13 June 2012 - 15:17 Woodward Tahoe Opens With Full Snow Park
FREESKIING IN THE SUMMER. It’s June after the worst and warmest winter in Tahoe’s recent history. Golf courses down the street from the biggest resorts were open through January. Squaw Valley’s legendary Fingers weren’t even skiable until late February. Yet just twenty minutes away at the top of Donner Summit, petite Boreal Mountain Resort with 500 feet of vertical hosted the Grand Opening of the new Woodward Tahoe with a lift-serviced terrain park counting fifteen features, a fifty-foot money booter, an airbag, and a perfectly-shaped 22-foot superpipe. The gods, as the saying goes, must be crazy.
The new Woodward Tahoe action sports camp opened Saturday, June 9, 2012, with a full snow park at Boreal Mountain Resort. Photo by Ryan Dunfee
It appears that terrain park construction is steadily reaching the levels of inventiveness and trickery that go down in those same parks. Boreal’s marketing director Jon Slaughter said the idea came about three years ago when Boreal’s staff returned from their May vacations and saw a copious amount of snow still on the ground in the first week of June. Boreal’s base elevation is 7,200 feet — a full 1,000 feet higher than Squaw’s base, helping the snow last longer. That year saw the first public summer shred day, with a park as good as any that had been built that winter. The following summer, after historic snowfalls totaled 770 inches during the 2010-’11 winter, Boreal hosted a summer camp June 20-24, with jibs, a two-jump line, a bag jump, and an 18-foot pipe. That summer, Boreal was open to the top.
The Woodward Tahoe halfpipe at Boreal Mountain Resort. Photo by Ryan Dunfee
In building a park for the inaugural summer snow camp of Woodward Tahoe, the newest branch of the growing franchise and featuring Woodward’s signature bunker stocked with foam pits and skate bowls and trampolines, the challenge was considerably greater.
Photo credit: Danny Kern
Despite the resort being the only one in Tahoe to eek out enough snowfall in the spring to equal their season average — 400 inches in Boreal’s case — natural snow wouldn’t do it alone. So, with good snowmaking temps, Boreal turned the snow guns on well into March, quadrupling their average annual snowmaking output from ten million gallons to forty million. Then, as soon as the mountain closed in April, the park crew led by veteran Eric Rosenwald spent one hundred hours in the snowcats farming the snow all the way to the dirt, and pushing it all in between the walls of Boreal’s 22-foot in-ground superpipe. Once the pipe had been filled deep enough to make a flat walk from wall to wall, the crew let the snow glaze over and freeze, utilizing the protective pipe walls as something of an incubator.
Photo credit: Danny Kern
Knowing that any cat work with the snow would accelerate the melting, Woodward Tahoe staff waited until last Monday — five days before Woodward Tahoe’s grand opening — to push the snow into an elaborate park. But after all that, doesn’t having a 22-foot superpipe, usually the most snow-intensive feature out there, seem a little optimistic?
“Our competition — Windells, High Cascade — they all have 22-foot superpipes,” Slaughter said. “So we had to have one.”
A skier at Woodward Tahoe slides a rail at Boreal. Photo by Danny Kern
While the halfpipe is only expected to last for another two weeks before being taken down to supplement the snow on the rest of the park, Slaughter expects Woodward Tahoe skiers and snowboarders, as well as a couple pros such as the Inspired Media crew, will be shredding real snow through the first week of July. Slaughter hopes that their performance this summer, along with the brand-new training facilities at The Bunker, will entice the best athletes to make Woodward Tahoe their summer training grounds in the lead up to the 2014 Olympics.
By Ryan Dunfee Teton Gravity Research | June 11th, 2012
Woodward Tahoe is Officially OPEN!
Monday, June 11th, 2012. The day started off early with the Boreal Summer Shred, where anyone with a lift ticket could access the Woodward Summer Terrain Park, including the 22’ superpipe, 2 jumps, Bag Jump and almost 20 rail features.
At 11:45 a large crowd gathered around the main entrance of The Bunker in anticipation of a traditional ribbon cutting. Boring. What they got instead was Nate Wessel charging out of the building on his BMX bike and bunny hopping right through the caution tape. By the time the tape hit the ground there were people lining up to be the first to step through the main entrance and really see what The Bunker has to offer.
Photo credit: Danny Kern
Oh, I did I mention athletes? Yeah, they were all there too – in force. Tanner Hall, Hannah Teter, Ryan Nyquist, Tony Hawk and his Birdhouse Crew, Sammy Carlson, Chas Goldemond, Mike Vallely, Mike “Rooftop, Escamilla, Todd Richards, Anthony Napolitan, Brandon Dosch, Drew Bezanson, Henrik Harlaut, Phil Casabon, and the twelve year old, Tom Schaar, who recently landed the first ever 1080 on a skateboard at Woodward West. Just to name a few...
Photo credit: Danny Kern
The next five hours consisted of an action sports induced blur that included public skate, BMX and trampoline sessions, pro demos on the Launch Pad, indoor skatepark, East Campus mini-ramp and the trampolines, tours of the facility and musical performances from several killer DJ’s and artists.
Photo credit: Danny Kern
The afternoon’s activities wrapped up around 5:30pm, giving us only a few short hours to clean the campus, get some sleep and prepare for the first day of camp the very next morning. Bring it on.