Mount Hood Skibowl Explained

Mount Hood Skibowl
Location:Mount Hood, Clackamas County, Oregon, US
Nearest City:Government Camp immediately north, Portland 60miles west
Pushpin Map:Oregon#United States
Pushpin Relief:1
Coordinates:45.3019°N -121.7732°W
Top Elevation:5027feet
Base Elevation:3500feet
Skiable Area:960acres
Number Trails:65
20% beginner
40% intermediate
40% advanced
Liftsystem:4 chairs, 3 rope tow, 1 platter lift, 1 tubing tow
Snowfall:yearly snowfall: 252NaN2
average pack: 82NaN2[1]
Snowmaking:tubing hill and ski school carpet only
Nightskiing:Yes, 4 chairlifts, 34 runs
External Link:Mount Hood Skibowl

Mount Hood Skibowl is a recreation area on Mount Hood located near Government Camp, Oregon. It is the largest night ski area in the United States, and the total skiable area encompasses an area of 960acres (about two thirds of this is lit). The resort is the closest ski venue to Portland, with an elevation of 3600feet at the lodge, rising to just over 5000feet at the summit. The average snowfall at the area is 300inches, with an average consolidated base around 100inches and 65 marked trails. An adventure park in the area includes alpine slides, zip-line, and bungee jumping. As well as other outdoor activities. Just across the highway is Government Camp, the focal point of Mount Hood.

Skibowl is owned by Kirk Hanna. Hanna purchased Skibowl in 1987 and has made many changes since purchasing the resort.[2]

Mountain statistics[3]

Elevation

Trails

Trail Map

Lift Information

SkiBowl Chairlift Information[4] [5] [6]

History[7]

Mount Hood Skibowl began as two separate resorts, Skibowl and Multorpor. In 1928, Everett Sickler developed Jump Hill on Multorpor Mountain. The following year, the Cascade Ski Club began holding competitions on the hill, which brought national recognition after hosting a National Ski Association event. By 1938, Raymond Hughes had built the first tow rope on Multorpor on what is now the ski run named, Raceway. The current lodge on Multorpor was built by George Butler in 1949.

1937 marked the opening of the Warming Hut on Skibowl and the opening of the mountain’s first rope tow that was installed by Boyd French. In 1946, "Sandy" Sandberg installed the first chair lift that connected the lower mountain to the original Upper Bowl tow rope.

Multorpor and Skibowl are joined

The two resorts came together in 1964 when Carl Reynolds and Everett Darr bought Skibowl. The area is collectively known as Skibowl while the resort at Multorpor Mountain is now Skibowl East.

Kirk Hanna purchase

In 1987, Kirk Hanna purchased Skibowl out of bankruptcy and began making improvements to the resort. Hanna added 300 acres, expanded the runs that are lit for night skiing, and cut the Olympic Certified, Reynolds Run. Summer activities were also expanded with the addition of mountain biking, go-karts, and miniature golf.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mountain Stats . Mt. Hood Skibowl . 2008-02-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071225174555/http://skibowl.com/index.php?page=mountain-stats . 2007-12-25 . dead .
  2. Web site: Kirk Hanna Kirk Hanna Skibowl Owner Kirk Hanna Portland Oregon. www.kirkhanna.com. 2016-11-22.
  3. Web site: By the Numbers. www.skibowl.com. 2016-11-22.
  4. Web site: Skilifts.org - Mt. Hood Skibowl, Oregon. www.skilifts.org. 2016-11-22.
  5. Web site: Mt. Hood Skibowl - Mountain Stats . 2007-12-25 . 2016-11-22 . bot: unknown . https://web.archive.org/web/20071225174555/http://skibowl.com/index.php?page=mountain-stats . 2007-12-25 .
  6. Web site: History Mt Hood Skibowl Kirk Hanna. www.skibowl.com. 2016-11-22.
  7. Web site: History Mt Hood Skibowl Kirk Hanna. www.skibowl.com. 2016-11-24.