Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Results of Tavel Magazine Readers' Poll on Skiing

Results of Condé Nast Traveler's 13th Annual Ski Poll announced

A ski poll is nothing at all like a ski pole. The former is a travel magazine's annual survey that ranks "the best places to ski and stay in North America" An "unprecented" 32,633 Condé Nast Traveler readers who took part in this year's survey. Frankly, I always take these reader polls with a grain of salt. Big Western resorts always "win" because more people visitthem. The big, fancy hotels generally rank high, not necessarily because everyone who selected them has stayed there, but because many people recognize a name-brand luxury chain and vote for it. The results are interesting nonetheless.

The magazine's press release explained: "Readers were asked to evaluate resort towns on the following criteria: Terrain and Conditions; Lifts and Lines; Town Ambience; Dining; and Après-ski/Activities. The ski hotels were rated based on: Location; Rooms; Service; Dining and Food; and Design. The awards appear in the December issue (on newsstands November 25) and are derived from the Condé Nast Traveler Readers Choice Survey." Whistler Blackcomb, BC, was voted Best Ski Resort Town, with an overall score of 90.7 and top scores in Après-Ski/Activities and Local Dining. Other top scorers in specific categories are:
  • Top Terrain: Big White, BC (95.3)
  • Top Lifts and Lines: Deer Valley, UT (92.1)
  • Top Aprés-ski/Activities: Whistler/Blackcomb, BC (93.2)
  • Top Local Dining: Whistler/Blackcomb, BC (90.3)
  • Top Local Ambience: Jackson Hole, WY (94.0)
The Top 10 Ski Resorts are the usual suspects:

1. Whistler Blackcomb, BC
2. Telluride, CO
3. Deer Valley, UT
4. Aspen, CO
5. Jackson Hole, WY
6. Sun Valley, ID
7. Vail, CO
8. Beaver Creek, CO
9. Park City, UT
10. Sun Peaks, BC

Ranked as the Best Ski Hotel for 2008 is the Post Hotel & Spa in Lake Louise, AB, with an overall score of 93.3 and the top score for Food (94.9). There's something funny about the Pan Pacific Mountainside leading in three categories but not appearing at all on the overall top-10 list. Make of that what you will. Both are in Whistler/Blackcomb. Other category leaders are:
  • Top Location: Pan Pacific Whistler Mountainside, Whistler/Blackcomb, BC (100)
  • Top Rooms: Pan Pacific Whistler Mountainside, Whistler/Blackcomb, BC (96.1)
  • Top Service: Four Seasons Resort, Jackson Hole, WY (95.1)
  • Top Food: Post Hotel & Spa, Lake Louise, AB (94.9)
  • Top Design: Pan Pacific Whistler Mountainside, Whistler/Blackcomb, BC (96.1)
According to the poll, the Top 10 Ski Hotels overall are as follows:

1. Post Hotel & Spa, Lake Louise, AB
2. Pan Pacific Whistler Village Centre, Whistler/Blackcomb, BC
3. Four Seasons Resort, Jackson Hole, WY
4. Stein Eriksen Lodge, Deer Valley, UT
5. Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch, Beaver Creek, CO
6. Four Seasons Resort, Whistler/Blackcomb, BC
7. Little Nell Hotel, Aspen, CO
8. Lodge & Spa at Cordillera, Vail Valley (Edwards), CO
9. Sundance Resort, Sundance, UT
10. St. Regis Resort, Aspen, CO

Monday, January 24, 2011

Vail Names Trail After Lindsey Vonn

Ski areas have traditionally honored important people in their development and notable competitors by naming trails after them. Consider Sun Valley, with Gretchen's Gold (Gretchen Fraser, 1948 Olympic gold medalist) and Christin's Silver (Christin Copper, 1984 Olympic silver medalist and two dozen World Cup victories) both on Seattle Ridge, and Picabo's Street (Picabo Street, 1998 Olympic gold medalist, World chamnpionship gold, World Cup downhill title) down on the Warm Springs side.

Vail has renamed the International Trail and now calls it Lindsey's in honor of Lindsey Vonn's two medals in the just completed 2010 Winter Games. How appropriate, since the run was used to contend the women's speed events during the 1989 and 1999 World Alpine Ski Championships.

And yes, I know that other ski areas have honored other competitors who trained on their slopes. Sun Valley is just the won -- I mean one -- that came to mind when I saw the photo of the new trail sign honoring Vail's big winner during the '10 Games.

Catchy Choice Hotels Commercial from Half a World Away

Do you find Choice Hotels' country-song commercial as catchy as I do? "I've Been Everywhere" popularized by Hank Snow and then Johnny Cash, it is a rapid-fire vocal list of places all over the country. To me, it is way better than most jingles. Turns out that the original song was written in Australia more than half a century ago, according to Wikipedia. One Geoff Mack wrote it in 1959 with names of Australian towns, and it was recorded by an Aussie singer named Lucky Starr (real name, Leslie Morrison). First it was a down-under hit, and then it became a hit in the US in 1962 too, when Hank Snow retooled it with American places. Johnny Cash's 1996 release was a hit again a generation later. The Wikipedia entry includes various verions released with different place names around the globe. Click here for a YouTube video featuring Johnny Cash's recording. I keep intending to figure out how many places are in the song and how many I've been to -- not a lot, really.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Amtrak To Winter Park: All Aboard

Colorado resort teams up with Amtrak to Winter Park to offer Snowball Express package

Winter Park is less than 30 miles west of Boulder, but because there is no road through the Indian Peaks Wilderness and adjacent James Peak Wilderness, the roundabout drive is considerably longer. The one shortcut from near here to right there is by train. The 6-mile-long Moffat Tunnel bores through the mountains under the Continental Divide and under the protected land. The Winter Park Resort lies at tunnel's West Portal. The Ski Train uses the tunnel for its dedicated Denver-Winter Park trip -- and so does Amtrak's California Zephyr. In fact, one of Winter Park's chairlifts is called the Zephyr in honor of the classic rail route.

This year, Winter Resort and Amtrak have partnered to offer an affordable and stress-free vacation package and called it the Snowball Express. It sure beats driving across the Plains, which are vulnerable to dicey snow conditions, and for people put off by airline hassles, it's a terrific option too.

The California Zephyr between Chicago and Oakland offers daily service -- not always punctual, but otherwise reliable. The Snowball Express includes roundtrip coach seats on Amtrak, three nights' lodging in a one-bedroom condo in the Town of Winter Park and three days of lift tickets. Book online through Winter Park Central Reservations or by calling 800-979-0327. The package is valid until the end of the ski season but must be booked by December 7. Adult prices including travel from what organizers call "preferred departure cities" are:

Chicago - $665
Naperville, IL - also $665
Galesburg, IL - $639.50
Burlington, IA - $634
Mt. Pleasant, IA - $628
Ottumwa, IA - $625
Osceola, IA $613
Omaha - $592
Lincoln, NE - $582.50

More Trains to US Ski Country

Other US ski resorts with rail access (though none nearly as doorstep convenient as Winter Park) include:
  • The North Lake Tahoe resorts via California Zephyr to Truckee
  • The seven resorts near Salt Lake City, a major Amtrak station
  • The Aspen areas via the Zephyr to Glenwood Springs
  • Whitefish Mountain Resort, MT via Amtrak's Empire Builder
  • Schweitzer, ID, to the Amtrak stop at Sandpoint
  • Several resorts in Vermont and New Hampshire via either Amtrak's Ethan Allen Express to Rutland or the Vermonter, with half-a-dozen stops from Brattleboro in the south to Essex Junction and St. Albans in the north)
  • Amtrak's Downeaster to Portland, ME
  • Alyeska, AK, via the Alaska Railroad to Girdwood
Other Countries

Canada's VIA Rail services:
  • In Quebec, Quebec City for Mont. Ste.-Anne and Le Massif and Montreal (for Tremblant), including trains from New York City/Albany)
  • In Alberta, Jasper for Marmot Basin
  • In British Columbia, Kamloops for Sun Peaks and Vancouver for Whistler/Blackcomb

And in Europe, virtually every Alpine mountain resort has excellent, efficient, frequent and punctual rail service or at least a bus that connects directly to a nearby railroad station.

New National Monument Designations on the Horizon -- Maybe

Western towns will benefit if sites are federally protected

An internal memo about more than a dozen natural areas considered for possible National Monument designation has surfaced. The areas that the Department of Interior is studying for management and protection by the National Park Service or other federal agency reported are:

  • San Rafael Swell, UT
  • Montana's Northern Prairie, MT
  • Lesser Prairie Chicken Preserve, NM
  • Berryessa Snow Mountains, CA
  • Heart of the Great Basin, NV
  • Otero Mesa, NM
  • Northwest Sonoran Desert, AZ
  • Owyhee Desert, OR/NV
  • Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument, CA (expansion)
  • Vermillion Basin, CO
  • Bodie Hills, CA
  • The Modoc Plateau, CA
  • Cedar Mesa, UT 
  • San Juan Islands, WA


Predictably, two Utah politicians immediately came out in opposition -- just in case the two potential monuments made it even into the official proposal state. Senator Orrin Hatch has already been quoted as threatening do everything in his power to prevent the proposal from moving forward, and Governor Gary Herbert keeps arguing that states should be allowed to manage their own natural resources. Click here for the leaked document that has raised the hackles of these rib-rock Republican aginners.
I suppose Messrs. Hatch and Herbert don't think of the economic benefit that accrue to their state annually from visitors to Utah's magnificent national parks:  nearly 1 million Arches, more than 1 million to Bryce Canyon, nearly half a million to Canyonlands, about 600,000 to Capitol Reef and 2,689,840 who visited Zion. And that doesn't include those who visit Monument Valley Tribal Park at the Arizona border and assorted national monuments, federal wildlife preserves and other public lands under federal jurisdiction. Rather than tourist dollars, I suppose Utah's H-team prefers landmarks like the enormous, open-pit Kennecott Copper Mine, the world's largest, just outside of Salt Lake City or uranium mining, even though a tailings pile from a mill near Moab is still leaching into the Colorado River.

The Grand Staircase-Escanlate National Monument in southern Utah was declared and placed under Bureau of Land Management protection under the Clinton Administration, raised howl of indignant protests from the legions of highly placed Utah aginners, including Senator Hatch who called it a "land grab." It it was, the government grabbed 1.9 million acres, including land eyed for coal mining development Andalex Resources, a Dutch company.

Today, regardless of its stance then, the Kane County Chamber of Commerce now boasts: "Near the National Parks you will also find many State Parks and National Monuments, such as Kodachrome Basin State Park, Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park, Pipe Spring National Monument, Cedar Breaks National Monument, and the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. With ninety-five percent of county lands administered by State and Federal Agencies, you'll never run out of things to do, or places to go. Drive roads less traveled, and find a place to call your own." Unspoken is" and stay, shop, eat and pump gas in Kanab and other nearby towns. And people who never would have heard of the place without national monument status do just that.

Fingers crossed that the government ignores the likes of Hatch Herbert, creates more federally protected areas -- and provides the funding to manage them well

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Beating the Checked-Bag Blues

Airlines' pay-to-play policies affect ski-vacation travel budgets

It is impossible to travel light on a ski trip. Ski clothing and other winter outdoor clothing and footwear are bulky. Ski and snowboard equipment is both bulky and awkwardly shaped. Since last ski season ended, most airlines have begun charging for checked luggage on domestic flights. Most US carriers began imposing a fee for the second checked piece, which was bad enough for skiers, but they levied fees even for first checked bag, which is bad for all travelers.

Skiwear and other winter clothing mean one checked bag per person. Most experienced skiers take their own boots, even if they rent skis. A pair of boots just about fills a carry-on that will fit into the overhead, especially the teeny space on smaller regional aircraft that often fly into mountain airports. A separate boot bag, even if stuffed to the gills with clothing, counts as a second checked bag.
Take your own skis or snowboard, and that’s checked bag number three. The one bright spot is that one ski or snowboard bag and one boot bag still count as a single piece of luggage, as they did in the days when airlines accepted two pieces of checked luggage without charging. This amounts to bad news for skiers heading for their vacations.

At this writing, most airlines charge $15 for the first and $25, but United gets $50 for the second checked bag. The first bag is free on Delta, and the second costs $25. Don’t plan on taking more than you need. The third and subsequent bags are $80 and up each.

These baggage charges are for the entire trip, not per leg if you are changing planes. Fees for overweight bags have also skyrocketed, so don’t think that buying a team ski bag or hockey gear bag and stuffing everything into it will save money. It won’t.

Premier members of airlines’ frequent-flier programs and those seated in premium cabins in the front of the plane are generally exempt from these surcharges.

Southwest is one major U.S. carrier that so far does not charge for up to two checked bags. The airline also does not charge for curbside baggage check-in, a real boon when a lot of gear is involved. Southwest flies to the ski gateways of Albuquerque, Boise, Denver, Manchester (NH), Salt Lake City and Reno/Tahoe. A change of planes might be necessary, but low fares and absence of surcharges make it worthwhile.

In Colorado, Steamboat and Vail Resorts’ four destinations (Beaver Creek, Breckenridge, Keystone and Vail, plus Heavenly, California) are helping skiers out with a kind of subsidy to take the sting out of the baggage surcharges.

There are still a couple of weeks to tap into Vail Resorts’ Baggage Bailout that gives a $50 credit to guests who book at least a four-day, four-night ski/snowboard vacation by December 1 through Vail Resorts Reservations (866-949-2573). The offer is valid for any qualifying vacation through April 20, the end of the ski season but most be booked by phone.

Steamboat’s Bags Fly Free offer nets a $25 American Express gift card from the resort per booked seat – plus 20 percent off on lift tickets and lodging on early-bird bookings of lift/lodging packages of at least four nights. The vacation had to have been booked though Steamboat Central Reservations (800-922-2722) by November 3, but with this ongoing economic slump, late-booking skiers hold out hope that this or another kind of rebate will be revived. When combined with the resort’s pioneering Kids Ski Free program (children under 12 ski and stay free one-on-one with a paying adult), Bags Fly Free can really pare the cost for a family.

If you will visit any of these resorts (again, Beaver Creek, Keystone, Breckenridge or Heavenly several times this winter) and don’t like to be bothered with your skis at all, consider a RentSkis.com season pass for unlimited ski/snowboard rental. The cost is $359 per adult ($459 for performance gear) and $199 for kids 13 and under.

Air Canada imposed and then rescinded checked-baggage fees and now allows each passenger to check two bags at no charge. Calgary and Vancouver are the major Canadian gateways to ski country. Others are Montreal, Quebec City, Edmonton, Kelowna and Canadian Rockies Airport (Cranbrook). Transatlantic still have a two-piece free baggage allowance, and international airlines also consider skis/boots as one piece, which can take some of the sting out of a European ski trip.

Some skiers are willing to pay more to avoid hassles, especially when flying to small mountain airports where planes are often weight-restricted. That means you might reach your destination, while some or all of your checked bags follow – often the next day.

Options include shipping bags via FedEx, UPS or a dedicated door-to-door luggage pickup and delivery service. Sports Express, which is headquartered in Durango, Colorado, has a particular affinity for travel to the mountains.

Yet another option is to rent skis. Ski Butlers is a ski/snowboard rental operation with a difference. The service delivers top-quality, well maintained skis and snowboards directly to your accommodation in 25 North American resorts, adjusts your boards to your boots and picks it up at the end of your trip. That saves both the expense of taking your own equipment the hassle of going to a rental shop, filling out forms and standing in line to get your gear -- and then at the end of your vacation, trekking back to the rental shop to return the equipment. Their slogan is "Never Stand in Line Again."

None of this, of course, is carved in granite. Domestic carriers, which don’t need to file their tariffs with regulatory agencies in advance, hit travelers over the head by imposing fees for checked baggage, and they might turn on a dime and change them too. With a soft travel market, the possibility of lower jet-fuel prices and sluggish reservations, they could drop the fees – or other resorts could follow Steamboat and the Vail family and offer a credit to ski vacationers. The only thing certain about the 2008-09 season is uncertainty.

Venus and Mars Discuss Ladies-Only Airplane Lavatories

Japan's ANA is introducing them on long flights. A good idea or not?

The current buzz in the air travel sector of the blogosphere is ANA's announcement that it would be converting one front-cabin lavatory on international flights for women only. Stuck at the Airport posted the news on "Ladies Only Lavs on All Nippon Airways" and commented, "Why a woman’s only lav? Women who have flown on long flights don’t even need to ask." Upgrade: Travel Better posted "Do We Really Need Women-Only Lavatories Inflight?" and noted, "Restrooms are scarce resources on aircraft. Taking one lavatory out of commission for half the people on the plane means a greater likelihood of people (men) milling about in the aisles, waiting for a free loo."

It should come as no surprise that a woman, Harriet Baskas, writes Stuck at the Airport and a man, Mark Ashley, writes Upgrade: Travel Better. Ashley asks for his readers' opinions on the subject. What's mine? I really have none, because I've very rarely flown in any cabin except the back of the plane.