By the time March rolled around, we were feeling fried. My business picked up, Adam was working a lot of overtime, and we had survived the childcare less month of February. Plain and simple...we needed to get away. We hadn't been on an airplane since before the pandemic and we were desperate to get away for any amount of time. While a lot of our friends headed south for sunshine, we planned an entirely different getaway. Our 2020 ski season was cut short due to the pandemic, and winter 2021... I was very very pregnant. And so, this was our first year back on skis. We bought the Epic Pass to make sure we got out there and used it and it worked. We spent four days in Colorado, three days skiing in the most perfect warm and sunny spring skiing conditions. It was long enough to recharge but not too long away from our one year old. It was the perfect amount of time to enjoy a ski weekend without going insanely overbudget on an expensive trip. We were so happy to come home to our baby and our dogs, and both agreed these were some of our best ski days yet. We returned home perfectly windburned and happily recharged.
Passes
For the 2021/2022 season, the Epic passes were discounted and we bought them early at the cheapest rate they are offered. We bought season passes for $534 each and when you think about how much lift tickets are these days, it's an insanely good deal. For local New England mountains, our pass covers Mount Snow, Okemo and Stowe. Due to a lack of babysitters (aka our parents being away the month of February) we didn't get as much local skiing in as we wanted. We skied two days at Okemo and three days in Colorado and this pass was key to us getting on the slopes. Not only was it a huge discount, but it forced us to get out there and use our pass. We probably wouldn't have booked this trip without it. Let's do the math.
Vail Day Pass (Weekend): $240
Beaver Creek Day Pass (Weekend): $240
Breckenridge Day Pass (Weekend): $220
Okemo Day Pass (Weekend): $130 (x2)
$960 dollars of lift tickets. Plus free wax/tune and discounts at all the cafeterias. Parents also told us that the savings on ski school and lodging make this pass the only affordable option. Even only skiing 5 days, we saved $430 each. I know the passes make the mountains a bit more crowded but they are truly an "affordable" way to ski all winter long. No shelling out $200 a day, one upfront cost and you get to skip the ticket lines and jump right on the lift.
Affordable Travel
If you know me, you know affordable travel is the way I like to travel and what I preach. It allows you to see so much more of the world when you stick to a budget on your trips. It's all fun and games to watch influencers share their gifted trip to the fancy lodge at the base of the ski mountain but it's unrealistic for most middle-class couples and families. This trip was affordable because we used our credit card points to book flights, utilized family for airport pickups and drop off, instead of a hotel we rented a studio with a kitchen on AirBnb to cook and prep meals, we used Turo car sharing for a rental car instead of an airport rental agency, and skied with our Epic discounted passes. We enjoyed an amazing ski trip at some of the best resorts out in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado without breaking the bank.
If you want to enjoy a trip without shelling out money left and right, avoid a hotel and find something on Airbnb with a kitchen. The food cost of a trip is always more significant than anyone budgets for. If you had to eat out three meals a day, you are easily going to spend over $100 a day on food, and that's being conservative. By making breakfast most mornings and making lunch every day, we avoided busy lodges, unhealthy options, and expensive mountain meals. I had hardboiled eggs and yogurt for the morning, granola bars for snacks, and sandwiches packed in my ski bag every day we skied. No waiting for tables or for food, we enjoyed the perfect spring weather outside with a view every day for lunch. We even made dinner at the Airbnb one night and made a pre-dinner cheese plate on our last night. When we wanted to splurge on vacation, we stopped in the lodge for a hot cocoa or grabbed an appetizer at a restaurant after skiing.
Buying our Epic passes early in the season, saving credit card points for flights and using Turo for a car rental also saved us hundreds of dollars. If you truly want to stick to a budget, pack some extra patience and utilize the free shuttles from town for parking (parking at all of the mountains really adds up). Avoid the shops and really prioritize where you want to spend your money.
Know Before You Go
Getting There
Train to downtown Denver
Car Sharing - Turo
Getting to the Mountains
The Mountains
Staying in Frisco
The Resorts - Overview
Vail
Vail gave me one of my top 3 ski days to date. It snowed the night before and we hit the slopes on an abnormally quiet Friday, thanks to post St. Paddy's Day celebrations and March Madness. The front side of Vail is fine but the Legendary Back Bowls of Vail are exactly that. They are open and filled with soft powdery snow. There is some amazing tree skiing and the views are incredible as you make your way through this insane topography. China Bowl did not disappoint and we both agreed Vail was our favorite. The village of Vail is also as quaint as can be and you can come to Colorado to experience a "European village with bavarian flair". We parked at one of the lots that was a 5-10 minute walk to the base. See my 2019 post about the mountain.
Mountain Stats
Total Skiable Terrain: 5,317 Acres (2,141 H)Front Side: 1,655 Acres
Back Bowls: 3,017 Acres
Blue Sky Basin: 645 Acres
Trails: 195 Lifts: 31
Longest Run: Riva Ridge - 4 miles (6.4 km)
Average Annual Snowfall: 354 inches (899 cm)
Parking
Vail Village and Lionshead: $30Free satellite parking through town with a transit option (details here)
Beaver Creek
Beaver Creek had me at escalators and Cookie Hour. It has that Deer Valley uppity vibe and as you walk by the Ritz Carlton and the insane mega-mansions that lay at the end of "homeowner access only" trails. Beaver Creek is big and on a Saturday, we never waited in lift lines (single line is always helpful). We started out the day on the western side of the mountain by the Birds of Prey lift. After some exhausting double black bumps, we made our way to the middle of the mountain and farther east to my favorite spot on the mountain. Bachelor Gulch and Arrowhead were quiet but full of some fun blues and blacks. It's tucked away down mega-mansions lane and it's a lovely place to ski for the day. Make your way back to Lift 6 for Cookie time at 3pm. Chefs in white coats come out with warm freshly baked chocolate chip cookies and it was the best surprise on my first trip to BC. It's the new standard for how I want to end every ski day, waistline be damned. See my 2019 post about the mountain.
Mountain Stats
Base Elevation: 8,100 ft (2,469 m)Summit Elevation: 11,440 ft (3,488 m)
Vertical Rise: 3,340 ft (1,018 m)
Number of Trails: 167
Number of Lifts: 24
Average Annual Snowfall: 325 in (826 cm)
Skiable Acreage: 2,082 acres (843 hectares)
Longest Run: Centennial at 2.75 miles (4.43 km)
Parking
We parked in the lower lots (the Elk Lot, the on-mountain lots were full) and took the shuttle up to the base area.Bear Lot and Elk Lot are placed at the resort’s eastern and western entrances - a free shuttle runs you to the baselodge. They offer 1 hour of free parking and a flat daily parking rate of only $10 (free after 1).
Villa Montane Garage and Ford Hall Parking Garage (7 AM to 10 PM). They are just steps from the Centennial Express Lift $35 for 4+ hours (up to 3 hours free if arriving after 3pm)
Free - village of Avon and take a shuttle in from town (more info here).
Breckenridge
We loved Peak 6. It's a fun little area on the eastern edge of the mountain, mostly blues, a few black runs. It's quiet with wide open bowls on the top and some fun flowy steep sections with a few options to swing through glades or bumps. Breckenridge has a lot of really fun fast blue runs but beware, you will have to share with the inexperienced skiers. You can also take the T-Bar to ski the open bowls and the peaks also have a "hike to" section where you can surely beat the crowds and beginners if you are willing to work for it. If you want to escape the crowds and stay within lift access, head to Peak 10 where single and double black only terrain keeps this area quiet and beginner free. The Gondola Lot is the easiest way to get to the mountain. A gondola takes you from the parking lot right up to a few different stops on the mountain. Don't make the mistake we did - they are sneaky about requiring you to pay for parking online BEFORE you head up the mountain (there is no tollhouse and we didn't see any signs requiring this strange "pay before you ski but there's no place to pay" option.
Mountain Stats
Total Ski/Ride Terrain: 2,908 acres / 1,177 hectaresBase Elevation: 9,600 feet / 2,926 meters
Summit Elevation: 12,998 feet / 3,963 meters
Vertical Rise: 3,398 feet / 1,036 meters
Longest Trail: Four O’Clock – 3.5 miles / 5.6 kilometers
Operating Since December 16, 1961
Parking
Stables (walk to peak 7 or 8) $30/$35
F Lot (walk to Peak 9): $40/$45
Where We Ate
We packed lunch every day for the mountain, made dinner one night, and made breakfast two mornings. Here is where we ate the rest of the time.Happy Skiing,
Katie Wanders
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