Talk:Whistler-Blackcomb

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WikiProject Ski This article is part of Wikipedia:WikiProject Ski, an attempt at building a useful skiing resource. If you would like to participate, you can choose to edit the article attached to this page (see Wikipedia:Contributing FAQ for more information).

Sports and Games Portal


Peer review Whistler-Blackcomb has had a peer review by Wikipedia editors which is now archived. It may contain ideas you can use to improve this article.

Isn't the Fitzsimmons lift on Whistler?

The Fitzsimmons lift runs from the village base up Whistler Mountain. It links (sort of) with the bottom of the Garbanzo Chair. It is the primary lift for accessing the bike park on Whistler during the summer. It is also a quick way to bypass long lines at the gondola on busy ski days.142.177.195.152 14:02, 3 December 2005 (UTC)

When Blackcomb opened it had four fixed-grip triple chairlifts and one double chairlift and they were numbered, not named. Later they assigned names to the lifts and the one which ran from the village elevation to the upper parking lot, originally called Lift One, was called Fitzsimmons Chair. That chairlift was eventually replaced with the much longer, but still only marginally useful, Excalibur Gondola.

Names of places, structures, runs and lifts get moved around, and even repeated, frequently and seemingly at random at this resort.

The Resort Municipality of Whistler and the ski area Whistler-Blackcomb are not one and the same, incidentally. Intrawest only owns and operates the two ski areas and some retail shops and land management services. They are principally a developer and, contrary to popular belief, do not own or run the town.

Nippon cable of Japan also owns a minority share in Whistler/Blackcomb (not the town). They have been a partner in the mountains for many years, and were involved with Blackcomb when Aspen Skiing Corporation was also involved.--Baoluo 06:43, 17 July 2006 (UTC)

The vertical drop stated in the article is as supplied by the ski area, but is not correct. The true elevation at the top of the highest lifts is 2,240 metres or 7,347 feet--but that doesn't work out to a vertical mile unless one can get from the top of the lifts on Blackcomb Mountain to the bottom of the lifts on the west side of Whistler Mountain--not an easy feat.

Reference?

[edit] Windows Vienna

The article says "The successor to Windows Server 2003 is codenamed Windows Blackcomb", which is no longer true.

[edit] When did they merge?

The Blackcomb section mentions they were purchased in 1986 by Interwest, but it does not say if they already owned Whistler (I don't think they did). So when did Whistler-Blackcomb become Whistler-Blackcomb? Maury 21:30, 2 February 2007 (UTC)

Found it, edited... Maury 21:41, 2 February 2007 (UTC)