Mt. Baker Ski Area

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Mt. Baker Ski Area
Mt. Shuksan in 2003from the White Salmon Lodge
Mt. Shuksan in 2003
from the White Salmon Lodge
Mt. Baker Ski Area is located in USA
Mt. Baker Ski Area
Mt. Baker Ski Area
Location in the United States
Location Glacier, Washington, U.S.
Nearest city Bellingham: 52 miles (84 km) west, 75 min drive
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Vertical 1,589 ft (484 m)
Top elevation 5,089 ft (1,551 m)
Base elevation 3,500 ft (1,067 m)
White Salmon Base Area
4,300 ft (1,310 m)
Heather Meadows Base Area
Skiable area 1,000 acres (4.0 km2)
Runs 31
Ski trail rating symbol-green circle.svg - 24% easiest
Ski trail rating symbol-blue square.svg - 45% more difficult
Ski trail rating symbol-black diamond.svg - 31% most difficult
Lift system 8 chairs, 2 rope tows
Snowfall 641 in (53.4 ft; 16.3 m)
Snowmaking no
Night skiing no
Website mtbaker.us

Mt. Baker Ski Area is a ski resort in the northwest United States, located in Whatcom County, Washington, at the end of State Route 542. The base elevation is at 3,500 feet (1,067 m), while the peak of the resort is at 5,089 feet (1,551 m). It is about 10 miles (16 km) south of the 49th parallel, the international border with Canada.

The ski area is home to the world's greatest recorded snowfall in one season, 1,140 inches (95.0 ft; 29.0 m), recorded during the 1998–99 season. Mt. Baker also enjoys the unofficially highest average annual snowfall of any resort in the world, with 641 inches (53.4 ft; 16.3 m).[1][2][3]

The ski area is known for numerous challenging in-bounds routes and for the many backcountry opportunities that surround it. The backcountry is accessible from several chairlifts, and access is permitted from the resort following the Mt. Baker Ski Area backcountry policy.

The mountain

The lifts at Mt. Baker are not named but referred to by number. All are fixed-grip quads without safety bars or footrests. Chairs 3 and 4 access the same point from different sides of the mountain using a continuous loop of cable (haul rope); there is a mid-station at the top for unloading only.

Chair 1 runs from the Heather Meadows Lodge upper base area to the top of Panorama Dome. There is a midpoint station on this lift, where other riders can catch it halfway down the mountain, allowing for speedy runs on Austin, Pan Face, North Face, Chicken Ridge, and the famed Chute. Also accessible from Chair 1 is the Canyon and the rest of the Chair 6 terrain. Chair 2 is located at the Heather Meadows Lodge upper base area. This is a chair for beginners. Chair 3 allows customers either to access the Raven Hut Lodge area or return down to Chairs 2 and 3. Chair 4 runs from the Raven Hut Lodge area and back up to the top of Chair 3. Chair 5 replaced two parallel double chairs and accesses intermediate terrain, as well as the experts-only Gabl's run and the Elbow backcountry area. Chair 6 runs to the top of Panorama Dome. Chair 7 is the only chair that leaves from the White Salmon Lodge base area. From it, one can access Chair 8 or the Raven Hut Lodge area. Chair 8 is the longest chair on the mountain and features longer groomed runs as well as access to the Hemispheres and Shuksan Arm backcountry areas. Additionally, there are two handle-tow surface lifts for beginners, one located at White Salmon and one at Heather Meadows.

As of 2015, Mt. Baker does not have a terrain park.

Possible expansion

Future expansion is limited, according to an interview with the owner, Duncan Howat:[4]

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Due to the remote location of the ski area — 37 miles out on a dead-end road — Howat said it will probably never become a full-scale ski resort with hotels and condos. For starters, there aren’t any public utilities up there to support more development. In 1989, when the ski area began developing a second base area known as the White Salmon Lodge, it first had to build all the necessary infrastructure: a parking lot, a water catchment and filtration system, a sewage treatment system, and a power generator. "We’ll improve the current infrastructure, but as far as going off into some new territory and build new chairlifts, that won’t happen," Howat said. "We’ve got some new plans, but I’m not gonna let it out yet."

— Bellingham Business Journal, 2009

Events

Legendary Banked Slalom

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Started in 1985, this slalom snowboard race through the natural halfpipe has evolved into an international event. The Legendary Banked Slalom attracts many professionals from around the world as competitors and allows amateurs of all ages and abilities to compete on the same course over the same period with the professionals. The winner in each category receives a duct tape trophy and an embroidered Carhartt jacket.

Mt. Baker Seshup

Mt. Baker Seshup is a one-day snowboard big air event held annually at Mount Baker. It was Created in 2003 by a local group of friends, including Jason Speer.[5] The event typically takes place at the end of the Washington snowboarding season. It is an informal gathering of supporters and riders who voluntarily build the jump by shoveling snow and forming one large jump. Typically, the jump is a large step-up style kicker.

Although the event started as an informal competition between friends who pooled money for the best snowboarder of the day, the event today is a non-competitive event open to anyone who wants to participate. The 2014 event coordinator, Steven Goodell, stated "The Seshup is like Superpark if the riders built their own jump and absolutely everyone was invited. The entire thing is DIY. It’s not a contest. There’s no “winner”. Just a huge group of friends doing what they love together."[5]

The participants would each contribute 5 to 10 dollars to the winners pot. After repeatedly "hitting" the step-up jump over the course of a day, participants write the name of the person who they felt rode the best on a piece of paper and put it in a hat. Votes are tallied and the one with the most votes wins the cash pot, typically around $150. As more people have participated over the years, the size of the earnings have increased.[6]

In 2014, more than 200 [7] participants and volunteers including athletes, spectators, and sponsoring companies attended.

Featured in films

Mt. Baker Ski Area is often featured in ski and snowboard films and still photography due to its picturesque setting, plentiful snowfall, and the availability of easily accessed advanced terrain. The Call of The Wild was filmed at Mt. Baker in 1934–35.[8]

Season and Hours

File:MtBakerSkiAreaParkingLot.JPG
White Salmon Lodge
and Mt. Shuksan

The ski season typically begins in late November and ends in late April. Usual operating hours are 9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

Year Opening
Date
2012 21-Nov [9]
2011 18-Nov [9]
2009 12-Nov [4]
2008 14-Dec [10]
2007 29-Nov [11]

History

  • 1921–26: Mt. Baker highway constructed to Heather Meadows; skiing begins.[12]
  • 1927: Mount Baker Lodge opened. Mt. Baker Ski Club organized.[12]
  • 1930: First ski tournament at Heather Meadows.[12]
  • 1931: Mt. Baker Lodge destroyed by fire.[12]
  • 1935: Pacific Northwest Ski Association downhill tournament, held on northeast face of Table Mountain.[12]
  • 1935–36: "Ski escalator" installed.[12]
  • 1937–38: First rope tow installed, Otto Lang ski school.[12]
  • 1953: The first chairlift, Pan Dome (now Chair 1), is constructed at the ski area.[8]
  • 1977: Six chairs and four rope tows operate. They are referenced by name instead of number.[13]
  • 1981–88: One rope tow (Galena) is removed, and chairs are now numbered instead of named.[13]
  • 1989–90: The first quad chair (Chair 7) is installed in the White Salmon area. One more rope tow (7 Hills) is removed.[13]
  • 1991–98: Chair 8 opens.[13]
  • 1996: White Salmon Day Lodge opens.[14]
  • 2002: Chair 4 and Chair 5 doubles replaced with Chair 5 quad.[15]
  • 2011: Chairs 1 and 6 designated as "Experts only".[13]

References

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External links