Closed Runs
It's a tale of two worlds. The
age-old story of progress versus
tradition, with the inevitable end—
convenience wins out. The old couldn’t keep
up, not because it couldn’t compete, but
rather because of forces outside its control—
technology, economics, geography, climate,
political clout or perhaps a little of all of
these. Beyond the politicians, business people
and weather, we skiers played our part.
We chanted the “bigger is better” mantra,
marvelling at faster lifts, greater access,
amenity-laden slopeside condos and busier,
bustling ski runs. We traded the familiar for
the fl ashy, the local for the transnational. In
short, we abandoned the family-run ski hill
for the big-business four-season resort. It
seemed normal, progressive. A no-brainer.
No surprise we end up with fewer choices,
and even fewer ski experiences. To make up
for the loss of ski areas we rejuvenated the
sport with blades, twintips and park skiing.
And skiing was getting better we were
assured. Wherever we turned, the numbers
and graphs were jumping. And sure enough,
the slope-scene matched the prognostics—
every weekend they were packed with record
skier-visits and, of course, greater industry
profi ts. Soon sport engineers made quicker
carving skis so we could avoid the new traffi c.
Yes, developers had succeeded in moving
the cities north. Their genius most recently
brought urban skateboard parks under the hail
of snowmaking machines.
Yet, amid the fanfare a red fl ag went up, at
least for me. Somewhere between mortgaging
my home to pay for a skiing addiction and a
sickening crash with a suicidal snowboarder,
I asked myself that lingering question: What
happened to the ski experience of yore?
Predictably, the technocrats rattled off in
millennial ski-speak—poor skier density and
low lift capacity. Tsk tsk, they scolded me.
If I was irreverent enough to ask, I could go
ahead and buy isolation on helicopters. But
I was barely elbowing my way through the
$75-a-day lift lines.
All along the way, the notion stuck in my
head: In this global world of skiing, where
does the local fi t? Were there still ski areas
where people knew my name, where I could
get a home-cooked meal, and where I could
fi nd the quintessential peace-and-quiet
experience of the outdoors combined with
the joy of carving turns far from the madding
crowd?
With a little research, I found out that
many of these places really haven’t gone
anywhere. In fact, it was I who left. Turns out
the counter corporate ski culture revolution
has been going on for decades—just don’t
let the power suits know that it’s catching
on. At the core of it are long-time skiers who
have been working with axe, saw and lobby
to bring back the turns of yesteryear all along
forgotten Route 117 in Montreal’s Laurentian
backcountry.
My introduction begins the minute I veer
northeast off the Laurentian Autoroute at
the Shawbridge interchange. I squeeze onto
the antiquated bridge that leads across the
Simon River and onto the raunchier Hwy 117.
I’ve already passed Foster’s legendary Big Hill
50 and the lesson can’t be clearer. Once the
most quintessential of Québecois scenes and
home to the first-ever mechanical ski lift in
North America, Big Hill 50’s celebrated historic
past is dwarfed by gaudy, vinyl-sided hillside
condos and defaced by the largest McDonald’s
in the world outside of Moscow.
Despite the glaring injustice, something
else makes me chuckle. And that’s the image
of skiers decades ago, fresh from the train,
grinning maniacally, clenching hell-bent
onto that rope tow with tar-covered mitts.
The tow, powered by an ancient Dodge on
blocks, launched skiers up that hill in delirious
wintertime pleasure. It’s the same spirit that
fuels the people I’m about to meet.
Rejoining the 117, the north’s former
bloodline, brings back the depression. Once
full of bustling little cabins and lodges,
the highway is now lined with abandoned
restaurants and empty lots. The ancient rails
of the former P’tit Train du Nord poke through
the earth like scars. The place is an economic
backwater. To bring some needed jobs to
the area, the government fitfully introduced
the only lasting enterprise in the modern
economy—a juvenile detention centre. I drive
by Shawbridge’s infamous home for troubled
young men. Scenes of its history have been so
harrowing that to erase their association to it,
the villagers changed the name of their town
to Prévost.
This is just one of many changes that
the Laurentians have seen since postwar
promoters heralded the area “a little
Switzerland” to entice migrating settlers to
clear the land and open a dairy industry.
The settlers came, chopped down the forests
and put up their farms. But there was little
prosperity in the soil for the farmer. The next
wave of migrants was foresters. But once they
knocked down the rest of the trees, there was
nothing worth sticking around for. However,
despite the hardships, the word was out. The
Laurentians, though fallow for settlers, was
ripe for tourists and entrepreneurs. And they
came seeking adventure.
Adventure came in the form of the
great outdoors. And a group of legendary
débrouillards, or creators, were being born
in the hills. Moise Paquette invented the
ultimate winter ride—a heart-stopping
skijore behind a wingless warplane on skis
throttling thrill-seekers at up to an icy 100
kph over frozen Lac des Sables. Perhaps more
enduringly, though, it was the mechanized
ski tow that really put the Laurentians on
the map. Once Alex Foster got his Dodge
winterized and the towline tightly around
its rear wheel, the ski industry took off not
only here, but in the rest of North America.
Locally, virtually every existing hill along the
stretch of the P’tit Train’s tracks ran a tow up
its summit. Demand for access to the region
became so great that in 1959 Premier Duplesis
kicked in, creating Quebec’s first Autoroute—
Hwy 117.
These were the decades of the family-run
ski area. A cottage industry based on the idea
that the owners managed everything—the
lifts, the mechanics, the home-cooked meals
and the beds for those who were going to stay
the weekend and those who got injured or fell
sick. The concept of ski club was nurtured and
the Penguins, the McGill Red Birds and the
Laurentian Club began building their legacies.
In the golden age, going “up north” was like
coming home.
Perhaps there was no other person that so
embodied this vision so much as Jackrabbit
Johannsen, the legendary Norwegian who
helped tie the dreams of those Laurentian
locals with skiers in the city. Working night
and day, he blazed a labyrinth of trails and
people-based networks that fanned out from
the P’tit Train to the chalets and ski areas of
the Laurentians.
But with the birth of the car craze,
money—big money—got in the way.
Franchises burst on the scene and
development rapidly pushed north. By
the mid-1970s, the new Laurentian mega
autoroute, Hwy 15, was paved and the Little
Train, the diminutive Autoroute 117 and the
ski areas they serviced were abandoned. In
one particularly ill-fated decision, Hwy 15
swerved right through a wild area known as
Treasure Valley, known for its bucolic beauty.
Blindsided, the tourists veered northwest with
the times. Here, on the speedier autoroute,
fortunes were made. Hwy 15 became the
home of empires, while the 117 dwindled into
disrepair. The tourists were swept up in the
excitement of the corporate bonanza, and they
never looked back.
As I edge into the quaint village of Val
David, slowing for a couple of cyclists crossing
the bike path that has taken over the former
rails of the P’tit Train, I have to ponder the
new reality. It’s been more than 130 years
since the rails brought their first load of
passengers. Now, it is cyclists, joggers and
families. The word on the street is come
winter the town will come alive with a new
type of skier, not surprisingly it is the oldest
kind there is: the telemarker.
********************************************
Martin Silverstone looks at me quizzically
through a pair of duct-taped glasses perched
implausibly on a multiple-broken nose. When
not gesticulating, his gnarly working-man
hands battle with gravity, pushing those
battered lenses back again and again onto his
schnozzle. One of the key figures to spearhead
this back-to-the-land skier movement for
the past decade or so, the charismatic, saltand-
pepper-haired Montreal writer and editor
knows the region’s geography and people like
few other. He has spent his entire life running
wild through the local mountainsides.
Meeting me at the foot of Mont Césaire, he
invites me for fresh out-of-the-backpack coffee
and St. Viateur bagels. We cross Jackrabbit’s
legendary Gillespie Trail and walk together
toward the rusted, long-abandoned, yellow
T-bar that remains half-hidden by the abundant
orange hues of the mountain’s fall foliage.
“Used to be 35 trails up here.” Marty smiles,
fingering his fragile glasses back onto his
muzzle again. Then he slurps his coffee down
and winks. “Now there are dozens more.”
The mystery is solved as we walk upward.
Through Marty’s animated caffeine-induced
discussion, we come across a small army of
volunteers and friends working on their secret
spots on the hillside, handsaws and clippers in
hand. Each one of them is managing his own
personal trail. “It’s heresy to let anyone know
about this,” he states. “Your article will have
them lynching me from one of the ancient
T-bar towers.”
Uh-oh, I didn’t realize I had to protect my
sources, but it is true that a lot of backcountry
aficionados are particular about protecting
their stashes. Still, Marty and I go way back—
old friends who have jumped off a cliff or two
together (mostly unintentionally) and, besides,
I have promised only to follow the rules. For
starters, the trail clearers know not to cut any
live trees. Rather, they only move deadfall
and dangerous underbrush out of the way to
protect the skiers. While the lines go from
beginner to suicide, the goal for each of the
volunteers is the same—a real family skiing
experience that pushes their personal limits
and increases their and others’ access to the
great wild north. As for the price of skiing, it’s
not costing anyone a cent. To get in on it, all
you need is a little pre-season sweat and grime
along with a frosty wintertime skin up.
As we reach the peak, I focus back on
tireless Marty, who hasn’t stopped talking
since we met. “It only gets better,” he says
overlooking the golden panorama. “Every year
more trees grow back, and that just makes
the lines tighter, more exciting.” And then he
gets serious. Looking south over the valley,
he says this year may be the most interesting
of recent history. After years of speculation
by developers who had seen the area as prime
for real estate, locals successfully lobbied the
neighbouring municipalities to expropriate the
area this past April into the giant, 500-hectare
Parc régional Dufresne, which is being billed
as one of the premier places in Quebec for the
backcountry experience.
But the threat is far from over. Just south,
in the town of Prévost, developers are pushing
to take over the hillsides there, too. The stakes
are high, with hundreds of hectares of land and
innumerable trails in the balance. No doubt
Marty and his army of workers will find their
way out there, too.
When asked why he dedicates so much
effort to keep these old ski areas open to
the public, he shrugs in his nonchalant way.
“It’s all about seeing the forest for the trees.”
Then he looks at me with his eyes shining and
says, “And skiing some of the best fall lines of
eastern Canada.”
Canadian Ski Areas: RIP
Here are some of the names of the ski
areas to have closed their doors across
Canada. Help Ski Canada remember them
and others by sending in your stories and
photos to mailto:info@skicanadamag.com
British Columbia
108 Ranch Resort, 100 Mile House
Arrowsmith Mt. Recreation, Port Alberni
Azu Ski Village, Mackenzie
(now Powder King Mountain Resort)
Diamond Head Chalets, Squamish
Forbidden Plateau, Courtenay
Fort St. James Ski Club
Fort St. John Ski Club
Golden Ski Hill
(became Whitetooth and now Kicking Horse)
Grandview Ski Acres, Kamloops
Kitsumkalum Ski Area, Terrace
(lifts moved to Shames Mountain)
Kokanee Alpine Skiing, Winlaw
Lardeau Valley Ski Club, Meadow Creek
Last Mountain Ski Resort, Westbank
(now Crystal Mountain)
Lumby & District Ski Association
Lytton Ski Club
Mica Creek Ski Club
Morning Mountain Ski Area, Nelson
Mount Hayes Recreation Area, Prince Rupert
Radium Recreation
Rainbow Ski Village, Whistler
Sicamous Ski Club
Silver Tip Development, Chilliwack
Ski Loos, McBride
Sky Glider Recreation, Vancouver
Snow Birds Lift Society, Nanaimo
Sunshine Valley Development, Vancouver
Tillicum Valley, Vernon
Timberland Ski Club, Williams Lake
Tod Mountain, Kamloops (now Sun Peaks Resort)
Valhalla Mountain Touring, New Denver
White Recreation, Vancouver
Yelohed Recreation Area, Prince George
Alberta
Cypress Skiers Association, Medicine Hat
(now Hidden Valley)
Darwell Ski Hill, Penhold
Fortress Mountain Resort, Calgary (Kananaskis)
Lake Eden Resort, Edmonton
Pigeon Mountain, Canmore
Saskatchewan
Minatinas Ski Resort, Domrey
Manitoba
Birch Ski Area, Winnipeg
Snow Valley, Roseisle
Ontario
Big Thunder, Thunder Bay (first ski jump in Canada)
Britannia, Lake of Bays
Candy Mountain, Thunder Bay
Carlington Ski Hill, Ottawa
Cedar Grove, Huntsville
Chedoke, Hamilton
Curlew, Huntsville
Dacre Heights, Renfrew
Dome, Ottawa
Don Valley Ski Club, Toronto
High Park, Toronto
(where the Toronto Ski Club started)
Honey Pot, Toronto
King Valley, King City
King’s Forest, Hamilton
Limber Lost, Huntsville
Mt. Antoine, Mattawa
Mt. McKay, Thunder Bay
Muskoka Sands, Gravenhurst
Old Smokey, Beaver Valley
Omemee Ski Club, Bethany
Pinnacle, Alton
Rainbow Ridge, Bracebridge
Rockcliffe, Ottawa
Ski and Snowboard Ranch, Bethany
(originally called Bethany Ski Club
and then Kawartha Peaks)
Summit, Toronto
Sunridge, Huntsville
Tally-ho Winter Park, Huntsville
Valley Schuss, Hockley Valley
Quebec
Beaver Lake Ski Tow, Montréal
Big Hill 50, Laurentians
Centre de Ski Lac Carling, Pine Hill
Centre de ski St-Georges, Chaudière-Appalaches
Centre de ski Val d’Or, Abitibi-Témiscamingue
Hill 68, Laurentians (now part of St. Sauveur)
Hill 69, Laurentians (now part of St. Sauveur)
Hill 70, Laurentians (now part of St. Sauveur)
Hill 71, Laurentians (now part of St. Sauveur)
Hill 72, Laurentians (now part of St. Sauveur)
Mont Alouette, Laurentians
Mont Castor, Laurentians
Mont Césaire , Laurentians
Mont Christie, Laurentians
Mont Pontbriand, Rawdon
Mont Sainte-Agathe
Mont Sauvage, Laurentians
Mont Snow, Rawdon
St. Jerome, Laurentians
Station touristique La Crapaudière, Chaudière-
Appalaches
Sun Valley, Laurentians
Université de Montréal Ski Tow, Montréal
Vallée Taconique, Gaspésie
Nova Scotia
Cape Smokey (now Keltic Lodge)