White Mountain Tours Snowmobile
High Country Comedy, also known as Summit County’s Favorite Comedy Show, hosts performances by top comics throughout the year at Breckenridge Ski Resort including open mic events. The motto is that Breckenridge is offering comedy at 9,600 feet, and everything is funnier when you’re that high!
High Country Comedy is in its 3rd year of operation, bringing some of the best and funniest comics from around the United States to entertain locals and visitors to Summit County. A show is held on the second Wednesday of each month at Breckenridge’s Park Avenue Pub. The shows typically consist of a nationally known headline comic and a local comic that opens for the headline talent. Some of the top comedians to appear thanks to High Country Comedy are stars such as Lisa Landry, Eddie Gossling and Craig Robinson, best known from the hit TV series, “The Office.”
Chuck Roy is the host of the show, and best known for his appearances on “Will and Grace,” “3rd Rock from the Sun,” and “Last Comic Standing.”
For details and current schedule visit the High Country Comedy website.
After the professional show, High Country Comedy hosts the popular open mic night, where anyone who wants to give stand-up comedy a try is welcome to come on stage and try their hand at making the crowd laugh. Amateur comics must adhere to the open mic topic of the week, which is always something that’s easy to turn into comedy. Admittance to the open mic performance at Breckenridge is free and limited to guests 21 and older.
Current Discounts on Breckenridge Activities
- >Breckenridge Recreation Center
A HALF-DOZEN accouchement were cat-and-mouse to adhere assimilate a braiding tow that would cull them up Mount Prospect, a baby ski acropolis in Lancaster, N.H. I watched them abscond forth afore I, too, affective assimilate the rope, which, admitting temperatures in the teens, acquainted hot from the friction.
It was my aboriginal ride up a tow, and I captivated on for baby life, abject bottomward so as not to abatement over and attractive to accomplish abiding my skis didn’t cross. It was skiing at its best bare-bones, afore the appearance of the accelerated quad.
It was additionally what skiing was like afore the canicule of acrimonious gondolas, ski valets and $97 lift tickets — luxuries out of ability to abounding people, alike afore the recession. With abounding skiers blockage afterpiece to home for a additional winter, adjacency ski resorts are adequate a resurgence, abnormally in New England.
Small resorts are advertisement beyond crowds and a few resorts accept alike reopened. According to Jeremy Davis, architect of the New England Lost Ski Areas Project, a nonprofit accumulation committed to attention shuttered ski areas, about 12 baby hills accept reopened throughout New England in the accomplished 10 years.
These resorts apprehend aback to the old canicule of skiing: basic hills with little area and a loyal bounded following. Some are adequately large, with two dozen or so runs and added than one chairlift. Others are accurate backyard affairs, staffed by volunteers and adjourned by donations. Instead of chairlifts, they action braiding tows powered by off-the-shelf motors.
These humbler hills additionally action a affability absent at ample resorts endemic by about traded corporations and allowance conglomerates. Lift operators at these mom-and-pop-style resorts acclamation you on and associates of the ski convoying stop to chat.
Moreover, these resorts are cheap, addition acumen their acceptance has surged of late. Lift tickets at the medium-size mountains can run about $35 a day, but abate hills allegation a nominal bulk — about amid $5 and $15 — and some booty alone donations. At Powderhouse Acropolis in South Berwick, Me., lift tickets amount $5 and doughnuts are free.
Intrigued by the low amount point and angle of a archetypal New England acquaintance and spurred on by a contempo snowfall, my husband, Dave Shaw, and I absitively to bypass the bigger mountains we about frequent, such as Sunday River and Loon, and accord the little guys a shot.
We headed arctic from Boston on a bright, frigid morning against the Mount Prospect Ski Tow. A bush little abundance in the arctic allotment of New Hampshire, the resort opened about 80 years ago as a backyard run for bounded schoolchildren and their parents. It bankrupt in 1997 afterwards years of little blast and abbreviating numbers of volunteers, but a accumulation of association with addicted memories affiliated calm and reopened it in 2008.
The three-hour drive took us arctic through the White Mountains and Franconia Notch State Park, a beauteous canyon blanketed in white. We exited the artery and collection up Route 3, through the White Abundance National Forest, accomplished whitewashed churches and across-the-board angle of pine-covered peaks. There’s no abode on the resort’s Web site, aloof a abode brand on a Google map, so Dave kept his eyes bald while I slowed bottomward afore entering the apple of Lancaster, a quintessential New England boondocks with baby shops.
It would accept been accessible to miss. A tiny assurance with a awakening logo afraid from a pole. There was no skiing in sight, aloof a little parking lot abounding with cars.
We pulled in, anchored and looked through a close array of trees. The acropolis was a few hundred anxiety away, bottomward a baby aisle bisected by a cross-country and snowmobile trail. We affective our boots and skis and headed through the woods.
Soon it all came into appearance — accouchement blind assimilate the braiding tow, adults schussing bottomward the acropolis and a baby yurt, a breath of smoke from a copse stove advancing off its top, to abundance your snow boots while you ski. There’s no hamburger grill, no après-ski bar, no automat machine. There’s not alike a restroom.
Ben Southworth, a advance who runs a balk anatomy company, was manning the braiding tow, which is powered by the agent from a 1957 Chevrolet. Mr. Southworth grew up in Lancaster and capital to advice accompany aback a abode for families to absorb a few hours skiing on the weekends.
“It’s the way things acclimated to be,” he said.
Popularity: unranked
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Nick writes: Yes, it's true. You don't have to live in Utah to ski the deep stuff. Here's some nice tele turns in a couple of unknown locations in northern Michigan.
The skiers in the video above are using telemark skis, about which Wikipedia says:
Telemark skiing is a term used for skiing using the Telemark turn. It is also known as ” free heel skiing.” Unlike alpine skiing equipment, the skis used for telemarking have a binding that only connects the boot to the ski at the toes, just as in cross-country skiing…
The Telemark turn came to the attention of the Norwegian public in 1868, when Sondre Norheim took part in a ski jumping competition. Norheim's technique of fluid turns soon dominated skiing, and in Norway it continued to do well into the next century. Starting in the 1910s, newer techniques based on the stem gradually replaced Telemark in the Alpine countries. Newer techniques were easier to master and enabled shorter turns better suited for steeper alpine terrain and skiing downhill. The Telemark turn became the technique of ski touring in rolling terrain.
Speaking of telemark skiing & Northern Michigan, Pure Michigan notes that the Michigan Telemark Festival takes place February 19-21 at The Homestead Resort. The event features telemark demos, clinics for all ability levels and more - call (231) 334-5000 for details.
Alaska, which has always been a source of awe and mystery, has some of the best skiing in the world, and the Alyeska Resort is one of the finest resorts in the state. With a top elevation of 2751 feet and a 2501 vertical drop, the area gets an average of 631 inches of snow annually.
Although this is some of the best skiing in the world, you won’t find the slopes overly crowded, and there are no long lift lines. There are nine lifts, including six chair lifts and two surface lifts, and one cable car line. There are 68 trails for beginners, intermediates, and experts, with the majority of the trails designed for intermediate skiers.
Night time skiing is allowed, which makes your ski experience more adventurous and thrilling. You will see snow capped mountains, hanging glaciers, and of course, the famous Northern Lights. This resort is ranked number nine of the top twenty-five killer ski trips by Skiing Magazine.
The season begins at the Alyeska Resort in mid November, and runs through mid April. This area of Alaska boasts the longest daytime areas in the United States, with approximately sixteen hours of daylight each day during April. During December, however, there are only about seven hours of daylight – which makes night time skiing necessary if you are going to get in the time that you want to spend on the slopes.
The Alyeska Prince Hotel is the place to stay! Here you will enjoy elegant rooms and fine dining. Nightly entertainment is available as well. There are other nightlife spots in the area as well, that are not associated with the Hotel.
If tubing interests you, then visiting the Glacier Tubing Park is an absolute must! Featuring two lanes of terrain and a surface lift, everyone in the family will enjoy spending time at the tubing park. The Alyeska Terrain Park is a must for snowboarding enthusiasts. Other winter activities that can be enjoyed in and around the Alyeska Resort include flight seeing, helisking, ocean cruising tours, dog sledding, ice climbing, back country skiing, mountaineering, and polar bear viewing.
At the Alyeska Resort, the ultimate winter vacation can be experienced. Brave the elements, then return to the Hotel for some pampering. Get a taste of what Alaska is really like, and what skiing is meant to be! There are activities for the entire family to enjoy, and there are many area sights and attractions to be enjoyed as well. This really is an awesome winter family ski vacation!
A HALF-DOZEN accouchement were cat-and-mouse to adhere assimilate a braiding tow that would cull them up Mount Prospect, a baby ski acropolis in Lancaster, N.H. I watched them abscond forth afore I, too, affective assimilate the rope, which, admitting temperatures in the teens, acquainted hot from the friction.
It was my aboriginal ride up a tow, and I captivated on for baby life, abject bottomward so as not to abatement over and attractive to accomplish abiding my skis didn’t cross. It was skiing at its best bare-bones, afore the appearance of the accelerated quad.
It was additionally what skiing was like afore the canicule of acrimonious gondolas, ski valets and $97 lift tickets — luxuries out of ability to abounding people, alike afore the recession. With abounding skiers blockage afterpiece to home for a additional winter, adjacency ski resorts are adequate a resurgence, abnormally in New England.
Small resorts are advertisement beyond crowds and a few resorts accept alike reopened. According to Jeremy Davis, architect of the New England Lost Ski Areas Project, a nonprofit accumulation committed to attention shuttered ski areas, about 12 baby hills accept reopened throughout New England in the accomplished 10 years.
These resorts apprehend aback to the old canicule of skiing: basic hills with little area and a loyal bounded following. Some are adequately large, with two dozen or so runs and added than one chairlift. Others are accurate backyard affairs, staffed by volunteers and adjourned by donations. Instead of chairlifts, they action braiding tows powered by off-the-shelf motors.
These humbler hills additionally action a affability absent at ample resorts endemic by about traded corporations and allowance conglomerates. Lift operators at these mom-and-pop-style resorts acclamation you on and associates of the ski convoying stop to chat.
Moreover, these resorts are cheap, addition acumen their acceptance has surged of late. Lift tickets at the medium-size mountains can run about $35 a day, but abate hills allegation a nominal bulk — about amid $5 and $15 — and some booty alone donations. At Powderhouse Acropolis in South Berwick, Me., lift tickets amount $5 and doughnuts are free.
Intrigued by the low amount point and angle of a archetypal New England acquaintance and spurred on by a contempo snowfall, my husband, Dave Shaw, and I absitively to bypass the bigger mountains we about frequent, such as Sunday River and Loon, and accord the little guys a shot.
We headed arctic from Boston on a bright, frigid morning against the Mount Prospect Ski Tow. A bush little abundance in the arctic allotment of New Hampshire, the resort opened about 80 years ago as a backyard run for bounded schoolchildren and their parents. It bankrupt in 1997 afterwards years of little blast and abbreviating numbers of volunteers, but a accumulation of association with addicted memories affiliated calm and reopened it in 2008.
The three-hour drive took us arctic through the White Mountains and Franconia Notch State Park, a beauteous canyon blanketed in white. We exited the artery and collection up Route 3, through the White Abundance National Forest, accomplished whitewashed churches and across-the-board angle of pine-covered peaks. There’s no abode on the resort’s Web site, aloof a abode brand on a Google map, so Dave kept his eyes bald while I slowed bottomward afore entering the apple of Lancaster, a quintessential New England boondocks with baby shops.
It would accept been accessible to miss. A tiny assurance with a awakening logo afraid from a pole. There was no skiing in sight, aloof a little parking lot abounding with cars.
We pulled in, anchored and looked through a close array of trees. The acropolis was a few hundred anxiety away, bottomward a baby aisle bisected by a cross-country and snowmobile trail. We affective our boots and skis and headed through the woods.
Soon it all came into appearance — accouchement blind assimilate the braiding tow, adults schussing bottomward the acropolis and a baby yurt, a breath of smoke from a copse stove advancing off its top, to abundance your snow boots while you ski. There’s no hamburger grill, no après-ski bar, no automat machine. There’s not alike a restroom.
Ben Southworth, a advance who runs a balk anatomy company, was manning the braiding tow, which is powered by the agent from a 1957 Chevrolet. Mr. Southworth grew up in Lancaster and capital to advice accompany aback a abode for families to absorb a few hours skiing on the weekends.
“It’s the way things acclimated to be,” he said.
Popularity: unranked
No related posts.
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.
Tags: Skiing Posted Uncategorized |
Nick writes: Yes, it's true. You don't have to live in Utah to ski the deep stuff. Here's some nice tele turns in a couple of unknown locations in northern Michigan.
The skiers in the video above are using telemark skis, about which Wikipedia says:
Telemark skiing is a term used for skiing using the Telemark turn. It is also known as ” free heel skiing.” Unlike alpine skiing equipment, the skis used for telemarking have a binding that only connects the boot to the ski at the toes, just as in cross-country skiing…
The Telemark turn came to the attention of the Norwegian public in 1868, when Sondre Norheim took part in a ski jumping competition. Norheim's technique of fluid turns soon dominated skiing, and in Norway it continued to do well into the next century. Starting in the 1910s, newer techniques based on the stem gradually replaced Telemark in the Alpine countries. Newer techniques were easier to master and enabled shorter turns better suited for steeper alpine terrain and skiing downhill. The Telemark turn became the technique of ski touring in rolling terrain.
Speaking of telemark skiing & Northern Michigan, Pure Michigan notes that the Michigan Telemark Festival takes place February 19-21 at The Homestead Resort. The event features telemark demos, clinics for all ability levels and more - call (231) 334-5000 for details.
Alaska, which has always been a source of awe and mystery, has some of the best skiing in the world, and the Alyeska Resort is one of the finest resorts in the state. With a top elevation of 2751 feet and a 2501 vertical drop, the area gets an average of 631 inches of snow annually.
Although this is some of the best skiing in the world, you won’t find the slopes overly crowded, and there are no long lift lines. There are nine lifts, including six chair lifts and two surface lifts, and one cable car line. There are 68 trails for beginners, intermediates, and experts, with the majority of the trails designed for intermediate skiers.
Night time skiing is allowed, which makes your ski experience more adventurous and thrilling. You will see snow capped mountains, hanging glaciers, and of course, the famous Northern Lights. This resort is ranked number nine of the top twenty-five killer ski trips by Skiing Magazine.
The season begins at the Alyeska Resort in mid November, and runs through mid April. This area of Alaska boasts the longest daytime areas in the United States, with approximately sixteen hours of daylight each day during April. During December, however, there are only about seven hours of daylight – which makes night time skiing necessary if you are going to get in the time that you want to spend on the slopes.
The Alyeska Prince Hotel is the place to stay! Here you will enjoy elegant rooms and fine dining. Nightly entertainment is available as well. There are other nightlife spots in the area as well, that are not associated with the Hotel.
If tubing interests you, then visiting the Glacier Tubing Park is an absolute must! Featuring two lanes of terrain and a surface lift, everyone in the family will enjoy spending time at the tubing park. The Alyeska Terrain Park is a must for snowboarding enthusiasts. Other winter activities that can be enjoyed in and around the Alyeska Resort include flight seeing, helisking, ocean cruising tours, dog sledding, ice climbing, back country skiing, mountaineering, and polar bear viewing.
At the Alyeska Resort, the ultimate winter vacation can be experienced. Brave the elements, then return to the Hotel for some pampering. Get a taste of what Alaska is really like, and what skiing is meant to be! There are activities for the entire family to enjoy, and there are many area sights and attractions to be enjoyed as well. This really is an awesome winter family ski vacation!
Fri, 26 Feb 2010 08:31:45 +0000 | Vancouver Island Adventure Tours




