Bristol Mountain Ski Resort
Bristol Mountain Winter Resort | |
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Bristol Mountain in autumn 2009 | |
Location | Bristol Mountain |
Nearest city | Canandaigua |
Coordinates | 42°44′42″N 77°24′16″W / 42.745°N 77.404444°WCoordinates: 42°44′42″N 77°24′16″W / 42.745°N 77.404444°W |
Vertical | 1,200 feet (370 m) |
Top elevation | 2,100 feet (640 m) |
Base elevation | 900 feet (270 m) |
Skiable area | 160 acres (0.65 km2) |
Runs | 33 |
Longest run | 2 miles (3.2 km) |
Lift system | 5 chairlifts (two detachable high-speed), one surface lift |
Lift capacity | 10200 passengers/hr not including surface lift (1500 pph) |
Terrain parks | One advanced and one beginner |
Snowfall | 130 inches (330 cm) |
Snowmaking | 97% |
Night skiing | 96% |
Website | http://www.bristolmountain.com/ |
Bristol Mountain Ski Resort, also known as Bristol Mountain Winter Resort, is a ski resort located in South Bristol, New York in the Finger Lakes region.[1] It is located 30 miles (48 km) from the center of Rochester, New York, the nearest major city to the resort, and about 10 miles (16 km) from Canandaigua on State Route 64. Currently, Bristol Mountain Resort features many trails ranging from easiest (green circle) to difficult (double black diamonds). Bristol Mountain has a vertical rise of 1,200 feet, claiming to have the highest vertical of any ski resort between the Rocky Mountains and the Adirondacks. Bristol also offers two terrain parks and cross country skiing at the resort's summit. Also at the bottom is a ski shop and rental facility. Bristol Mountain Resort also operates in conjunction with Roseland Waterpark, open during the summer season in Canandaigua. As of 2010, they have two high speed detachable chairlifts. The Comet Express lift was installed for the 1999/2000 season and the Galaxy Express for the 2009/2010 season. Both make a full pass in about four minutes. In the autumn they offer Fall Sky Rides using the Comet Express High Speed Quad chairlift[2] slowed down to take 15–20 minutes. Once at the top the riders may stay on and ride or hike down the trails.[3]
History
Bristol Mountain was established in 1964 after the land was bought in South Bristol, New York. 50 of 360 acres (1.5 km2) was cleared, the base lodge built for the December 12 opening. Snowmaking capabilities and a new lift was added in 1965. In 1967, then Senator Robert Kennedy skied at Bristol. In 1968 Bristol Mountain was the world's largest illuminated ski resort. By the 1970s, Bristol was getting over 100,000 skiers per year and opened seven days a week. They progressively made snowmaking improvements and by 1985 they had 100 percent coverage and guaranteed over 100 days of skiing per season.[4]
In 1969 the rate for skiing was seven dollars, with four dollar nights. Even then they had the longest vertical drop between the Adirondacks and the Rockies. However, back then they only claimed the drop to be 1,000 instead of 1,200 feet.[5] Surprisingly, they were open later then, closing at 10:30 instead of 10:00.
In 2009–2010, the new high speed detachable chairlift (Galaxy Express High Speed Quad) was added. A new trail, Lower North Star, which ends at the bottom of the Galaxy chairlift was added for the 2010–2011 season. The new lift replaces an older, non-detachable, lift that started halfway up the mountain in the same place. The new trail is 2,600 feet long and 120 feet wide,[6] adding a little over seven acres to the mountain.
For the summer of 2014 Bristol Mountain Aerial Adventures was introduced. It is a three acre aerial park consisting of 7 challenging courses with nearly 100 tree to tree elements and 10 zip lines, situated within the forest canopy at the summit of the mountain. There is also a dedicated kids course for ages 4-7. This season is from May to November which enables Bristol Mountain to operate as a year round attraction.[7]
With an abnormally cold and snowy winter, the 2014-2015 season saw prosperous snow-sport conditions, with local ski resorts including Bristol Mountain predicting the season to extend through April.[8]
Rural Radio Network
The summit of Bristol Mountain has been a broadcasting site for the Rural Radio Network since 1948, before the ski resort was ever formed. The station now known as WAIO signed on June 6, 1948 as WVBT, licensed to Bristol Center, New York and transmitting from Bristol Mountain on 101.9 MHz. It was the next-to-last link in the Rural Radio Network chain of FM stations broadcasting to farmers across upstate New York. WVBT changed call letters to WRRE and changed frequency to 95.1 in the early 1950s. When the Rural Radio Network became the Ivy Network under new owners in 1960, WRRE became WMIV. It would retain those calls under the network's next identity, the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN), broadcasting religious programming from studios in Ithaca between 1968 and 1981. WMIV was sold to Empire Broadcasting and in early 1982, it changed format to adult standards and its call letters to WYLF. This station operated from a studio in a converted house on Route 332 in Farmington. On July 28, 1986, WYLF was sold and became WZSH. On December 26, 1991, WZSH became WRQI, "Rock-It 95," programming a rock format. In 1993, Rock-It 95 added the syndicated Howard Stern Show to its lineup, bringing the station attention and ratings in the larger Rochester market. WRQI made several attempts to improve its main signal on 95.1 as well, briefly moving from its historic Bristol Mountain site to a tower in Farmington owned by Rochester Telephone Company, but was forced to return to Bristol after interference complaints from the tower's neighbors. On April 21, 1995, WRQI became WNVE, "The Nerve," a modern rock/alternative station. In 2001, WNVE left its Bristol Mountain transmitter site for the last time, changing city of license from South Bristol to Honeoye Falls, New York in a swap with sister station WLCL (107.3), which took the South Bristol city of license and the Bristol Mountain transmitter site. On July 4, 2004, Clear Channel moved WNVE from 95.1 to the lesser Bristol Mountain 107.3 signal. Replacing it on 95.1 was the former 107.3 classic rock format, "The Fox," with new call letters WFXF. The Bristol Mountain station now broadcasts on 107.3 as WNBL, a country music station.
Statistics
While Bristol is often claimed to have had 160 skiable acres, Bristol states that with the addition of the latest trail they are up to 138 skiable acres.[9] 160 is probably the total cleared acreage, including the summit and base area. Bristol's new detachable chairlift, the Galaxy high speed quad, will only run during peak times such as afternoons and weekends. Bristol Mountain usually has a winter operating season of about four months (December to March), sometimes opening by late November and closing sometime in April. Early and late in the season only a few trails and lifts are open. In 2010, they opened on December 5, but only the Comet Express lift was running and only Rocket Run was open, from noon to four pm.[10]
Trails: 34; 33% Novice; 49% Intermediate; 18% Advanced
Chairlifts:
See heading below for additional information.
- Galaxy Express High-Speed Quad (new for 2009/2010)
- Comet Express High-Speed Quad
- Morning Star Quad
- Rocket Triple
- Sunset Double
Surface lifts
- Lunar Launch Magic Carpet
Vertical: 1,200 feet (370 m)
Summit elevation: 2,200 feet (670 m)
Skiable acres: 160
Average annual snowfall: 120 inches
Night skiing: 96% of the trails have trail lighting
Snowmaking: 97% of terrain has snowmaking capabilities[11] (all trails except Quantum Leap)
Chairlifts
Bristol currently has installed 5 total, including two high speed detachable chairlifts. There is also a surface lift (conveyor lift) to a beginner slope known as Launching Pad which only rises 60 feet.
Galaxy Express High-Speed Quad
Installed in 2009, the Galaxy Express is the mountain's newest lift. It is a detachable high speed quad chairlift manufactured by Doppelmayr CTEC and installed at the base of Lower Galaxy on the northern side of the mountain. The lift services intermediate to advanced terrain on the "Galaxy-side" of the mountain. On off-peak days, the lift is often closed due to the low number of skiers and snowboarders on the mountain, especially since the Comet Express lift can provide access to the northern trails. The ride takes a little over four minutes and the lift has a capacity of 2,000 passengers per hour. The ride up takes passengers through the woods beside Lower Galaxy and then over the skiable area of Upper Galaxy.
Comet Express High-Speed Quad
Installed at the base of Lower Rocket in 1999, this lift is by far the most popular lift at the mountain. Like the Galaxy Express, it is a detachable high speed quad chairlift, but was manufactured by Garaventa CTEC (now Doppelmayr CTEC). The lift services all terrain at Bristol (ranging from easy to expert) and provides access to most of the trails at Bristol. Transporting passengers at a rate of 2,000 per hour, the ride takes a little over four minutes from base to summit. The ride takes passengers over Lower Comet and Upper Comet, a double-black diamond trail.
Morning Star Quad
A fixed-grip quad chairlift installed mid-mountain that provides guests access to easy to intermediate trails and, depending on the year, access to one or two terrain parks. The lift was manufactured and installed by Garaventa CTEC in 2000. With a 600-foot vertical rise, the ride takes about eight minutes. The lift carries 2,000 passengers per hour over the Morning Star Terrain Park where riders can watch skiers and snowboarders perform advanced tricks while they ride to the summit.
Rocket Triple
A fixed-grip triple chairlift installed at the base of Lower Rocket that provides guests access to intermediate to advanced trails. It was manufactured by CTEC and carries 1,800 passengers per hour on its 12-minute ride from base to summit.
Sunset Double
A fix-gripped double chairlift installed at the base of Sunset that provides guests access to easy to intermediate/advanced terrain (depending on whether Challenger is open or closed). It was refurbished and reinstalled by CTEC in 1992, making it the oldest lift currently operating at Bristol. The lift services 1,200 passengers per hour up 400 feet of vertical rise.
Lunar Launch Magic Carpet
A conveyor-lift installed in 2008 that services the Launching Pad located at the base of the mountain for beginners and learn-to-ski students. The lift carries 1,500 passengers per hour up the 60-foot vertical rise to the top of the Launching Pad.
Trails
Bristol Mountain Ski Resort has 34 slopes and trails, and terrain parks including a progressive terrain park (Shooting Star) and the Morning Star Terrain Park has been relocated to Galaxy trail. New for the 2014-15 season will be Family Cross on Orion's Belt and various Rail Gardens on Galaxy and the mid-point between Rocket and Meteor. [12] The longest trail/run is about two miles and is made up of three trails, starting at Milky Way, then to Eclipse, and Infinity. All three are easy trails; this goes around the backside of the mountain.
Easy
- Eclipse (Continuation of Sunbelt)
- Hale Bop*
- Haley's Run*
- Infinity
- Launching Pad ("Bunny Hill")
- Milky Way
- Nova
- Shooting Star- progression terrain park
- Skyway*
- Spacewalk*
- Sunbelt
More difficult
- Beta*
- Big Dipper*
- Galaxy
- Lower Meteor
- Lower North Star (new for 2010–2011)
- Lower Rocket
- Morning Star
- Outer Orbit
- Shuttle*
- Southern Cross
- Sunset
- Sunset Way*
- Universal
- Upper North Star
- Ursa Minor*
Most difficult
- Lower Challenger
- Lower Galaxy
- Upper Meteor
- Upper Rocket
Experts only
- Comet
- Quantum Leap
Note: as of 2015, Quantum Leap has remained closed of the majority of the mountain's operating season and is rarely open.
The trail names all have to do with space. This is due to that fact that Bristol Mountain first opened in the 1960s, during the space race, and is located a few miles from the CEK Mees Observatory. Additionally, Challenger is a memorial trail dedicated to the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster.
* = Short Connecting Run
Cross Country Skiing
Bristol also has cross country skiing available at the Summit Nordic Center, consisting of two trails, one of which has snowmaking and lights for night skiing. The Summit Nordic Center is not directly accessible from Bristol Mountain's downhill base lodges; visitors must use the separate entrance by driving up the mountain to South Hill Road off of County Road 32.[13]
Deaths
On February 16, 2010, a Penfield man died in a snowboarding accident at Bristol Mountain. 48 year old Elliott A. Eklund was pronounced dead at Thompson Hospital in Canandaigua at 8:20 after striking a tree on Bristol Mountain's Shooting Star run at about 7:30.[14] This is the first death that has occurred at the resort since 2001, when a 36-year-old Palmyra man died after skiing into a tree.[15]
Coincidentally, on February 16, 1988, 17-year-old David Elliot of Penfield died after being injured in a skiing accident at Bristol Mountain.[16]
References
- ↑ "Bristol Mountain Winter Resort - Finger Lakes Tourism Alliance". Fingerlakes.org. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑ "Fall Sky Rides". Bristolmountain.com. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Bristol Mountain gearing up for 2010-11 season - Canandaigua, NY". MPNnow. 2010-12-05. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑ Diehl, Marci (May 23, 2014). "Aerial park opens at Bristol Mountain". Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved October 27, 2014.
- ↑ Freile, Victoria E. (February 11, 2015). "Ski resorts revel in recent snowfall". Democrat & Chronicle. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
- ↑ "Mountain Profile". Bristolmountain.com. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Parks and Pipes". Bristolmountain.com. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Penfield man dies in snowboarding accident at Bristol Mountain - Canandaigua, NY". MPNnow. 2010-02-17. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑ "Penfield family copes with tragedy - Canandaigua, NY". MPNnow. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
External links
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