mountain Resort

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Blue Mountain
LocationLower Towamensing Township, Carbon County, Pennsylvania
Nearest major cityPalmerton, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°49′20″N 75°30′48″W / 40.82222°N 75.51333°W / 40.82222; -75.51333
Vertical1,082 ft (330 m)
Top elevation1,540 ft (470 m)
Base elevation458 ft (140 m)
Skiable area164 acres (0.66 km2)
Trails39 total
15 easier
4 more difficult
11 most difficult
4 extremely difficult
5 terrain park
Longest run6,400 ft (2,000 m)
Lift system13 lifts:
3 double chairlifts
1 triple chairlift
1 high-speed quad
1 high-speed six-pack
4 surface lifts
3 rope tows
Lift capacity13,500 skiers/hr
Snowfall33 in (0.84 m)
Snowmaking100%
Night skiing100%
Websitehttps://www.skibluemt.com/

Blue Mountain resort is located near Palmerton, Pennsylvania, on Blue Mountain in the northern part of the Lehigh Valley, in Pennsylvania. Blue Mountain serves the Allentown, Philadelphia, New York City, and Wilmington urban areas, as well as Carbon County, Schuylkill County, and the Hazleton area.

History

The resort was opened by Ray Tuthill[1] in 1977 as Little Gap Ski Area;[2] he re-established it as Blue Mountain in 1989.[3] With a new logo needed for the new name, Tuthill asked people from across the nation to submit ideas. The final selection of the characteristic skier in the word "mountain", was created by local designer, Carol Stickles. The resort celebrated its 30th anniversary during the 2007-08 season.[4]

In 2002 and 2003 Blue Mountain added two advanced runs and a teaching hill with two beginner slopes, fed by a triple chairlift and a conveyor lift. In 2006 the resort added eastern Pennsylvania's first high-speed six-pack chairlift.[5]

In summer 2008 the resort implemented a $3.1 million upgrade for the 2008-2009 ski season. It included improvements to the resort's snowmaking equipment, a newly built dining facility, and the addition of a new intermediate trail between Razor's Edge and Paradise named Dreamweaver.[6]

In 2009 Blue Mountain became the first PA ski resort and second resort in the country to have a BigAirBag which can be used to practice aerial maneuvers. As of the 2016-17 ski season the bigairbag is no longer in use. Blue Mountain added another PA ski resort first in 2011. They have partnered up with the United States Luge Association and will now be a US Luge Training and Recruitment site. Blue will have the only east coast Natural US luge track open to the public.

The Mountain

Blue Mountain has a summit elevation of 1,407 feet (429 m) and vertical elevation change of 1,087 ft (331 m), the biggest vertical drop of any ski resort in Pennsylvania.[2] The Summit is accessed by a High Speed Quad and a Six Person lift along with 3 double chairs. A beginner trail and an intermediate trail run down the outer, eastern side of the north-facing slope; 4 expert runs follow the chairlifts to the bottom, and an access trail connects the summit to the western half of the resort.

Aerial View of Blue Mountain Ski Area

Three double chairlifts rise up the western side of the resort, accessing mixed Novice Intermediate and Expert terrain. The main resort lodge, located at the top of the mountain is accessible by car. A dedicated beginner section adjacent to the lodge is served by a double chair and two surface lifts. A beginner trail, Burma Road, connects to the beginner section at the bottom of the hill. A second lodge and the resort's snow tubing facility are also located at the bottom of the mountain near the Valley Lodge.

The resort has a total of 40q slopes. Blue Mountain has Glade Trails, Beginner-Expert, various Terrain park difficulties, and training slopes. The mountain has many snow guns and annually add to the snow making capacity. Blue Mountain also uses Lift Line Ticket Scanners Via RFID Scanners at every lift for less wait. The mountain offers 39 snow tubing trails each 1,000+ feet long. They are the only mountain in PA that offers Family tubes, as well as single tubes with both day and night snow tubing.

There are 6 Terrain Parks which include Sidewinder Park, Terrain Run, Lower Sidewinder, Come Around Park & Central Park. The longest trail is 6,400 feet (2,000 m) in length; the mountain has 164 acres (0.66 km2) of skiing terrain. Although it receives an average of only 33 inches (840 mm) of natural snowfall per year, resort staff supplement it with 100% snow making coverage.

The resort hosts an alpine ski race team consisting of more than 125 USSA competitors and 75 developmental competitors. Its ski patrol is featured in the truTV reality series Ski Patrol.[7] which aired in 2008/2009 Season.

Trails and Lifts

Trails

Trail Name Length Difficulty
Burma Road 4500'
Connector 670'
Easy Out 800'
Explorer Hill 255'
Finish Line 2224'
Homestretch 1700'
Little Gap 430'
Paradise 4176'
Pioneer Pass 400'
School Hill 500'
Shuttle 900'
Sky Top 400'
Valley School East 1200'
Valley School West 1200'
Vista 1300'
Dreamweaver 2500'
Lazy Mile 5000'
Switchback 3900'
Tut's Lane 1400'
Barney's Bumps 1140'
Blue Baumer Glade 520'
The Chute 700'
Crossover 400'
Lower Main St 1650'
Midway 900'
Razorback 550'
Sleepy Hollow Glade 400'
Upper Main St 1650'
Widow Maker 1300'
X-ing 690'
Challenge 3000'
Falls 350'
Nightmare 900'
Razor's Edge 3300'
Central Park 400'
Come Around Park 1700'
Lower Sidewinder Park 1740'
Sidewinder Park 3175'
Terrain Run Park 1200'
Yeti Park

Lifts

Lift Name Manufacturer Type Year
Challenge Express Leitner-Poma Detachable 6-Pack 2006
Comet Quad Leitner-Poma Detachable Quad 1994
Valley School Triple Partek Triple 2002
Main St. Chair VonRoll Double 1981
Burma Chair Hall Double 1981
Vista Chair Hall Double 1976
Valley Conveyor N/A Carpet N/A[8]
School Hill Lift N/A Carpet N/A
Explorer Conveyor N/A Carpet N/A

References

  1. ^ "Honoring our sport's heroes". PennLive. 2008-12-21. Retrieved 2009-01-30. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ a b Phillips, John (2001). Ski and Snowboard America - Mid-Atlantic: The Complete Guide to Downhill Skiing, Snowboarding, Cross Country Skiing, Snow Tubing, and More Throughout the Mid-Atlantic Region. Guilford, Connecticut: Globe Pequot Press. ISBN 0-7627-0845-X.
  3. ^ "About Us". Blue Mountain. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  4. ^ "What's New for 2007: Blue Mountain Ski Area". www.dcski.com. 2007-11-12. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
  5. ^ "DCSki Resort Profile: Blue Mountain Ski Area". www.dcski.com. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
  6. ^ Smith, M. Scott (2008-11-15). "What's New for 2008: Blue Mountain Ski Area". www.dcski.com. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
  7. ^ "Turner Newsroom: truTV Hits the Slopes with All-Access, High-Adrenaline Rescue Series SKI PATROL". news.turner.com. 2008-09-17. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
  8. ^ "Sunkid - we move - you smile - Mountain pleasure at its best". www.sunkidworld.com.