
Mountain LayoutSnowboarding
Crested
Butte as a town harbors no prejudice against those who approach
the world a little differentlyand that reflects in its attitude
toward snowboarders. Welcome. Now strap in and go for a ride. Just make sure to read the notes about cliffs in the mountain
layout section, and find a local or guide to take you into the
Extreme Limits the first couple of times.
A
great feature about Crested Butte is the humongous amount of big
air you can find, if you're into it. Anywhere experts go off the
T-bars is good. The farther out you traverse from the top of these
lifts, the less likely you are to see people. The downside is that
if you want to do laps all the way to the bottom, it'll take you
three or four lifts (depending on your destination) to get back
to the top. Of course, this also helps preserve untracked snow.
An
excellent choice for true hardcores is the 40-degree Headwall. Once
again, the farther you traverse, the less likely you are to cross
tracks. But don't go out here if you are not really a seasoned
expert. The 12-inch-by-12-inch sign that reads "Cliff Area"
actually means that there is a 400-foot-long cliff band below you.
If Teocalli Bowl is open, go there immediately.
Off
of Silver Queen, traverse to the phenomenally good west-facing chutes.
Banana, Peel and Sunset Ridge are the places to be on a spring day,
when there's lots of sun and conditions are soft.
Silver
Queen takes advanced riders to some of the steeper groomed black
runs in the state. Intermediates will have a ball in Paradise Bowl
and on the long cruisers that start at the top of Paradise Express
and dump you out at the base of the East River Lift. Be ready to
feel weak in the legs by the time you reach the bottom. Beginners
also have a great selection of trails, most just off the Red Lady
Express. But don't skip the midmountain cabin and runs off Painter
Boy Lift.
Flats are unavoidable here, as they are most everywhere. The really annoying one, though, is returning to the Red Lady Express after riding Peak, Peel, Banana, Funnel and Forest. Keep your speed or you'll get stuck on a heinous flat. It's—yes—a quarter-mile long.
You'll also have to hike out from the Extreme Limits and Teocalli
Bowl.
Parks
and pipes
As if the steeps and cliffs aren't enough, Crested Butte has an
awesome advanced park along the lower Canaan run. The Canaan Terrain
Park, above the Paradise warming house, is long, with good sequences of tabletops, rails and kickers—including
a 55-foot monster—that
allow for creativity. The wall ride is where you'll really find
out just how good you are. Because the park's beneath the Paradise
lift, it's the perfect place to collect a bunch of cheers—or jeers—depending
on your style.
Crested
Butte's 420-foot-long superpipe is also off the Paradise chairlift
on Forest Queen. The Zaugg cuts it to be 55 feet wide and 18 feet
high with a slope of 17 degrees.
Painter Boy Park at the top of Painter Boy offers solace to those who aren't ready to jump in with the big contenders, -though you'll see some kid riders and skiers here who
are pretty hot. Kids as well as adults come here to ride the smaller
features and get a feel for tabletops, rail slides and the minipipe.
Photos courtesy of Crested Butte
Mountain Resort
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