Worked late yesterday so I came in late to work this morning. Felt really good, kind of like I was sticking it back to the man for the man sticking it to me every so often. Jay Peak reciprocal mid-week pass was in effect for two runs before heading into work. Burke was empty, wow! Talk about a mountain that is under utilized mid-week, let alone on the weekends. Burke’s very friendly staff directed me to the correct desk for my ticket and I was advised (by a former Jay employee who I talked trees with) that Cave Man would be better than Throbulator (both recently opened). The employee informed me that he had been on the trail crew that maintained Cave Man over the Summer, pretty cool getting that type of information when both runs count!
Up the Sherburne Express and then up a rather cold Willoughby Quad to the summit. Two inches of dust on top of the groomed made the first couple turns on Big Dipper feel amazing. But I bared right onto Wilderness that had natural snow and really nice small and soft moguls with 2-4″ of light fluff on top of a packed base. I built up a lot of speed since the moguls were small and the snow was soft. Cruised some arcs down another groomer with 2″ of fluff en route to the Caveman entrance.
Caveman was freaking sweet! Two to six inches of powder with an awesome boot to knee deep drift halfway down. Not many folks have been in so far this season and no tracks yet this morning. Cover was respectable but still thin if you slammed on the breaks. So par for the course was going fast, not turning much, and chewing up the fluff. One of the best things about Burke’s glades are the natural contours, topographical oddities, rocks, and stumps left to build cool snow obstacles around. The obstacles made for great jumping around in the fluff. That run ended way too soon with the long traverse back to the Mid-Burke Lodge. As much as I fear for those glades and East Bowl, if they can retain the glades and character of the area while adding an East Bowl chair lift, I welcome not having to traverse back to Mid-Burke Lodge. It will also increase the amount of runs I take in that area as that runout and traverse limit the amount of laps I prefer to do into that runout.
Next run was Doug’s Drop to Little Cheif which was a blast. Doug’s is still pretty thin with natural snow and those natural contours, rolls, and rocks that make the trail interesting. I hurled my body off the natural bumps again into soft landings on a few inches of fluff covering a packed but thin base. Lower Doug’s was okay but I saw Little Cheif open and ducked in for a well covered short narrow slot through the trees which was particularly nice and provoked my only verbal exclamation of praise and delight for the morning. I cut back to Warren’s Way which had two inches of fluff over a groomed base, awesome carvering through the fluffy fresh powder even though only two inches were left after the groomers’ last pass.
Burke is skiing really nicely with almost all trails (except Fox’s Folly) open and about half of the glades. Burke continues to be the over looked gem of Vermont and every visit never fails to remind me of what makes Burke so special. With the new ownership, some things have changed, but guest services have only gotten better and people (guests and employees) are both as friendly as ever. Considering the poor start to the year and how Burke always misses the jackpot snow falls that hit the Northern Greens, Burke is in great shape, way better than I had expected.