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Mountain LayoutSnowboarding
After
snowboarders ripped through yards in little Wardner under the gondola,
its now illegal to ski or snowboard in town. But theres
plenty of space on the mountain.
Experts come for the steep glades of giant Ponderosa
pines and the open-boundary policy. Take the Wardner Peak Traverse
to an inspirational knob with a stupendous view of the Silver Valley
below. Some challenging black-diamond runs go back down to the Shaft
and Chair 4. Terrible Edith, off Noahs and under Chair 5,
is one of those runs that makes you feel like youre snowboarding
down a globe. The farther down you go, the steeper it gets, until
finally you see the cat track belowand thats only half-way
down.
For advanced riders, the run rating always depends
on snow conditions. On fresh powder days, take Silver Belt to Rendezvous
on the Kellogg side. For great thrills on the Wardner side, cut
down anywhere from the early section of the Wardner Peak Traverse.
The best riding on powder days is off the scree slopes between the
tops of Chairs 4 and 2. Pass Midway and keep going down through
the Shaft to the Chair 4 base. Day fog can cause night ice when
the thermometer dips. Until it softens up, stay on the groomed runs
(most of the Kellogg side). Centennial and Tamarack, both blues,
are safe bets on the Wardner side.
Silver Belt, from the triple Chair 2, is a wide
and terrific intermediate warm-up run. At the Junction, riders who
like bumps should turn down Saddle Back. To avoid the moguls, take
a hard left on the Cross Over Run to the Midway load station on
Chair 4 for a ride to Wardner Peak. From the top there are several
trails back to Midway.
Chairs 1, 2, 3, and 5 at the Mountain Haus base
area all serve beginner terrain. Below the lodge, Ross Run is a
wide beginner favorite, allowing crossover to Noahs and back
again, ending on Dawdler with a choice to return to Chair 5 or Chair
3.
Parks
and pipes
Silvers terrain park on Lower Quicksilver
has jumps, pools, wave walls and a halfpipe.
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