Trial Run at Sun Peaks, BC
Three-year-old Kian approached the
edge of the gully and looked down
to his older brother. Logan stood
eight metres below, at the bottom of a concave
drop that must have ranked as a couloir
through the eyes of a six-year-old. He craned
his neck so he could look, with justifi able pride,
out from under the rim of his helmet and up to
his first first-descent.
“Was that fun, Logan?” asked Kian.
“Yup,” answered Logan, who must have
already learned that adopting an air of
nonchalance is the only way to make an
impressive feat even more impressive.
Kian doesn’t yet ski with poles. I’m putting
that down as a contributing factor to what
happened next. He shuffled to the edge, looked
once at his mother and with that was gone.
Kian didn’t think the drop was as much fun
as Logan did. Poles might have let him ease
over the edge, or maybe catch his balance.
But at least there were fewer pieces to pick
up from the bottom of the gully when the
crying was done.
I turned and started skiing. It wasn’t that
I was unconcerned about Kian—his parents
were with him and he only ever cries two or
three tears at once—it’s that I wanted to
get a head start. Soon they would be nipping
at my heels and I would be trying not to be
beaten down the hill again by my nephews. I
was already sick of explaining to people in line
that, yes, he sure was small, only three years
old in fact. It only made it worse when he had
obviously been waiting for me and wondering
if he’d be better off in the single line.
It wasn’t supposed to be this way. I was on a
family vacation to Sun Peaks. I envisioned a
week of linking relaxed arcs on wide groomers
with plenty of breaks to let the little guys catch
up. Instead I found myself in an alder-choked
gully, absorbing low-pitch bumps with withered
quads while looking for a route back out to
the groomer so I could make up some time on
them.
Rethinking family skiing wasn’t the only
mental adjustment I had made that week. I was
also taking a fresh look at “family resorts”.
An ultrasound of my partner’s burgeoning
belly had recently confi rmed that resorts that
court kid-heavy families might comprise my
skiing future for the next few decades. It
seemed time to take a closer look.
Put it down to a lack of technical ability
if you like, but I had always gravitated
toward mountains with terrain that rewarded
accomplished woodland orienteering skills
more than the ability to properly fi nish a turn.
I preferred exploring to cruising, and I was
worried that a resort that prided itself on wellgroomed
and expansive intermediate terrain
might not have much else going for it.
My first clue that Sun Peaks was not the
staid, sterile place I envisioned family resorts
to be presented itself at the baggage carousel
at the Kamloops airport.
We had waited through an unplanned, fivehour
layover in Vancouver, thanks to a brokendown
airplane, and when I say “we” I mean the
band of brothers and sisters that takes shape
any time an airline’s operational dysfunction
rules the day. The good news is that the plane
broke on the tarmac, not in the air. The other
good news is that the delay gave Air Canada’s
baggage handlers just enough time to make
sure all the connecting bags got on the right
flight—except for one.
Anytime you mix an Australian accent with
five hours in an airport bar, interpersonal
communication will suffer. I’m sure the
guy in board shorts and flip-flops wasn’t
actually talking about kangaroos being
underappreciated, but that’s all I could imagine
he was trying to get across to me while we
waited for our bags. The shuttle driver must
have understood though, because when I
loaded my bags on the van destined for Sun
Peaks, the driver told me we had to wait for
the hopeful vacationer to arrange for his bag—
which I could only hope contained some winter
boots—to be brought up the mountain to Sun
Peaks the next day.
Driving 45 minutes up the hill from arid
Kamloops, home of cacti and lizards, to the
snowy flanks of Tod Mountain, annual recipient
of 560 cm of snow, we stopped eight times so
the Australian could pretend to relieve himself
while he took poorly concealed hauls on the
beginnings of eight cigarettes.
His two entirely coherent friends told me
why they had flown from Australia for a week
at Sun Peaks. It had nothing to do with familyfriendly
tubing parks and everything to do with
skiing, yes, but also the kind of concentrated
nightlife only purpose-built resorts full of
vacationing skiers can deliver. When we
stopped at their hotel and I refused two very
polite and one overly impassioned invitations
to share a drink with them, I had to admit that
I had underestimated the nightlife I might find
on the mountain, and overestimated myself
when I thought I was still the type of person to
take advantage of it.
From a suddenly quiet shuttle van, I looked
out on the backs of some of the resort’s 12
centrally located inns and lodges. I could
only see the backs of them because the resort
village was built as a place to walk—or ski. The
snow-covered lanes are on a grade down to the
lifts, so you can ski out of your hotel door in
the morning and back to it in the afternoon.
Though the inns in the village centre cater to
most tastes and budgets, a further 24 diverse
chalet clusters spread down and up the valley.
Most are ski-in and all are serviced by the
resort’s free shuttle bus.
The airport van dropped me in front of the
nearly finished Delta Residences, a new wing of
self-contained and expansive suites abutting
the hotel. I checked in, then crept—as well
as you can creep with a ski bag over your
shoulder—into my room, knowing my brother,
sister-in-law and two nephews would be
sleeping off their drive. On the table was an
envelope with a note inside. “We would like to
take this opportunity to welcome you and your
owner to the Delta Sun Peaks Resort,” it read.
Apparently Leo, their new Labrador retriever,
was here also. What followed was a list of all
the reasons a dog could expect a pleasant stay
at the welcoming hotel. Very convincing.
***********
“Hey, Logan, want to go skiing with Nancy
Greene?” my brother Tyler asked.
“Nancy Greene?” Logan replied with an
expression only a confused six-year-old can
muster. “Nancy Greene is a lake.”
My brother’s family lives in Rossland, B.C.,
former hometown of Sun Peaks’s director of
skiing Nancy Greene. After Greene won Olympic
gold and her second World Cup title in 1968,
Rossland honoured her by naming a lake north
of town after her. Tyler and his family camp at
Nancy Greene Lake in the summer, and it took a
while to convince Logan that if we showed up
at the bottom of the Sundance Express at the
right time we could have the lake’s namesake
show us around her mountain.
Nancy Greene was waiting, as the sign said
she would be, next to the snow playground
that’s part of the Sundance Playschool and
Sun Tots ski program complex. Together they
bolster Sun Peaks’s claim to being the best
place to take kids as young as three if you
want to have pros teach them how to ski.
It’s a mentality that runs deep at Sun
Peaks—and all the way to the top. Though her
non-tarnishing Olympic hardware is proof she
knows how to get down a hill quickly, Greene
was in no hurry as she led us on the kind of
meandering path kids naturally follow. When we
pulled over to show the kids one of the many
locally decorated Christmas trees that dot the
runs, she convinced Kian to dig for gifts.
I don’t know if his faith in Santa Claus or
his arm strength gave out first, but before
long he was back on his feet and traversing,
as kids do, straight across the hill. With one
eye over my shoulder on alert for overtaking
skiers, I watched him as he disappeared
into one of the many twisting trails that dip
and turn through the wooded fringes of the
run. While other resorts might have run out
of bamboo trying to block off these boreal
bobsled courses, Greene spoke proudly about
how the one-lane nature trails at Sun Peaks
were a cut above those at other ski areas.
In case you ever tire of these forest
forays (which I’ve decided is something kids
never do), you have easy recourse to more
varied terrain. Spread over three mountains,
the 122 trails of Sun Peaks are 58 per cent
intermediate and a full 32 per cent expert.
The north-facing Mount Morrisey on the south
side of the resort offers you a holiday from
your ski holiday, with an empty quad chair
and gently graded blue trails broken up with
enough manicured pods of trees to give the
area a playground-like feel.
With two terrain parks and long, blue
cruisers, Sundance Peak is similarly stressfree.
It’s Mount Tod, with a vertical drop of
881 metres and the great majority of bumps,
steeps, trees and bowls, that makes Sun Peaks
much more than a place to lean back and
watch the trees go by.
And it was here, riding the 19-minutelong
Burfield quad classic, that I gazed down
on hectares of fresh powder stashes and
realized the true worth of family resorts. The
last snowfall had been five days previous, but
everywhere I looked there were untracked
lines, below rock faces, between tree banks,
anywhere that wasn’t immediately easy to
get to, still holding a dozen or so turns of
B.C. white.
True, there were skiers quietly going about
hitting the lines, but with almost 1,500
hectares to get through, the skiers who
came to Sun Peaks for the ungroomed and
untracked were in the silent minority.
With this realization a new light shone on
the peaks for me. Sun Peaks may not have the
massive terrain of Whistler or Jackson Hole,
but with a good number of the skiers content
with groomers or else taking advantage of the
tubing park, bungee trampoline, horse rides,
snowshoe tours, dogsledding, Nordic skiing and
skating rink, it leaves ample alpine for anyone
who comes here to enjoy any type of skiing
they like without having to fight for fresh lines.
But I had to admit I might not be offering
as much competition for those lines from
now on. We can probably put it down to the
thoroughness of evolution that the moment
youthful exuberance begins to leave your
thigh muscles coincides with the beginning of
the child-rearing years. Those blue runs that
seemed benign but boring to me before, take
on a new appeal when you get to watch two
kids who call you uncle get noticeably better
every other run.
Getting a three-year-old on the chair will
always be nerve-racking, and trying to convince
a six-year-old on a gloriously sunny day that no,
we shouldn’t put the chair’s bad-weather bubble
down just for fun can get tedious. But when they
look at you and ask what run you want to do
next and you realize you want to ski whatever
run they want to ski, then it’s easy to embrace a
new appreciation for family resorts.
SUN PEAKS FACTS & STATS
GETTING THERE: Skiers coming from the east will now have more choices to avoid detouring through Vancouver
on the way to Kamloops. Starting December 15, WestJet (www.westjet.com) will be fl ying directly into Kamloops
from Calgary daily, joining a fl ight path already plied by Air Canada. The Kamloops airport is only 45 minutes
from the resort, making Kamloops the new preferred arrival gate instead of Kelowna (2.5 hours away).
SUMMIT ELEVATION: 2,152 metres
VERTICAL DROP: 881 metres
NUMBER OF NAMED RUNS: 122
LONGEST RUN: 8 km
TERRAIN: 10% novice, 58% intermediate, 32% expert
TERRAIN PARKS: 3
LIFTS: 12 (three high-speed)
SNOWFALL: 559 cm
ADULT LIFT TICKET: $67
NEW THIS YEAR: “The Other Way,” an intermediate
run cut off “5-Mile”; two new groomers; and more
snowmaking capacity.
CONTACT:Sun Peaks Resort 800/807-3257
MORE PLANNING: www.hellobc.com, 800/435-562