Model Ski Towns
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photo: Henry Georgi at Fernie BC |
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When people conjure images
of a ski town, it would be
hard to come up with an
archetype better than that provided by
the Kootenays, specifically the towns
of Rossland, Nelson and Fernie.
Nestled in the mountains, these towns
are characterized by heritage houses
and buildings that seem to mimic the
landscape with their steep-sided roofs
and angles. Locally owned businesses
appear to dominate over big chains
and franchises. Small yet somehow
worldly, these places buzz with a kind
of youthful energy and exuberance
that is contagious. Visit once, and something makes you want to go back home,
sell the farm, load up the bikes, boards and boats and return for good.
High-paid ski village planners could go bankrupt trying to design and build a
resort that even comes close to capturing this quintessentially earthy and funky
vibe. No offence to ski resorts, but although it’s possible to attempt to replicate
the physical appearance, perhaps even build character villages that look more
authentic than a real heritage town (is that possible?), it’s not possible to create
a corporate-sponsored synthetic scene that rivals what oozes naturally from the
pores of the Kootenay landscape and culture. At the end of the day, a “planned”
resort town will always feel, well, planned.
Perhaps the answer to this riddle, the secret to the Kootenays’s unassuming
appeal, is the fact that these places were fully functioning communities before
they were ski towns. Their origins are inextricably bound to the colourful mining
history of the region that spurred railway tracks to be laid down, towns to be
built and many a beer or whisky to be downed in the local saloons and brothels
by adventurers, ne’er do wells and a host of other characters who all sought golddusted
dreams in this remote corner of B.C.
The Kootenays isn’t a truck stop. It isn’t truly on the way to anywhere. There are
no international airports within easy striking distance, and to get there you have to
plan your trip accordingly. Even though it isn’t really all that isolated anymore, the
Kootenays still feels that way, which is probably why people who live there identify
so strongly with their geography. When someone says they’re from the Kootenays, it
means something more than an address on an envelope. It is as much a lifestyle as it
is a place. Today, the Kootenays still attracts adventurers, and the casual, fun-loving
attitude of the locals refl ects the region’s colourful heritage.
Mining has long since taken a back seat to tourism in the Kootenays, and
dreamers of a different sort are coming here—people seeking gold-dusted dreams of
a free, unfettered lifestyle carved from mountains blessed with some of the tastiest
snow on the planet. Do a quick visual survey from the non high-speed chairlifts and
you’ll quickly notice that per capita there are more guys and gals who rip—be it on
bikes, boards, boats or otherwise—than pretty much anywhere else.
Still the Kootenays can get named to only so many outdoor magazine top-10
lists before the world takes notice. Consequently, it’s official—these towns have
been discovered and all three are experiencing their share of growing pains as real
estate is priced beyond reach of the average avowed ski bum.
After an exhaustive survey of photographers, writers and ski movie stars, we’ve
come up with an unabashedly biased, spiritually rather than scientifi cally driven
guide to the curious Zeitgeist of Kootenay ski towns. Feel free to disregard this
guide and explore on your own. In fact, we encourage it.
ROSSLAND
Tucked among the rounded summits of the
southern Monashees, Rossland is worlds away
from the nearby smelter town of Trail on the
banks of the Columbia River. This consummate
skier’s town seems to have been perpetually
teetering on the edge of big change. This is
where unleashed husky-lab mutts outnumber
humans, where black-and-white photos of the
town’s favourite daughter, Nancy Greene, still
hang wistfully on the walls of the timeless
Rafter’s Lounge at the base of the ski area,
and where having a girlfriend or boyfriend
who doesn’t ski, board and ride a mountain
bike means certain relationship implosion.
Winter Night Diversions Strap on your rock boards and crank some turns beneath the
streetlights on Rossland’s steep streets after a
fresh dump of snow.
Eats: The cozy confines on 2nd Avenue have
housed numerous eateries over the years,
but Idgies Restaurant has become a fixture,
searing a mean steak as well as preparing
appetizing daily specials. When the right stars
are in alignment, the owners set up a stage for
live blues and jazz.
Lounging: Rossland remains a fairly sleepy
place on the after-dark side of the equation,
with people more often than not opting for
kitchen parties with guitars than a night
out on the town. However, Nowhere Special
on Columbia Street is a new offering on the
evening scene that brings a uniquely urban
aesthetic to this mountain mecca, playing host
to local and out-of-town DJs and bands. It’s a
chill place to hang out and sip a cold microbrew.
Best run to finish the day: Red Mountain
is legendary for its vertical and fall-line
skiing—terrain that has helped hone the skills
of more than one Canadian skiing legend. For
afternoon views and moderately steep tree
skiing that feels off-piste but is well within
bounds, it’s hard to beat Han’s Run, The
Orchards or Powder Fields for a leg burner.
The Buzz: Eventually someone was going
to survey Red’s expansive terrain and the
aesthetic town at its foot and say, “Hey,
there’s some money to be made here.”
Locals are watching with trepidation as the
mountain becomes the personal business
experiment of San Diego entrepreneur Howard
Katkov. So far real estate development seems
to be coming long before lift upgrades.
That means Red and Granite are still in
the dark ages when it comes to on-hill
infrastructure—a happy state-of-affairs for
riders with duct tape holding their ski pants
together, but disconcerting for high-speed
city types who have only ridden bubble
lifts and gondolas.
FERNIE
Fernie, collected on a bend in the Elk River
where it’s joined by tributaries Coal, Lizard and
Fairy creeks, was founded on coal mining—
and they’re still digging the stuff out of
the Rocky Mountains near the B.C.-Alberta
border. These days, town residents are more
interested in what happens on rather than
inside the mountains. The most accessible
of the Kootenay communities to a major
Canuck metropolis, Fernie would be annexed
by Alberta if those Hummer-driving oil sheiks
could have their way. Though the nouveaux
riches of wild rose country are doing their best
to turn this east Kootenay outdoor hub into
a recreational suburb of Calgary, thankfully
Fernie still retains its soulful vibe.
Whetting your Whistle: The Central,
in the 100-year-old Grand Central Hotel,
has everything you need for slaking a
thirst and rubbing elbows with the locals:
great food, pool tables, live music and
a crowd that doesn’t make you feel as if
your next stop is the Canada Pension Plan.
Chowing down: Yamagoya Sushi brings
in top-shelf fresh fish and seafood, and
puts creativity and imagination into its
roster of rolls. It’s often busy and doesn’t
take reservations so be prepared to wait
for a table. You can always head across
the street for a pint while you wait.
Best run to finish the day: If I tell
you, I’ll have to kill you. The best things
in life take a little effort to acquire. The
run Steep and Deep has long fall-line
skiing with perfect pitch where the fresh
pow tends to stick around a little longer.
Chalk that up to the required 10-minute
traverse across Cedar Bowl onto Snake
Ridge to get there. A high avalanche
hazard can keep Cedar Bowl closed for
days on end, meaning snow has time to
accumulate. Tourists—meaning you—are
usually put off by the hike, therefore can’t
be bothered heading out to Steep and
Deep to soil the best lines.
The Buzz: One word—“Calgi-
Ferniecation.” Disposable income
flooding across the border from Alberta’s
booming economy is having a profound
impact on the local housing and
development picture. Great if you’re a
builder, not so great if you’re a liftee
looking for a place to park your quiver
for the winter, which has prompted the
city to start developing an “affordable
and attainable housing strategy.”
NELSON
Nestled on the shores of Kootenay Lake and
hemmed in by lushly forested mountains,
Nelson is a place where provincial court
judges need degrees in horticulture and
hydroponics to effectively carry out their
judiciary duties, and where you can take
lessons in tabla drumming, go ski touring
then groove to a DJ from San Francisco all in
one fulfilling spring day.
Eats: Not only has Nelson evolved into a
recreational nirvana, it’s also become a mosaic
of multiculturalism that puts most towns
twice its size to shame. Not surprisingly, this
is reflected in local cuisine. Baba’s Indian
Cuisine on Baker Street brings an authentic
slice of the great Indian subcontinent to the
Kootenays with its sumptuous curries. Don’t
miss all-you-can-eat nights.
Beverages: Nelson Brewing Company’s After
Dark is like the Kootenays in a bottle—
organic, rich in taste and flavour, and a little
cheeky.
Best run to finish the day: As one writer
recently stated, Whitewater is essentially a
portal to the backcountry—meaning it’s more
renowned for the off-piste access its lifts
provide than the in-bounds shredding. Ride
the Silver King Chair and then follow the short
bootpack trail to the top of the wooded ridge
above the lift to enjoy the afternoon sun
before returning to the lodge via Nugget.
Check for avalanche conditions or closures and
grab your touring gear before heading up the
T-bar and hiking to the top. This steep fallline
run of off-piste tree and chute skiing spits
you onto the road, where your friends will be
waiting with cold beer in a warm truck.
Birthday suit Bathing: Most visitors head
to Ainsworth Hot Springs for a soak in the
mineral pools. A worthy après-ski endeavour,
indeed, but if you prefer your hot springs
without the gift shop, make it a day trip and
travel up Slocan Valley then north to Nakusp
to explore the hidden treasures of Halfway
and St. Lyon hot springs.
Hanging out: Oso Negra is where the art of
socializing over a foamy latte of shade-grown
organic coffee is being constantly refined and
perfected by Nelsonites—day after day after
day after day. Great place to hang if long days
chatting to people with ambiguous careers
and sharing powder epics is your idea of a
good time, but if your clock ticks with New
York minutes, keep walking.
The Buzz: If you’ve yet to act on your dream
of buying a shack in Nelson and making the
mountains your full-time career, then you
may have missed the boat. Any doubts about
Nelson’s stature as the premier mountain
town in Canada were dashed during last
season’s staggeringly successful Kootenay
Cold Smoke Festival that drew writers,
photographers and other media types from
across North America and even Europe to
snack on the local goods.
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