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Friday, January 13, 2006

Silverton ski resort best for the bold

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By

SILVERTON, Colo. -- As avalanche-control blasts echoed in a narrow valley walled off by towering, jagged whitecaps, a guide stretched one hand high above her head while cupping the other around her nose and mouth, creating an air pocket.

Skiers and snowboarders -- already required to strap on homing beacons and backpacks containing small shovels and extendable probes -- watched quietly as the guide demonstrated how to survive in a cascading mass of snow.

Precautions taken at Silverton Mountain render the threat of avalanches low. Yet little can be left to chance at this breathtakingly steep, rugged throwback of a ski area that bridges the thrills of the backcountry with some basic conveniences of conventional resorts.

"It's similar to helicopter skiing, except about $2,500 less," said Jonathan Hauger, a Colorado resident and repeat customer. "It's a little scary sometimes because it's really steep. You're looking down a 55-degree slope and you're thinking, 'I really can't make a mistake here, because if you lose it, you could go down like a pinball off the rocks.'"

Now in its fifth season, Silverton Mountain isn't for everyone, and it won't be for the foreseeable future because its young owners don't really want it to be.

Aaron Brill, 34, who founded the ski area with wife, Jen, 33, was tiring of typical American ski resorts, wondering why the United States had nothing resembling the New Zealand ski areas known as club fields, where real estate development is negligible, prices reasonable, runs uncrowded and untracked snow plentiful.

"I got tired of skiing at mountains that got tracked out in half a day," Mr. Brill recalled. "It's not only me who thinks that way, so why not provide good skiers with what they want?"

For now, guided skiing is required at Silverton, but that is expected to change in April. A new Bureau of Land Management permit will allow the Brills to let up to 475 skiers a day venture out on their own from the top of the mountain's lone chairlift.

Some areas that require hiking and have some of the most extreme terrain may have to be kept off-limits to those without guides, but there will still be plenty of open bowl and tree skiing from the lift, which covers 2,000 feet of vertical and drops skiers off at an elevation of 12,300 feet.

There's an additional 1,000 feet of vertical for those in good enough shape -- and in good enough form on the slopes -- to hike up. One drop-in is so steep and narrow that skiers must hold on to a rope as they slip down to an area wide enough to make a couple of hair-raising turns. The reward, of course, is a glorious expanse of deep and often fresh snow.

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