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Taos Ski Valley Sold?!


NMSKI

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http://skitaos.org/files/tsv/press.pdf

 

One of the last family owned major ski areas is family owned no longer. While the sale should allow for some much needed improvements, its basically a foregone conclusion that a lift will be going up on Kachina now. The new CEO was the existing COO who was vocal in his support of the Kachina peak lift (as well as other improvements that many agree with). The uniqueness and beauty that was Kachina peak will soon be nothing more than a big mogul field with Texans in blue jeans all over it.

 

I'm going back this March for a week or so, and it will be really sad to make what might be my last hike up there in its unspoiled state.

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at least the guy seems like he is big on conservation. hopefully that will help preserve the place so it doesn't end up looking like a zoo.

That's true. This is much better than Vail Resorts or Intrawest, aquiring the mountain.

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Is the terrain up there easy enough for herbs to ski?
"Main street" is easy enough for herbs to struggle down. Easy to get into some serious shit though if you zig where you are supposed to zag. This picture was taken coming down either Main Street or K5 to give an idea.Pictures382.jpg

 

how good is taos?
As good as anywhere when the snow is good. Very steep. When the snow is not great it is limited at best. Edited by NMSKI
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One of the ski rags had a nice write up about some family owned resort in NM, is this the one? Can't recall the family name from the article, it was in Powder or Ski this season.

 

It was Taos.

 

Mother fucker.... Taos was a hold out from a different time. As a money thing it probably had to happen, they've had $$$ issues off an on for 40 years.

 

So fucking lame on the Kachina lift, it will probably be the Kachina lift presented by Amway or something equally as retarded.

 

Better than Vail turning it into Northstar at Tahoe South or DV 2 but the 80 year old man in me is unhappy.

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For the skier visits they do all this investment seems like a waste of money. Do they have much slope side lodging and other amenities at the base?

Lodging and amenities at the base are fairly limited. There's the snakedance and the St. Bernard for lodging, about 10 or 15 total shops and maybe 3 or 4 small restaurants/bars. I'd like to see the business model because I agree with you that the skier visits don't justify the cost.
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That's right. It's 2.5 hours from Albuquerque, which isn't exactly a major hub. Probably 6 hours from Denver but not sure why anyone would do that.

 

If your doing a 4 corners trip but most people don't do that.

 

Fly into Alb, hit Taos, then run into Southern CO, hit Silverton, Wolf, Durango and Telluride. Go home out of telluride-Denver or something similar.

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  • 4 weeks later...

What is the routine for avoiding altitude sickness?

The following:

- fill camelback with hot water (so it won't freeze) and drink water on every lift ride.

- stay somewhere at or below 7,500 feet if possible so the body can recover.

- first ski day take it a little easier than normal

- limit the beer and caffeine

- don't hike for turns first day (unless big storm then fuck it)

- try to sleep enough

 

Pretty basic but works for me. I only have to worry about it skiing where I'm someplace that gets above 11 or 12,000 feet, otherwise I would just go hard each day and drink lots of beer at night.

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What is the routine for avoiding altitude sickness?

Smoke....seriously it's the only positive of smoking, your brain adjusts your heart every time you light up so when you go somewhere high it's pretty much the same thing. Athletic young males get it the worst. Old people get it terrible, kids like everything else don't even seem to notice.

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I'm an "athletic young male" and I've never had an issue. Even after hiking. I guess it really effects everybody in different ways.

 

Ut tops out pretty low and if your sleeping in SLC your even lower.

 

I've never had it but my sister picked it up a little in telluride and I've never seen her with issues before. She lives in FLA so that's like 10 feet to 9000k in 24 hours.

 

High enough everyone will have issues but it definitely seems you either get it or you don't.

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For me I had just gotten off a plane from New York the day before skiing and had stayed in Albequerque that night so I had no acclimation. About the only thing I was doing right seems to have been smoking (which I long ago quit).

 

I skied fine for about 5 hours, but then was persuaded to do "one last run" I wasn't feeling, and got knocked out so bad I had to be brought down on a ski patrol sled and spent about the next 18 hours recovering.

 

Learned my lesson. Would have been one of the best ski experiences I've ever had were it not for that one last run.

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