
Recreation


A little help, please, Little Ski Hill gets snow delivery
The Little Ski Hill was able to set up several rails in front of the ski lodge thanks to a special delivery of snow.May Hardware co-owner Scott Fereday and Ben Gau of McCall teamed up with a dump truck and front loader to create a pile of snow at the base of the ski area to make up for this year’s sparse snowpack.“Due to low snow levels and unseasonably warm weather, we were unable to make our opening date this past week,” said Little Ski Hill Terrain Park Manager Preston Woods.“Thankfully we have some incredible humans in our community rallying together to help make a hike (terrain) park happen for our Little Ski Hill,” Woods said.This year marked the first time in 12 years that the ski area has needed to bring in snow to kickstart the season, he said.The delivery comes just in time for the ski area’s annual Holiday Rail Jam, where skiers and snowboarders will compete on Friday from 4 to 8 p.m.Snow has been lacking for the event in the past, but this year’s snowfall is the worst in recent memory.“There are years we have had to build the jumps by hand without the snowcat, but it’s never been even close to this bad,” Woods said.Fereday and Gau answered the call to assist when ski hill staff started searching for volunteers to help make up for the lack of snow.“Let’s do something to get kids stoked about skiing since there’s no skiing to be had,” Fereday said after dumping a load of snow at the hill on Tuesday.The transported pile was pushed, flattened and shaped into the landings and takeoffs of several rail features.“It’s a solid base, the kids aren’t going to bust through it and hopefully it gets us through until it snows enough to open,” Woods said.Tamarack and Brundage both have little terrain parks up and running, but a lot of children that ski at the Little Ski Hill do not have passes to the resorts and are relying on this project for somewhere to ski, he said.In total, eight truckloads of snow were taken from piles at the McCall Municipal Airport that were created from clearing the runway.“The airport absolutely will not miss this snow,” said Airport Manager Emily Hart.“During heavy winters like last year, the snow piles got quite high and wide, so having one of our early season piles lowered considerably just gives us more room to pile what’s to come,” Hart said.There was still not enough snow to open the ski area’s T-bar lift as of this week but the lodge at the Little Ski Hill opened for the year on Tuesday with drinks, food and ski movies on offer for visitors from 2 to 7 p.m.“We’ll kick the lights on at 5 p.m.

McCall’s Activity Barn To Open for Snow Tubing
Snow lovers headed to the McCall area will get a shot at some fresh gravity-fed thrills, as the Activity Barn Snow Tubing facility is set to open Friday, December 29.The Snow Tubing hill, located two miles south of McCall, will open with one 800-foot tubing lane in action.
Brundage forms community fund
The last five chairlifts remaining from Brundage Mountain Resort’s former Centennial Chairlift will be sold at auction to raise money for the resort’s new charitable foundation.The auction is open through Jan.

Crafting winter wonderlands
Sean Donofrio watched as the fruits of his labor gently floated down onto him on Monday at Tamarack Resort.Donofrio, the manager of Tamarack’s snowmaking operation, checks snow guns and snow quality every day on the slopes to maximize the resort’s efforts to turn water into snow.“We work in the background,” he said of the resort’s snowmaking crew.

Wax ‘em up
A crowd watched as Randy Anderson melted a block of red wax onto his cross-country skis on Friday to demonstrate one of the key components to Nordic racing.The demonstration was presented by the McCall Nordic and Biathlon Ski Club at the Broken Horn Brewery in McCall in preparation for the upcoming ski season.About 30 people were gathered around a ski waxing bench to learn the finer points of ski maintenance.


Pray for snow
Brundage Mountain Resort ramped up snowmaking at the resort’s base area this week in advance of a storm system that could bring as much as… Login to continue reading Login…

Little Dribblers
Young athletes, from first through fourth grade, perform ball-handling skills at halftime of a McCall-Donnelly girls basketball game on Nov. 15 as members of the Little… Login to continue reading Login…
