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EDITOR'S PICK
Two of Bill's grandkids enjoying Avalanche Lake in Glacier National Park. Photo by Marnie Schneider. Follow up news on past columns on gun control, the new "Screen Generation," road rage for cyclists, organized labor moving into conservation and Jim Range's legacy.

Travel & Outdoors

CHEAP & CLOSE

While Big Resorts Struggle, Echo Mountain Booms

Echo Mountain owner Gerald Petitt. David Frey photo.

What does Gerald Petitt know about the ski industry that other ski resort owners should learn?

In a year when resorts across the country watched their visitor numbers tumble, the Aspen resident who owns tiny Echo Mountain near Idaho Springs saw its numbers rise 30 percent, one of just three ski areas in the state to post gains.

What’s his secret? Partly it’s timing. Opened in March 2006, Echo Mountain is Colorado’s newest resort and it’s on the upswing. Partly it’s snow. At 10,500 feet, it gets plenty. Partly, it’s formula. Echo Mountain boasts being Denver’s “closest, cheapest and freshest ski and snowboard area,” a winning combination in a struggling economy.


OLYMPIC FEVER

Resorts Hope Olympics will be Golden for Snow Sports

Former Olympian Billy Kidd signs a poster for a fan at the Denver Ski & Snowboard Expo. David Frey photo.

Skiing and snowboarding aren’t exactly the TV spectacles that baseball and football are in this country, but every four years when the Winter Olympics roll around, they have their moment in the spotlight.

Resort operators hope the Olympics will inspire more people to get out on the slopes this winter, and more traveling skiers to avoid Vancouver’s crowds to come to ski areas south of the border.

“The Olympics coming up are going to bring so much attention to the sport of skiing and ski resorts,” says Billy Kidd, a former Olympian and director of skiing at Colorado’s Steamboat Mountain Resort, as he signs posters for fans wearing his trademark Stetson hat at the annual Denver Ski & Snowboard Expo.


More Travel & Outdoors

New Conflicts arise

Grizzlies On the Move, Back to the Wide-Open Prairie

A female grizzly bear and her three large cubs pause in a secluded meadow along Montana's Rocky Mountain Front near Dupuyer Creek. Biologists estimate that as many as 70 to 80 grizzlies may inhabit the high plains east of the Front. Photo courtesy of Mike Madel, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.

Montanans living along the winding Teton River, well east of the Rocky Mountain Front were quick to notice their new neighbor this summer. As early as the beginning of July, ranchers and other landowners along the prairie began intermittently spotting a solitary grizzly bear journeying east away from the mountains.

Residents of the rural grasslands, including Mike Madel, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Park’s Region 4 Grizzly Bear Management Specialist based in Choteau, were even more surprised in mid-July when members of a local ranching family captured photographs of the lone bear on their land along the Teton north of Fort Benton, ambling through open prairie nearly 100 miles from the mountains, where Ursus arctos horribilis is expected these days.

For Madel and other bear managers in the state, the bear’s arrival so far beyond the range of today’s grizzlies and into historic habitat was a revelation – and one that would be the first of many throughout the summer and fall. Madel, a 23-year veteran of working with grizzlies along the Front, called 2009 an “unprecedented” year for bears wandering back on to the prairie, and says the bears’ presence there is only likely to increase in coming years.

That means an entire population of humans will now have to learn how to cohabitate with grizzlies. While the plains are historically grizzly country, for many living there now, the return of the grizzly is – to put it lightly – a surprise. 


FOLLOWING MY SHOTS 2

Kids, Road Rage, Gun Laws, Union Conservationists, and More

Two of Bill's grandkids enjoying Avalanche Lake in Glacier National Park. Photo by Marnie Schneider.

I used to play basketball, but not too much since the day my coach took me aside, patted me on the head, and said, “Bill, you’re short, but you’re slow, and you really need to follow your shots.”

Well, that was a long time ago, and I admit to never doing anything about the shortness or the slowness, but I have learned to follow my shots. And sometimes, they’re worth following. When I write my columns, I frequently hope something happens, and guess what sometimes it does. Check out these updates to past columns.


'FLAT IS THE NEW UP'

Optimism Cautiously Creeps in for Ski Season

Shoppers crowd into the annual Denver Ski & Snowboard Expo. David Frey photo.

If you’re a ski resort operator, it’s hard to be optimistic when the country is suffering the effects of a grueling recession and about one in 10 Americans is jobless.

But when snow is dumping in the high country and across the room at the Colorado Convention Center people are walking out with armfuls of ski gear, optimism creeps in.

At the annual Denver Ski & Snowboard Expo last weekend, resort operators sounded notes of cautious optimism for the upcoming ski season. Many companies are seeing upticks in season pass sales, early bookings are on the upswing and after last year’s drop in skier numbers, any improvement would be welcome.


Skiing the world with Keely Kelleher

Winter’s Coming: Bust Out the Spandex!

Racing in Cortina, Italy

Welcome to my Snow Blog! First off I’d like to give you a quick intro on my skiing background. I grew up in the Gallatin Canyon fifteen miles from the Big Sky Ski Resort. Being raised in Big Sky, outdoor sports became my way of life. There weren’t many places to get into trouble as a youngster in Big Sky, yet I managed to find ways on the mountain. I would bomb down runs in Big Sky like Ambush or Snake Pit with ski patrollers close on my tail yelling, “slow down!”

Big Sky was so small twenty years ago there wasn’t even a daycare for my parents to be rid of me for a few hours. As a result Lone Peak became my babysitter. Instead of going to the mall, movies or prom with friends I went to the ski hill. I fell deeply in love with skiing, whether it be floating through powder, slicing through ice and corduroy or straight running steep pitches...it didn’t matter as long as I was skiing I was happy. I would throw fits if I had to leave Big Sky early. One Christmas when I was nine I cuddled all night with my brand new neon pink Atomic skis Santa had brought me. My obsession for skiing soon turned into ski racing. I wanted to go faster than anyone and being timed while skiing seemed like the perfect fit. 


Guest Opinion

Funding for Land Conservation Makes Good Economic Sense

Gary Berlin

Many of us will be afield this fall spending time in our favorite hunting and fishing spots. We will be enjoying the tradition of these field sports so important to our lives. But as you head out to the fields, rivers and streams we want you to be aware of an important tool for conservation of those areas we find near and dear to our hearts.

The United States Congress this fall will have a unique opportunity to secure full and dedicated funding of the Land and Water Conservation Fund, the principal source of federal dollars for protecting land in America’s national parks, forests, and other public landscapes and ensuring recreational opportunities for Americans in every state in the nation.

Since 1977, this fund has been authorized at $900 million per year. Most of the funds come from off-shore oil and gas leases, and are to be used for the purchase, from willing sellers, of land with outstanding natural, recreation, scenic, and other attributes, and for the development of outdoor recreation lands and facilities at the state and local level.


LAND BUY

Interior, Forest Service Buy Key Private Land Holdings

BLM photo

The Bureau of Land Management announced on Monday it is buying a key piece of private land in the midst of southwest Colorado’s Canyon of the Ancients National Monument believed to hold hundreds of undocumented prehistoric sites.

The purchase is of one of seven deals to buy 5,026 acres of private inholdings of conservation land within or next to public land in Colorado, Montana and Nevada.


WE NEED YOUR HELP WITH BURLINGTON NORTHERN SANTA FE

An Open Letter to Warren Buffett

What could be the best bike trail ever and how BNSF uses it--as a dump site for unused railcars. Photos by Bill Schneider

Dear Mr. Buffett:

I read with interest and glee about your recent acquisition of the majority ownership in Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF). Congratulations on buying a great company--investment wise, I should clarify, because BNSF is a not-so-great company on the public relations front.

Now that you own the railroad, you can change that bad image with one phone call and instantly make your new acquisition--and yourself, of course--a corporate saint out here in Montana.



Travel and Outdoors Editor

Bill Schneider

Former book publisher who for 30 years has been filling in the spaces between fishing trips, hikes and bike rides by writing books and articles about the great outdoors.

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