Silverton Mountain

Silverton
Location Silverton, Colorado, United States
Nearest city Silverton, Colorado
Coordinates 37°53′05″N 107°39′55″W / 37.88470°N 107.66529°W / 37.88470; -107.66529Coordinates: 37°53′05″N 107°39′55″W / 37.88470°N 107.66529°W / 37.88470; -107.66529
Top elevation 13,487 feet (4,111 m)
Base elevation 10,400 feet (3,200 m)
Skiable area 1819 acres
Lift system 1 total
Terrain parks 0
Snowfall 450-500 in
Website Silverton Mountain

Silverton Mountain is a ski resort near Silverton, Colorado USA that opened on January 19, 2002.[1] Popular with skiers, Silverton Mountain has one chairlift that carries skiers into in its terrain, which is for advanced and expert skiers. Avalanche gear is required to ride the lift at all times due to the unpatrolled and ungroomed nature of Silverton. In addition to Silverton Mountain's 1,819 acres of lift accessed skiing, Silverton also serves as a base area for over 22,000 acres of helicopter accessed skiing.[2] Also unique, Silverton is only open Thursday through Sunday from December through April.

Description

Silverton Mountain is located in San Juan County, just six miles from the historic mining town of Silverton, Colorado. The ski area is best known for adventure, powder and steep terrain. At 13,487 feet, it is North America’s highest and, according to its website, most expert ski area.[3]

The mountain boasts 1,819 acres of lift accessed terrain and over 22,000 acres of hike to and helicopter accessed terrain. There are no groomed runs and no cut trails. Skiers and snowboarders can access some of the best powder skiing in the world. Due to the high elevation of the San Juan Mountains and limited number of daily skiers the snow quality is typically very good.

During certain times of year the ski area only allows guided skiing. Guides are provided by Silverton Mountain. Each guided group of eight skiers or less can expect to typically hike between 5 and 45 minutes to access runs. However, some runs drop straight from the chair lift. Hiking 15 minutes to an hour allows access to large open bowls and steep, tight chutes.

Avalanche safety equipment is required to be worn by every skier and rider. Required equipment includes; avalanche beacon, shovel, and probe. These items are available for rent from Silverton Mountain. Reservations are highly recommended for guided skiing as the mountain does book up. Guides are also available during the unguided season.

On January 14, 2012 25-year-old Sydney Elizabeth Owens was skiing the "Riff" run with a guide when she fell and slid 1,500 feet down the mountain. Ski patrol attempted to revive her but she was pronounced dead when the ambulance arrived. This was her first run of the day and the fall was blamed on a binding failure.[4]

Heli Skiing

skiers standing on top of mountain
Dropping a little cornice on the way up to Silverton's iconic Billboard.

Heli skiing by the drop is unique to Silverton Mountain as no other operation in the lower 48 offers heli skiing by the drop. Silverton Mountain heli accessed terrain is strictly for advanced and expert skiers and boarders only. It is a great way to see more of the mountain. Other additional options include, but are not limited to: Heli Accessed Ski Touring, All Day Heli Skiing, The Private Ship and the Ultimate Heli Skiing Trip in Alaska’s Northern Chugach Range.

All helicopters are provided, staffed, insured, and maintained by third-party independent contractors.

Past and future

Silverton Mountain was founded by Aaron and Jen Brill and opened for business on January 19, 2002 with one double chair that had been purchased from Mommoth Mountain ski area. Known for lift accessed backcountry skiing, Silverton Mountain also maintains educational programs such as Avalanche Level I, Avalanche Level II, and Backcountry 101. The ski area is designed to have minimal impact on the environment. Based purely on skiing and not on development Silverton Mountain has no plans of building condos or high-speed chairlifts.[5] Voted Best of the West: Skiing in Colorado, Utah, California and Nevada for Extreme Terrain by USA Today.[6]

Television and movies

Bloomberg TV "Skiers Tempt Fate on Exclusive Expert-Only Mountain"

Warren Miller "Children of Winter"

Matchstick Productions "Attack of La Nina"

Teton Gravity Research "The Dream Factory"

Maps

References

  1. "Silverton's website". Retrieved 2012-02-08.
  2. "Silverton Mountain". Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  3. "Silverton's website". Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  4. Grenoble, Ryan (17 January 2012). "Sydney Elizabeth Owens Killed Skiing Silverton Mountain". huffingtonspost.com. The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2012-02-08.
  5. Blevins, Jason (4 August 2000). "Ski Bum Creating His Dream Slope". denverpost.com. The Denver Post. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  6. Dempsey, Jake (12 December 2006). "Best of the West: Skiing in Colo., Utah, Calif. and Nev.". usatoday30.usatoday.com. USA Today. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
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