Did private equity ruin skiing? | The Park City Meltdown

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  • Опубліковано 9 лют 2025

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  • @Flex6331
    @Flex6331 Місяць тому +72

    I guess everyone needs to switch to snowboarding if skiing is ruin.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +10

      Hahahaha best comment so far

    • @leroyjones769
      @leroyjones769 Місяць тому

      💯percent

    • @josephquinn8019
      @josephquinn8019 Місяць тому +5

      plenty of mountains without lines .... high profile, hi price. do away with the stock market and live back in the 80s

    • @davidkambic9169
      @davidkambic9169 Місяць тому

      What is the difference?

    • @leroyjones769
      @leroyjones769 Місяць тому +2

      @@davidkambic9169 was just a joke

  • @krizzle4087
    @krizzle4087 Місяць тому +340

    Private equity tends to ruin everything it touches in the name of short-term profits.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +4

      :/

    • @WTHenry2023
      @WTHenry2023 Місяць тому +1

      Agreed. It's not just skiing. They are locusts that destroy everything they touch by extracting wealth from bottom and middle of the pyramid and shifting it to the top.

    • @TheBeingReal
      @TheBeingReal Місяць тому +22

      It is even worse than that, they monopolize.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +10

      The monopoly comment is valid. Epic and Icon Pass has resulted in a huge shift to those mountains being the primary spot for many..

    • @Likeaworm
      @Likeaworm Місяць тому +34

      Watched a NBC video on how a guy from Minnesota spent 20k to ski at park city last week. For 20k he could have taken his family of 4 to Europe and skied for a week and a half all day long 😂.

  • @BridgerPOWDERhound
    @BridgerPOWDERhound Місяць тому +192

    Yes. Absolutely ruined the US skiing experience. I'm an American living in Europe. Just paid 76 euros per day in peak season to ski some of Austria's top resorts (Saalbach-Hinterglemm, Kitzbuhel, Flachauwinkl); heated chairlifts, gorgeous and independently managed lodges everywhere, all at still manageable (though more expensive than previous years) prices.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +22

      That’s what I keep seeing on Twitter - “it’s more affordable to fly to Europe and ski there for a week than do the same in Colorado.” I’m happy you’re able to enjoy it!

    • @lukeheatley4148
      @lukeheatley4148 Місяць тому +8

      @@Galbra1th We have a lot of US guests stay at our chalet in Kitzbühel. We were surprised but this explains it all.

    • @BoleiMNJournal
      @BoleiMNJournal Місяць тому

      How many times you ski in a season?

    • @BridgerPOWDERhound
      @BridgerPOWDERhound Місяць тому +3

      @@BoleiMNJournal 20-25, mostly in Italy (where passes can get below 40eur). In the states I did 30-40 in college and 70-80 growing up.

    • @BoleiMNJournal
      @BoleiMNJournal Місяць тому +5

      @@BridgerPOWDERhound if you get an Epic pass, which is about $1000, and you ski 25 times a season, each time is about $40. And you can ski any of the Epic resorts. Not sure why people only compare the one-day pass price.

  • @berthanadrossos9802
    @berthanadrossos9802 Місяць тому +127

    I have lived in the Salt Lake valley my entire life. I can no longer afford to ski in my own beautiful mountains. It is becoming a sport for the rich. Sad.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Argh I’m sorry to hear that! Are there other options nearby that you can still enjoy?

    • @mattjax16
      @mattjax16 Місяць тому +2

      @@Galbra1ththey are all increasing prices

    • @mattjax16
      @mattjax16 Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1thyou could also do about 10 minutes of research or less to find this out….

    • @stieldaddy3846
      @stieldaddy3846 Місяць тому +5

      Same in Colorado. Sad

    • @agentbb007
      @agentbb007 Місяць тому +5

      It’s the result of overpopulation. The mountain can only handle so many people. Obviously it isn’t expensive enough, they need to triple the price to get the crowds more reasonable. The current price is just making the experience bad for everyone, too many people.

  • @andy5478-MTB
    @andy5478-MTB Місяць тому +92

    Spot on. I say skiing was never meant to be corporatized and Disneyfied like Vail did. The people that got screwed by Vail the most are the hardworking folks that make a town a good place to live are the generational people that run all the mom and pop businesses, emergency services, teachers, town workers, trash collectors, mailmen, labor etc. Vail Corp has sucked the life out of the towns they've taken over.

    • @matmo4665
      @matmo4665 Місяць тому

      Why do you think they are"importing" all this cheap labor. They push out locals by driving up prices of real estate and everything else, then bring in cheap labor ie. Illegals to fill the positions. And stick them in your house you had to sell because you can't afford to live their anymore.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +2

      It’s a tough situation. The town and its people is obviously dependent on the mountain and the tourists it brings in, but it’s these tourists that are making their town totally unaffordable. It’s a shame as I agree; Vail / Beaver Creek / Eagle is a very special place!

    • @rodneywiescamp2722
      @rodneywiescamp2722 Місяць тому +5

      Vail is nothing but a Shit Show!

    • @Eddiep80
      @Eddiep80 Місяць тому

      What people don’t realize is that if everyone didn’t buy a pass that year. Their stocks would plummet and they would be forced to lower prices.
      But people like to bitch and complain but not actually take and actions, then cough up the hundreds of dollars for a pass.
      You all are the problem you have let it get this bad.

    • @bb5242
      @bb5242 Місяць тому

      Vail itself was never an actual town at all, it is a complete artifice

  • @DoggosintheHouse
    @DoggosintheHouse Місяць тому +72

    Whistler BC is a Vail property and a highly rated North American destination, but I'll never go back. Last season, I went up for a couple days mid-week and faced 90+ minutes waiting in line in the morning. Between ridiculous prices, heavy traffic and long wait times, this year I'll be going to the BC Interior to some smaller, privately run hills. Skiing is expensive enough without being gouged by greedy corporate interests who are more interested in profit margins than satisfied customers.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +4

      I couldn’t imagine waiting 90 mins for 1 lift.. I hope you have better luck at the other locations!

    • @DoggosintheHouse
      @DoggosintheHouse Місяць тому +4

      @@Galbra1th It doesn't get as much attention as US destinations, but there is plenty of anecdotal evidence of congestion problems in Whistler Village that has been exacerbated by American Epic Pass holders coming north. This clip shows the line running right through the main village. You can't even see the actual lifts:
      ua-cam.com/users/shortsZVqu-KqEtWo

    • @Real100Talk
      @Real100Talk Місяць тому +3

      I'm so angry, Vail ruined both resorts near me. I am contemplating if this is my last season or not, hopefully I can find somewhere better.

    • @JamesStangl
      @JamesStangl Місяць тому +1

      Yup. I live in WA state, have been to Whistler once, don't plan on going back anytime soon. On top of the Vail Corp's model of monetizing everything, weather at Whistler can be...iffy. It's in the Coast Range of BC, and it's not unusual for it to be raining at base, thick mid-mountain fog, and blowing sideways snow at the summit. Sure they get big snow dumps, but it's often heavy, wet stuff compared with inland BC or the Rockies. There are other smaller resorts in the BC interior, the Banff area, and elsewhere that I'd rather go to. And I'd rather support smaller operations that try to keep the "family" in family skiing. They often have great terrain, a better vibe, and lower costs.

    • @MR1977.
      @MR1977. Місяць тому +1

      90 minutes on a lift line is a deal breaker

  • @GuitarWithBrett
    @GuitarWithBrett Місяць тому +77

    Everything in America is getting ruined by greed .. but don’t worry billionaires and tech bros will fix it 😂

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +3

      I feel like the billionaires and tech bros are the ones who are finding better ways to operate than the status quo. I don’t think you can say Elon uses the same practices as PE to run his businesses, so I don’t see the connection..

    • @GuitarWithBrett
      @GuitarWithBrett Місяць тому +9

      @ what are a few specific improvements you see ? I am speaking more from a quality of life angle from 80s until now in the US. What I see is way more struggle to get by and much wider income inequality, where tech tends to not provide real value. Electric cars can be good from environment view of course .. economic angle is more controversial. Blockchain , meme coins and most social media is just making society overall worse backed by mental health studies

    • @craighamley3669
      @craighamley3669 Місяць тому +1

      Agree with you. I live a good chunk of the time in Truckee, Ca & will never give the big resorts my money anymore - the vibe at Northstar & Palisades (used to be Squaw Valley & Alpine Meadows) are overcrowded and ridiculously snobby, so I ski where I grew up at Sugar Bowl. They treat passholders like gold & take pride in not being like the big resorts - however without a pass I could probably only afford to ski 2-3 days a year, even at Sugar Bowl. By your name I'm guessing you might be into guitar, like i am, and I would never buy a new Gibson (anything after 2019) because they're now owned by the PE group KKR, when I can get a Heritage guitar made in the original Kalamazoo factory that has better QC for less money.

    • @GuitarWithBrett
      @GuitarWithBrett Місяць тому

      @@craighamley3669 that’s good you’re smart about who is just for profit vs really doing right for their customers. I didn’t know that about Gibson. I had to buy a practice amp a few years ago and bought older model since was better made. I am a surfer primarily now and it’s overall good as aren’t charged lift ticket prices ha. Yeah I taught guitar a long time and have videos teaching but lately I’ve been more into non guitar music and learning Ableton

    • @planescaped
      @planescaped Місяць тому +5

      @@GuitarWithBrett For all the good that came from the internet becoming ubiquitous, there was certainly quite a bit of bad.
      Social media in particular has poisoned society.

  • @thomaswoods1365
    @thomaswoods1365 Місяць тому +34

    Thank you for this! I live in Utah now and started skiing in 1967, so I have a lot of years to compare. The cost of skiing is absolutely ridiculous. I don't know how the skiers push back outside of simply refusing to go skiing to send the message. These corporations are pushing it to the extreme and I hope there is huge backlash for them. If I was one of those Park City skiers over the holidays I would be livid. They should all be given refunds. getting 3 runs down the hill for $350 is actual robbery. It's sad to see the sport I love taken hostage. Something must be done.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +2

      It’s super unfortunate as skiing is such a unique experience.

    • @MikeBodo
      @MikeBodo Місяць тому +2

      I didn't ski last year and likely won't this year due to greed, excessive costs and poor skiier experience. I've replaced that time joining a Sim Golf league where I have fun and laughs with my buds over a few drinks and don't have to worry about being cold. LOL!

  • @kieransteele7223
    @kieransteele7223 27 днів тому +7

    Funny how most business problems really boil down to corporate greed and not giving employees sufficient wages and benefits.

  • @AZTrigger
    @AZTrigger Місяць тому +46

    Vail's stock may be down recently to $180 but keep in mind it was trading around $11 back in 2003. What they have done over the past couple of decades, and the rest of the ski industry has largely followed their lead, is to corporatize and destroy the tradition of family skiing. Skiing was once a great family sport that has now become unaffordable for most families today. They also continue to monopolize the industry thereby autocratically controlling prices and instead of outsourcing labor abroad like PE companies do, they bring in cheap labor from abroad instead. The best thing that could happen to the US ski industry would be for the major ski resort companies like Vail to divest all of their holdings and let the industry manage itself as a free market again.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +4

      It’s a good take. I’m not sure why / how Vail would ever divest their assets though. I think there needs to be more affordable supply of ski runs. Potentially local governments building out their own “public parks”

    • @LiberatedMind1
      @LiberatedMind1 Місяць тому +3

      "Free" markets are what allow companies like Vail to buy up everyone else. Government owned resorts are the way to go.

    • @AZTrigger
      @AZTrigger Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th PE companies don't sit on dead money. If they cannot grow their fund's profits to target, they shed off the underperforming assets. In this case, stagnant growth could force them to sell off resorts if their returns are unattractive. Vail's stock has had a meteoric rise over the past few decades...PE companies know to sell high.

    • @RawRides4U
      @RawRides4U Місяць тому +1

      @@LiberatedMind1 When in the history of the world, a government ran something successfully over time?

    • @RawRides4U
      @RawRides4U Місяць тому +2

      Higher prices incentivize people to buy ski passes. A family can buy a 4 day ski pass for a Vail resort, or a local pass to a resort near their house. And it's still priced well. About $100 per day for the 4-7 days pass. Not bad for a huge resort with some of the best snow in the world. What you're saying just isn't true. Big resorts have better runs and therefore should charge more. You'll never see a $50 day pass for Vail or Park City. But a small ski resort with shorter runs will be priced like that to attract the crowds. That's capitalism at its finest bud. Also, high prices are a natural filter to the amount of people that will be on the mountain. All those resorts are already over crowded on the weekends, and some during the week even with the high prices that are being charged now. Imagine what it will look like, and how much time you'll have to stand in line if it was more affordable?

  • @Cmoredebris
    @Cmoredebris Місяць тому +23

    YES !!! I can say this because I ski at a small family run ski area and have also skied most of the "big" resorts. Yes the Vail resorts have better lifts and longer runs, however, at our small ski area, we all know each other, very friendly, lots of charm, no crowds, lots of great powder and fantastic tree skiing. I will not tell anyone where it is.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      Happy to hear that! I hope that can continue!

    • @JamesStangl
      @JamesStangl Місяць тому +4

      SO TRUE!! I've enjoyed checking out places like Vail and some other "big name" resorts, but my heart is with a ski area not too far from my home. Still privately owned, fun terrain, great family vibe. And I too will not divulge its name.

  • @JeremyHSmith
    @JeremyHSmith Місяць тому +61

    Lifelong Utahn and Park City local here. Vail has ruined this town. There is not one local I know that holds a favorable view of Vail. Every single person wants them to sell the resort and leave, never to return. Park City and The Canyons were much better managed before Vail took over. The experience and vibe of Park City Mountain Resort went from fun and friendly to stiff and corporate.
    The circumstances of how Vail took control of Park City Mountain Resort is would make for a great dedicated episode.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +2

      I appreciate the perspective from a Park City local! I can definitely look into the transaction that led the resort down this path. Is there any subject you think is necessary for me to include to capture the full story (I.e. not just what story is told my the companies)?

    • @Captdeets
      @Captdeets Місяць тому +3

      @@Galbra1thThere should be plenty of public info available. It was quite a soap opera. It would make an entertaining video. (18 year Park City resident here)

    • @HootchTV
      @HootchTV Місяць тому +1

      You may agree with these guys who wrote a song about it:
      VAIL FAIL BAIL
      ua-cam.com/video/K-FGAUK0c30/v-deo.htmlsi=CldJJrQBf7oBPh59

    • @MikeBodo
      @MikeBodo Місяць тому +2

      When PCMR and the Canyon's merged under Vail resorts ownership it was the worst thing to happen to both properties. They ruined the Whistler experience years earlier and repeated the mistakes there at Park City.

    • @rustyoneil216
      @rustyoneil216 Місяць тому +1

      I go to park city every weekend. Just snowboarded Beaver Creek, Vail, Copper Mountain (I have an ikon pass too) and Breckenridge for vacation over the holidays. I love my Epic Pass and take advantage of it every year. Park City side is crowded, but people that know, know how to get around the crowds, where to park., time of day to go. You want to talk about disasters, Brighton on the weekend, Cottonwood Canyon period on any weekend. Brighton is privately owned, but is 10x ques worst than PC In my opinion. I will only go to Brighton during the week, if I take some time off of work.

  • @tallyrc
    @tallyrc Місяць тому +50

    It's cheaper to fly to Europe for a European vacation and ski than stay domestic.. it's stupid.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      It’s crazy!

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +3

      But some people may think this means skiing in the alps is affordable - it’s not. Just more affordable than skiing in the U.S. lol

    • @tallyrc
      @tallyrc Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th regardless it's a better experience

    • @bertrenolds5
      @bertrenolds5 Місяць тому

      That is not true. If you buy a season pass thru vail or an icon pass it's not that much to actually ski. Lodging can be expensive and so can food if you are dumb enough to eat on the mtn. A flight to Europe for 1 seat is over 1k!!!!

    • @tallyrc
      @tallyrc Місяць тому

      @bertrenolds5 that's the point dude. They bought the whole damn town..

  • @amblincork
    @amblincork Місяць тому +19

    The people who were willing to pay these outrageous prices are a big part of the problem

    • @Unfluencer
      @Unfluencer Місяць тому +3

      lol! So true. I buy a season pass and ski 100 days a year so $1200 for the icon is a great deal. But for 5 days? Only a rich fool--or a fool-- would consider it.

    • @JamesStangl
      @JamesStangl Місяць тому

      Both the Epic and Ikon pass offerings are a double-edged sword. IF you ski enough days, and enjoy going to a few different ski areas per year, they're very cost-effective. And if you avoid the overpriced food and lodging provided by these places, even better. The reason Epic and Ikon passes exist is to lock in $$ for Vail Corp and Alterra, regardless of what the season is like. They provide the companies with a stable income stream that isn't as dependent on bad weather at some locations, etc. Frankly, you'd have to be crazy or crazy rich to plunk down the exorbitant $$ for a day pass at places like Park City, Vail, or Breck. Even a 5-day Epic Day pass would be far more cost-effective.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      True

  • @savillecreations8046
    @savillecreations8046 Місяць тому +17

    I live in Salt Lake City and have many world class resorts between 30-60 minutes from my home. I am upper middle class and have decided skiing is no longer smart financially…plus fighting for parking, long lift lines and crowded slopes. Fortunately Utah has many incredible state and national parks, great hiking and lakes. My wife and I can enjoy awesome recreation without the high costs for us to spend just one day standing in lines for few ski runs on the mountain.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      I’m happy to hear you’re still able to enjoy the great outdoors! It really is a shame that even financially responsible people still cannot justify the expenditure.

    • @savillecreations8046
      @savillecreations8046 Місяць тому +4

      @@Galbra1thit is becoming more and more an image thing than a love for the sport and nature.

  • @giggsmiller1
    @giggsmiller1 Місяць тому +13

    I skied park city last year (live in London and have skied predominantly in Europe) - the cost was insane! Passes, food, accommodation, it was wild. Made me feel for US based skiers, especially as infrastructure is way worse than in Europe. Just hoping Europe never gets commercialised in the same way…

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Where you you like to go in Europe? Why did you even come to the US in the first place? Lol

    • @giggsmiller1
      @giggsmiller1 Місяць тому +1

      Haha, I actually went for the cat skiing, only skied a day at each end in PC/Deer Valley - so had to get two separate day passes which was eye-watering! Park city is relatively easy from the UK and there aren’t really any cat skiing operations in Europe, so me and mate decided to give it a try (and we love powder skiing obvs). Don’t get me wrong, was a fantastic experience but the cost means there’s no way I would trek to the US for resort skiing. Europe wise I’ve skied maybe 20 resorts across France/Swiss/Austria/Italy - Val D’Isere is a big fave, Ischgl is awesome (probs my fave for apres in the alps), Verbier good but expensive. Essentially there are a lot of great resorts, just the snow cover in recent years has been pretty unreliable. The main thing that irritated me about PC was it was so expensive and yet the infrastructure was rubbish and the food up the mountain was shite. Everyone was super friendly though, I think the British accent helped! 😂

  • @jimhays2772
    @jimhays2772 Місяць тому +15

    Back in the early 60s Park City had some 1200 residents and falling some calling it a ghost town in the making. However the people of park city took a government grant for helping economically dire towns. They turned that money into a ski area called treasure mountain resort and they did not expect profits from the resort as it was supposed to exist as a means of getting tourists and skiiers into the towns restaurants,hotels and other businesses. Its said they were surprised the mountain made a small profit it's first year. Given that what we have today is a corporation that has wrecked skiing not only for locals but now everyone and their greed and shakedown of ski resorts originally intended in many cases to exist only to generate economic community growth and value has been hijacked and the community and the public have to suffer the consequences of a tiny fraction of people that will butcher and industry or company to get rich. Vail Resorts leaders and CEOs care nothing about skiing or the quality of the skiing since barely any of them even ski,much less giving a S%$t about the local communities or interests. Its a shame that we used to have a working model but greedy rich misers eventually had to step in and basically rob the public of a good thing so they might get that 3rd 25 million dollar yacht.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      It’s interesting to hear what Park City was like back in the 60s. I think a good step forward could be a similar process with local governments developing other public lands to turn them into public ski areas.

  • @BlacqueJacqueShellacque_
    @BlacqueJacqueShellacque_ Місяць тому +15

    The funny thing is I'm sure a huge percentage of people that had their vacation ruined by Vail will purchase their Epic Pass again next year. If you don't vote with your wallet corporations will continue to take advantage of you.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      Right.

    • @bmatt23420
      @bmatt23420 Місяць тому +1

      this guy gets it

    • @IAnonymous3
      @IAnonymous3 17 днів тому

      Exactly man….exactly…. I lived in Breckenridge for 10 years and that place is destroyed

    • @midi510
      @midi510 12 днів тому

      I bet EPIC sales for next winter go way down.

  • @leflixestla4659
    @leflixestla4659 Місяць тому +31

    US skiing is ruined. So please don’t ruin the Alps too

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +2

      I’ll do my best!

    • @testboga5991
      @testboga5991 Місяць тому +2

      💯

    • @bb5242
      @bb5242 Місяць тому

      Not all of it and hopefully nobody will clue you in publically, but there are a few gems still out there

  • @patrickodonnell4109
    @patrickodonnell4109 Місяць тому +37

    PE ruins everything it touches. Period. Note to Cameron: snow making is not a strain on water resources. The snow will melt in the spring and turn back into water making its way back to streams, lakes, underground aquifers, etc. The idea that snowmaking wastes water is a fallacy.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +2

      Thanks for the clarification on the snow making! That makes total sense.

    • @barbaravanerp4598
      @barbaravanerp4598 Місяць тому +3

      Actually Yellowstone club is trying to use reclaimed water because it is an issue

    • @hbofbyu1
      @hbofbyu1 Місяць тому

      Snow making machines alter the ecosystem, altering the water table and the natural water cycle. They introduce fungicidal proteins that are used to seed the snow which effects the plant growth. Artificial snow melts slower than natural snow and more is lost to evaporation and sublimation. So there is a net loss of water by using snow machines - not to mention the energy costs.

    • @timdskibum
      @timdskibum Місяць тому

      Yes and no, you are correct that it is not a total waste of water. There is loss in ground percolation and evaporation and must be considered. Utah is super dry and evaporation does occur even below freezing temps - look for that mini ice cube in the back of your freezer. Its not full proof.

    • @r2dad282
      @r2dad282 Місяць тому +1

      @barbaravanerp4598 Usually reclaimed water is cheap--WWTPs give it away in some cases. So even with additional MBR and ozone treatment that water is going to be less expensive than trucking or piping in new fresh water. Fresh water is always going to be "an issue", it's a matter of how much do other alternatives cost in comparison.

  • @thomasclark8119
    @thomasclark8119 Місяць тому +10

    I remember the days you could buy a next day lift ticket at your local supermarket. Or you could roll up to the resort and buy a same day ticket for around $50. Now days a same day lift ticket will cost $200 no matter where you go. Look to Europe and their lift tickets aren’t nearly as much. Two companies controlling almost all the resorts has destroyed the experience for common people here in America

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +2

      Yeah as I said it’s become totally unaffordable for a middle class (and even upper class) family. Sure lift tickets are $200+ but that doesn’t even take into consideration the equipment rentals, food there, and lodging.. crazy!

    • @richardpare3538
      @richardpare3538 Місяць тому +2

      Heck, I remember the days when you could get "twofer" ticket ( 2 lift tickets for the price of one) for $9!

    • @MacThreinfhir
      @MacThreinfhir Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1thI really hope this model fails… it’s ruined the experience and I think will do long term damage to the sport.

    • @JamesStangl
      @JamesStangl Місяць тому +2

      That's a great reason to support smaller, independent ski areas. A lot of them still exist, and are far more reasonable for families. They may not have some of the terrain and name cachet that places like Vail, Park City, Telluride, and Whistler have, but they can provide a fun time, good learning areas for kids, and they still have "soul." And ski shops away from the resorts often have good season rental deals. As far as food and lodging: DON'T stay at the hotels owned by the big corporations, and brown bag it!!

  • @tallyrc
    @tallyrc Місяць тому +37

    What hasn't private equity destroyed? Serious question. Name an industry it's helped..

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +14

      Asset management 🥶😂

    • @tman8939
      @tman8939 Місяць тому +5

      they destroyed affordability, ticket price, parking price, lodging price, food price. Buy up competitors= ski shops, liquor stores, retail stores, transportation companies ect. that is what Vail has destroyed. I saw it first hand living in a resort town.

    • @tiga2001
      @tiga2001 Місяць тому +2

      because we have people who keep voting in representatives in our government that don't want to pass any laws against corporate greed.

    • @timdskibum
      @timdskibum Місяць тому

      The development of new products and businesses.... Most of the things you do or touch... Do you think the government could manage a economy better? Yes it has its issues, but letting these business fail and die will evolve the economy. The problem is when big gov bails them out in the name of saving jobs...

    • @argentiniancapo
      @argentiniancapo Місяць тому +4

      Aaand that’s why I don’t get ikon or epic but support Sierra at Tahoe after the fires. If the join Alterra full time I will get Dodge Ridge or Bear Mountain. Support your local hill or get into backcountry with proper education. Vuck Fail

  • @ribrobrooproop
    @ribrobrooproop Місяць тому +4

    I take my 4-year old skiing at Solitude regularly, and was born in PC and grew up skiing DV every weekend. I just can't imagine the disappointment I'd feel if I showed up to go skiing with my kids and saw one of those lift lines. "Well guys, I don't know what to say, just stand here in the snow for 45 minutes."

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Yeah I feel for all the parents who had to wait in that line..

  • @boardervt
    @boardervt Місяць тому +7

    Imagine being an east coast skier and saving money for years planning a dream trip out west, spending the time to pick and plan it, paying $10,000+ between lift tickets, travel, lodging/food only for this to happen. I would be beyond livid

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      That’s what I keep thinking about. I couldn’t imagine having to wait for hours when I’ve paid that much.

    • @WaffleIron911
      @WaffleIron911 Місяць тому

      Imagine paying $10k just to ski at a Vail owned resort 😂 I'd be in Japan or Europe with that kind of money skiing for a full week and still come back spending less!

  • @rubrshrk
    @rubrshrk Місяць тому +9

    I won't cross picket lines to ski at Park City this year and I've communicated with them and their investor relations my displeasure with their employee relations. I won't buy another Epic Pass unless they change their priorities. It would not hurt them in the least to be decent to their employees. We apparently cannot satisfy the obscene greed of the private equity companies, but also of the general investment community. This model is completely driving a wrecking ball through companies and consumers.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Has their IR team gotten back to you?

    • @rubrshrk
      @rubrshrk Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th Not yet.

  • @koda5261
    @koda5261 Місяць тому +9

    Vail lift tickets increased 300% in 4 years and yet they complain about a $2 raise stating ski patrol wages have gone up 50% in 4 years. So lift tickets went from about $100 in 2020 to about $300, an extra profit of $200; yet they complain about the extra $10 they have to pay to ski patrol.
    We need a nationwide Vail ski patrol boycott, demand changes. Bring back season passes to 1/3 of what they cost today, in-line with where they were 5 years ago, don't charge for everything on the mountain, cut prices by 50% everywhere for dining/drinks, and increase lift capacity with larger chairs. They can say no all they want, but losing billions in a season and force them to go bankrupt is not an option for them; so they have to say yes.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Interesting strategy. I think food 100% should be reduced starting NOW!

    • @checo123
      @checo123 Місяць тому

      "Bring back season passes to 1/3 of what they cost today" - oh yeah that will definitely help with lines. 🤡

    • @randombuilder01
      @randombuilder01 Місяць тому +1

      10 years ago, I could fly from St Louis, Mo, get a shuttle, rental, housing, lift, and ski passes for $800. Went grocery shopping , and went out to eat a few times. Total 1000.00 for the entire trip cost. for 4 days. I thought that was a luxury, but affordable.

    • @steampunk888
      @steampunk888 Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1thIt might be better to inform your viewers of the actual market dynamics involved. A $200 price increase never means “an extra profit of $200.” And the price which results in max profit is almost never the highest price. Large price increases clearly hurt sales volume, so whenever they appear, you can be sure the operators regard it as a poison pill. But there are always fixed costs that simply must be paid. The resultant declines in sales only necessitate further price hikes, and further cuts in services and maintenance, making (for one example) lift lines lengthen. It’s a death spiral, and the biggest root cause is probably inflation. When currency is devalued and salaries do not increase, then essentially people are becoming poorer.

  • @AmeriMutt76
    @AmeriMutt76 18 днів тому +1

    "Imagine paying $350 for a lift ticket.." - full stop right there. That answers your question, absolutely 100% yes.

  • @johnheaney6383
    @johnheaney6383 Місяць тому +6

    Corporate greed is destroying everything good for the majority of people.

  • @wlouisharris
    @wlouisharris 14 днів тому +1

    I went to Park City last year. Once I figured out where to park I had a good time, but the crowds were insane. You had to ski down to the mid mountain lifts because if you skied down to the bottom it was a 1 hr wait. Park City just doesn't have the infrastructure to handle the kind of crowds coming in. The slopes are really great though.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  6 днів тому

      Ugh that’s just so crazy

  • @garyjarvis2730
    @garyjarvis2730 Місяць тому +5

    The Unlimited season pass is the straw that broke the camels back. Rather than charging a reasonable daily rate they pushed the all included ticket. This means there is no way of regulating how many people show up to ski on a particular day. The system gets overloaded quickly with this unpredictability in skier load. The upfront money grab is backfiring in a big way. They are getting close to the tipping point where it is cheaper to fly to Europe and ski or just stay home.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      I have no clue how as a business there is no way to regulate the daily flow. I saw someone earlier mention segmenting it into weekend and weekday passes to account for the weekend warriors.

    • @garyjarvis2730
      @garyjarvis2730 Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th If you had to purchase a ticket, or be issued one for each day as a season pass holder, the mountain could cut off the total number of skiers on the property at any given time. They know what is open and the working lift capacity. If you can move 5,000 people per hour on all of your operating lifts you should not have say 10,000 people on the property or you will have the chaos that is shown. It can be done if they really cared about their customer base.

    • @lattelandlatteland
      @lattelandlatteland Місяць тому +1

      ​@@Galbra1thCrystal mtn in WA had this problem on ikon. The solution was limited no of days per year on ikon (~7) unless you got the extra crystal pass. Now they try to limit it with a required parking pass at the resort.

  • @timdskibum
    @timdskibum Місяць тому +6

    PC local here, couple things going on that need to be considered. First, the ENTIRE mountain is rarely open for Christmas week. Its just to early in the season and the snow totals do not allow for the upper mountain that does not have snowmaking to open tell mid Jan. Second, the ski patrol strike is a joke. They cite living wages as the reason but $21 vs $23 starting wages will NEVER change what is needed to live up here. You need to make 100K+ a year to afford a 1 bedroom condo at $650K. Get real, if I could make 100K a year being a ski bum then EVERYBODY would be doing it. I patrolled when I was 19, best job that I ever had and loved every day I got paid to strap on my skies and make runs. Avi control was the best, the only way you could get a 19 year old idiot out of bed at 5AM. my legs were spent by 10AM from skiing untracked in avi boundary control locations. I knew it was a pre-college, pre-occupation to get out of mom and dads house job. Third, those nasty lines are not new this year, of course everybody says its the worst ever, but I will never ski during holiday break as I have been stuck in lines for 55 min before. Fourth, $355 otd for passes is over the top. I bought snow machines/timbersleds and hit the non crowded mountains to get my powder fix. even at $15K for a set up vs ticket prices - its cheaper and I am alone!

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      lol definitely some valid points about ski patrol not being a career.. And I agree that it’s hard to see how a $2 increase is going to drastically change the quality of life and all of a sudden allow them to afford Park City..

    • @sfvelo
      @sfvelo Місяць тому

      Strike is really not about $2. That’s the narrative but it’s about wage compression.

    • @MikeBodo
      @MikeBodo Місяць тому +1

      Aren't there dormotories for seasonal employees at PC? I know Vail Resorts provides this for employees at Whistler - especially those there on work Visa's from Australia that I've met over the years. Granted, I realize many employeers are year-rounders, but some locals I would think take advantage of this.

    • @Unfluencer
      @Unfluencer Місяць тому +1

      @@MikeBodo this will be the new model for ski areas. plenty of old hotels they can convert to employee housing. If they can stop being cheap AF.

  • @JohnMcRae-zs2lc
    @JohnMcRae-zs2lc 23 дні тому +1

    I've been skiing for over 50 years. I agree with everything presented here, but I think there's something else at work, namely, the development of skiing technology that makes learning and practicing the sport so easy. Like golf's development of pumpkin-sized drivers made from composite materials and designed to be very forgiving, like the tennis racquet growing in size and shrinking in weight, the development of the short, super-shaped ski has made acquiring the skills of the sport much less of a challenge. As a result, what used to take years to develop - from the snowplow, to the christie and stem-christie turns, the Austrian "hop" and on to parallel skiing - now can be mastered in a season or two, and you've got the slopes crowded with relatively inexperienced skiers who don't really remember what it used to be like to work at making it down the mountain on 200 cm skis over big bumps (or what it's like NOT to have a nice corduroy-smooth highway) and feeling the real challenge. It's just too easy now. All you need is $250, and you're all set!!

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  6 днів тому +1

      That’s a unique perspective.. Interesting’

  • @DBossMC
    @DBossMC Місяць тому +6

    I live here in Park City year round, since 2023. This situation sucks, though haven’t cared to go skiing since I got back from Christmas in FL

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Why have you chosen to not go skiing?

    • @mattjax16
      @mattjax16 Місяць тому

      Overcrowding, lack of qualified patrollers up till today, even just making up the canyons is a nightmare on weekends gotta go during the week and even that isn’t great with all the nepo babies and “work” from home crowd

    • @nathanyellll
      @nathanyellll Місяць тому

      @@mattjax16boo hoo you’re getting old. 😭

    • @DBossMC
      @DBossMC Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th cause the lines ain’t worth it

  • @TheDylantaylor08
    @TheDylantaylor08 Місяць тому +3

    Lifelong Utahn, son of a ski patrolman, grew up near PC and even worked for the resort prior to Vail coming to town. I also work for a publicly traded company that is consolidating an industry so I’ve seen both sides. Vail has made the experience worse in the name of creating shareholder value.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Interesting perspective. Hopefully your current company is doing a better job!

  • @Anonymousb1ack4
    @Anonymousb1ack4 Місяць тому +5

    Its sad to see how expensive skiing/snowboarding has become. Growing up here in Utah I had a lot of fun and have great memories at a lot of the resorts. Its crazy to think that 15-20 years ago a day pass was around 30-60. I remember when the olympics where here I had a season pass to park city resort for $99. I have been priced out of skiing and havent gone in over a decade. I wont be returning to the slopes unless it becomes more cost effective. im not holding my breath.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Do you still live in Utah? If so it’s super unfortunate you haven’t been able to enjoy it in your own backyard.

  • @wydryfly
    @wydryfly Місяць тому +1

    I remember paying $189 for a full season student pass at Smugglers Notch in VT. No restrictions, no blackouts. We stayed on campus during winter break so we could ski everyday all day. Those were magical times in the late 1990’s.

  • @squirrelnibbler19
    @squirrelnibbler19 Місяць тому +8

    We go to locally owned smaller mountains in Tahoe. I refuse to pay and participate in these terrible passes. Especially for lower level green/blue skiing families, I’ll never use most of these black runs anyhow. I’ll take the old school lodges with chicken fingers or fly to Europe on occasion. Ugh! Private equity burning it all down.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Makes sense! If you’re not trying to go down the steepest mountain or toughest terrain then there is nothing wrong with that! Hope y’all have fun!

  • @kylel9899
    @kylel9899 20 днів тому +1

    A big issue is that there just isn't much new skiable terrain in the last 40 years. The amount of ski resorts in the US has largely stayed the same since the 80s despite the population growing about 100 million. So the slopes are more crowded. There's more people competing for a finite resource.
    Like any business, those in charge of it are going to look for the path of least resistance in order to make money. This means that instead of finding new land to cut trail, open new resorts, and invest in expansion, which is expensive and bogged down by government regulations, they're just going to find ways to get more people crammed onto the mountain and find ways to rip them off. That's why you wait in line for an hour and your cheeseburger cost $25.
    The corporate ski industry has no interest in improving the experience because the bad experience is your only option. It's either ski at a crowded resort, take up backcountry (which most people won't/can't do), or stop skiing. Like anything these days, it's been enshittified beyond recognition because of greed.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  6 днів тому

      What’s the solution here?

  • @richardhite3953
    @richardhite3953 Місяць тому +6

    I live just 2 miles from the mouth of the canyon from one of these major resorts. My days of skiing are over. They have oversold these epic and icon passes making it difficult to ski. Roads are heavily congested. The lines are incredibly long. The prices have just skyrocketed. Skiing is no longer a family sport. Sadly it is for the wealthy. I choose to put my money elsewhere.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Thanks for the perspective! Do a lot of locals have epic passes or is it all people from out of town?

    • @kyle7574
      @kyle7574 Місяць тому

      Locals don’t really use epic as much because Ikon has 6 other resorts in Utah compared to just 1 for epic

  • @petertwiss356
    @petertwiss356 Місяць тому +7

    Ski resorts are becoming like amusement parks: overpriced and too crowded. Not worth it there are plenty of other great recreation sports.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      That’s why there’s a ton of value at the smaller but lesser known parks. The mountains may not be as “good” but they’re a far better experience.

  • @CaptainFransBanninckCocq
    @CaptainFransBanninckCocq Місяць тому +4

    Easy answer: Don't go to any resort which is on a mega pass. Except the Indy Pass.
    There are lots of magical mountains in charming towns waiting for you. Beaver Mountain Utah. Lost Trail Montana. Wolf Creek Pass Colorado. Ski Santa Fe New Mexico. These places all have charm, hospitality, reasonable prices, great snow, and hometown vibe. Don't even think about Park City, Vail, etc.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      Good point! For people who aren’t local or big skiers many may not know these places exist because of what they see online being dominated by the big guys.

    • @lattelandlatteland
      @lattelandlatteland Місяць тому +1

      ​@@Galbra1thwe need a good online guide for all the other ski passes

    • @four_two
      @four_two Місяць тому +1

      Thank you for this. You've got me thinking. I'm an Ikon pass holder and I ski out of my van. The big resorts and resort towns are very inhospitable to van campers. I've read that the smaller resorts are much more hospitable and have experienced it myself a bit.

    • @CaptainFransBanninckCocq
      @CaptainFransBanninckCocq Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th People need to Google hidden ski gems!

  • @Giovanni36
    @Giovanni36 Місяць тому +10

    Vail resorts did it to themselves gauging riders every day at every resort they run -own. It’s rediculous they have the money to pay ski patrol more corporate greed at work much larger ski areas and resorts in Europe make it happen for 40-70 euros a ticket and they are 10-40,000 skiable acres for many of them they do just fine

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Unfortunately it’s all about the margins to them. That’s the issue being a public company, you are always expected to find ways to grow your revenue. The public markets don’t reward flat profitability each year - it requires you to eke out every cent you can.. Just a tough reality :/

    • @WaffleIron911
      @WaffleIron911 Місяць тому

      ​@@Galbra1thand this is why the US economy is going down the drain. Every company has to maximize profits every quarter otherwise they're deemed a failure. You can't squeeze juice from a rock...

  • @JasonTaylor-po5xc
    @JasonTaylor-po5xc Місяць тому +6

    Some counter points to consider:
    1. Vail has put massive investments into their resorts - including cutting edge snow-making (especially Keystone) which opens resorts earlier and keeps them open longer and provides more consistent ski conditions throughout the season. Also, Vail has opened more terrain and replaced slow lifts with high-speed and often higher capacity lifts.
    2. Epic and Ikon passes (and others) allow frequent skiers a great value and flexibility throughout the ski season. I've skied at Keystone, Breckenridge and Vail already this season and I plan to hit Beaver Creek very soon. For example, last season I paid $750 for the Epic Local pass (Rockies) and skied 12 days at Epic resorts - which works out to $63 per day. Not bad at all. I call any season above 10 visits a win. I could not afford to ski that frequently without a pass.
    3. Vail charges a premium for other services but actually has great rates early season. I stayed at the Keystone condos for $150/night in November. With Vail, you are typically paying for easy access or preferred/better options. There are still plenty of places to rent equipment off mountain for very reasonable prices.
    4. At least in Colorado, most Epic resorts offer some form of free parking still. Breck has the Airport Road lot, Keystone has the River Run lot, and the remote lots at Beaver Creek aren't free but they are pretty reasonable. All these lots are shuttle served. Places like Breckenridge even operate a free city-wide bus line and Summit county offers a free shuttle that services several ski resorts.
    5. Super long lift lines are the exception, not the rule. Even at Breck, the longest I've ever waited was 25 minutes. Normally, it's more like 10-15 minutes, if that long. Crowds do thin out after lunch.
    6. Vail/Epic has a vested interest in keeping their guests happy. Of course, they want to maximize the number of happy guests, but if they allow _too_ many guests, then the guests will stop coming because of a poor experience.
    7. Not all improvements are within Vail's control. Nearly all ski resorts operate on federal lands. All expansions or even simple upgrades require approval from the corresponding government agency _and_ often the local town/county.
    8. They are a victim of their own success. I'd argue that traffic is a bigger problem than issues at the resorts. Every attempted to drive from Denver to any resort along I-70 on a Saturday morning? I have literally spent 4 hours going from Golden to Loveland Ski Area before. By allowing us commoners to access frequent skiing, the roads are crazy jammed at times.
    9. Mega passes spread out risk for Vail or other resorts, which allows them to forecast revenue. As climates change, this will become more important.
    Of course, some improvements could be made - not all of these are within Vail's control:
    1. Epic needs a "weekday-only" season pass option to spread out those weekend warriors.
    2. Free parking options at places without it - signs warning drivers of full lots well in advance (like in Breck).
    3. Option to park/car-camp overnight in Summit county or near other ski resorts. I really can't justify $500/night just for me during the core season. I think this could spread out the individual skiers on the roadways.
    4. Denver to Summit County rail service. This is applicable other places too. Busses/shuttles already exist but they are impacted by the same horrible traffic.
    5. Widen I-70, or at least toll lane all the way to Beaver Creek or make an HOV/shuttle/bus lane.
    Regarding ski patrol. I'm not a "living wage" or union person, but seems like ski patrol probably should make more than unskilled labor. But, it's all about supply and demand. If there is a long line to become a ski patroller, I suppose there isn't much room for negotiating.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Wow - thanks for the thoughtful comment! All points are super valid and show you’ve thought this through. Hopefully local governments can assist with these projects and make the process of traveling to these areas enjoyable again!

    • @alangil40
      @alangil40 Місяць тому

      I live in Colorado, and I have the Ikon pass. I can agree that I have seen improvements to lift capacity at Winter Park, Steamboat and Copper Mountain (and even Eldora). I also rarely encounter long lift lines, partially because I ski in the more advanced areas (even though I am only an average skier by Colorado standards, most vacationers are in the easier areas). For example, you can ski right up to the 6-person Super Bee lift in Copper without hardly any lines even on weekends. At worst on average a line might be 5 to 10 minutes on average across the Ikon mountains. I get in 12 to 15 days a year which makes the cost between $50 and $70 per day and I pack my own lunch to save money. I do feel for families who are not local as the price of a ski trip has become pretty outrageous. But it seems to me that the real problem is that there are a lot more people interested in skiing so it boils down to supply and demand. If prices were super cheap (as I wish they were in an ideal world), then the mountains and roads would be incredibly overcrowded. When people harken back to the good ole days of the 1970s and 1980s one must remember that there simply were not as many people in general, or as many skiers in particular. I wouldn't be surprised if the number of potential skiers has doubled in the last 40 years, yet the number of total skiable acres is roughly the same. This may get worse if climate change shortens the season. How do we get more ski mountains? Is it even possible given geography constraints?

    • @trailphantoms1928
      @trailphantoms1928 Місяць тому

      I have been skiing Keystone for 30 years and am a former Keysotne homeowner and village business owner. By any measure VR has ruined Keystone. The Purina days were the peak of the Keystone customer experience. Whether it's the skiing, retail shopping options or in resort dining their control has marginalized it all. So if you can be satisfied with Keystone's thin white ribbon of death offerings in early season and consider that a value good for you. But anyone who remembers how special Keystone was would have no problem calling BS on these "super valid" points.

    • @JasonTaylor-po5xc
      @JasonTaylor-po5xc Місяць тому

      @@trailphantoms1928 Even if you think the cons outweigh the pros, there isn't any BS in my points - you may simply disagree with them. Keystone had slower infrastructure and less reliable snow before Vail took over - this is undeniable. You might simply prefer the "good old days" when it had more of a local ski hill feel than a top rated destination ski mountain. Old Keystone would not have opened up Bergman Bowl with a high speed 6-pack. Yes, some skiers whine about others skiers not having the "earn their turns" in the bowl. Either way, it is a similar native/long-timer vs new comer sentiment expressed across all of Colorado - and most other desirable states. I'm sorry your Keystone is forever gone.

  • @pamelameier8485
    @pamelameier8485 13 днів тому +1

    As a long time skier and resident of Colorado, let me offer advice. #1-DONT BOOK YOUR SKI TRIP ON HOLIDAYS OR WEEKENDS. #2-Avoid Vail Resorts. There are many smaller ski areas (we call them the "Gems"). They may not have fancy restaurants or 5 star hotels but they are great "skiers mountains." #3-Plan your visit early enough to buy discount passes and tickets. Pass and day sales are best early and late season. (We buy ours Labor Day Weekend).

  • @paulc4732
    @paulc4732 Місяць тому +5

    People, stop giving into these resorts. We’re the problem. They know you’ll pay, they continue to mark up.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      There is definitely truth in this. I mentioned the $350 day pass - and yet the lines are absolutely packed!

    • @JoeRamm-u7v
      @JoeRamm-u7v Місяць тому

      Can’t afford it anyways lol

  • @fudogwhisperer3590
    @fudogwhisperer3590 26 днів тому +1

    I went skiing in Park City 3 years ago. I found the skiing great, but the lift ticket prices insane. I’ve purposely avoided anywhere that ticket prices were over $100 per day. It’s not as great skiing, but I’m not supporting the insanity.

  • @antonyphipps5671
    @antonyphipps5671 Місяць тому +3

    My wife and I used to live outside of Vail until two years ago, and skied there for 45 years. We stopped skiing after both of us got wiped out by snowboarders running into us and by the increasingly large crowds and lift lines and food lines and outrageous charges for lower quality experiences. It just was not worth it anymore. Vail (MTN) may have "cornered" the skiing market, but they're destroying what used to be a very worthwhile recreational experience. Outrageous and sad!

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  28 днів тому

      Very sad! And agreed, the snowboarders make it much more dangerous than before!

  • @Borlamach
    @Borlamach Місяць тому +2

    The thing I miss most about living in Japan was paying 4,500 - 6,000¥ for lift ticket and getting some of the best powder in the world

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      What does that equate to in USD?

    • @Borlamach
      @Borlamach Місяць тому

      @Galbra1th ¥6,000 is $38 today

    • @johnwhalley1437
      @johnwhalley1437 22 дні тому

      @@Galbra1th$30 to $40

  • @ohhansel
    @ohhansel Місяць тому +3

    Private equity mindset destroys everything.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      What examples have you seen in your own life?

    • @ohhansel
      @ohhansel Місяць тому

      @Galbra1th Payday loans and title loans are destroying the poor across America, yet they keep us convinced it's each other with manufactured race wars.

  • @tstouff65
    @tstouff65 Місяць тому +2

    I have been an epic pass holder for 14 years. Every year I pay more for the privilege of ever increasing season passes, traffic to the vail properties in CO, ungodly lift lines and in short an ever decreasing customer experience.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      I can’t imagine how much it’s changed in 14 years

    • @bvanderford
      @bvanderford Місяць тому +2

      Why do you continue to buy the pass?

    • @tstouff65
      @tstouff65 Місяць тому

      @ i buy the pass because I love to ski and thus far been willing to put up with the negatives that come with the sport. I don’t put the blame solely on the resort operators as everything seems to be more congested and expensive these days. I also don’t pretend to have any answers to the problems that increased interest in the sport have caused. It is was it is! So I will deal with it until I determine the costs outweigh my enjoyment. Just getting closer to that point than I ever have been.

  • @ledzeppelin460
    @ledzeppelin460 Місяць тому +3

    I'm on ski patrol Mt. Baldy BC. No lift lines, great powder, reasonable prices. Whilst there isn't really Accommodation on the mountain, local towns are not too far away

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      That's a great alternative to the packed resorts!

  • @mszabol69
    @mszabol69 Місяць тому +1

    Private Equity and Big Corp consolidation is ruining EVERYTHING. I work in the Coffee Industry and Private Equity is on a buying rampage throughout the space and causing all kinds of price increases and service decreases, and in general sucking the cash out of the local economies, and making liquidity that much harder for the local business that are the final mile for the entire value chain. It's nuts. And the PE owners DGAF.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      I’ve seen that play out in NYC with Pret a Manger. It’s everywhere!

  • @billlundquist
    @billlundquist Місяць тому +7

    We have been going to Snowy Range in WY. Not a big resort, but I'm an old fart and I just want to ski.

    • @tman8939
      @tman8939 Місяць тому +2

      hush, hush do not let the secret out..

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Haha I’m happy for you! Hopefully this comment doesn’t go viral!

  • @kasebier8688
    @kasebier8688 Місяць тому +2

    If you want to eliminate the lines, turn them into private clubs like golf courses. $100K up front to join and $20K a year for a family membership. Drinks and food not included.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      Yeah I’m really surprised there’s not things like this already. This seems like a natural next step for the true luxury experience.

    • @bvanderford
      @bvanderford Місяць тому

      Plenty of people will pay for that.

  • @CuriositySake
    @CuriositySake Місяць тому +3

    Private Equity & Private Corporate Giants
    (Altera) consolidation of ski resorts has done irreparable harm to every community they enter! Park City having both of these, it seems there is no end in site! $40 burger, coke fries on mountain? Meanwhile, global change has had a significant impact on ttpical open/closing dates. Christmas openings have become more of a challenge and spring seems to be getting warmer earlier.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Yeah the shortened ski season is not making any of the pricing issues go away.. And I totally agree - if we’re paying hundreds for a lift ticket you don’t need to over-charge us for our lunch! Take a page out of the Masters book in golf and make all concessions extremely affordable since they know you’re paying a premium for the tickets.

  • @matthewseel5961
    @matthewseel5961 12 днів тому +1

    I think there has been a small revolution of the skiing industry moving towards independent resorts in the last couple of years. The success of the indy pass is a testiment to that.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  6 днів тому

      Yeah I think the comments on this video support that claim!

  • @Tarbash7364
    @Tarbash7364 Місяць тому +7

    Never go to Park City‼️👎🏻👎🏻👎🏻

  • @PantheraOnca60
    @PantheraOnca60 29 днів тому

    When I skied as a teenager back in the 70s a full-day lift ticket at Breckenridge was as low as - don't for real - $8. I gave up on skiing years ago, amid ridiculous traffic, stupidly long lift lines, and piratical lift ticket pric3s. What they have done to skiing in Colorado is a crime.

  • @alainbrouillaud484
    @alainbrouillaud484 Місяць тому +6

    What can’t Vail Resorts “F” up? 🤣😂🤣😂

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      Ouch 😂

    • @alainbrouillaud484
      @alainbrouillaud484 Місяць тому +1

      @… good video on your part. I felt you explained the issue quite well. I live in Europe and ski in Europe. The resorts in the Alps are much larger, have better infrastructure and the price to ski is on average 70% less. Sadly Vail Resorts has gotten the foot in the door at 3 resorts. Whenever I am at a ski resort I go to the manager and tell them to never let Vail Resorts buy in! I tell them it’s the worst decision you could ever make.

  • @dcoxinator
    @dcoxinator Місяць тому +1

    Great video, Cameron!! Very informative and the video seems to be performing quite well at the moment.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      Thanks as always David! And yep - can’t believe the engagement!!

  • @harrisoneps
    @harrisoneps 9 днів тому +1

    It’s not all flowers and roses here in Austria, but this video puts my 10 second waits today to get onto modern Gondolas that move me up 3300 vertical feet in 10 minutes into perspective.

  • @olivergraham1233
    @olivergraham1233 Місяць тому +3

    Its cause we haven't built a new resort in over 40 years, and 10 million new people started skiing in the last 10 years

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      That’s a solid point

    • @jaymontgomery3330
      @jaymontgomery3330 Місяць тому +1

      We need more ski areas in Washington, but the Forest Service makes that very difficult.

  • @cohighcountry
    @cohighcountry 21 день тому +1

    We've moved from standard capitalism which allowed many small businesses and operations to comfortably exist, and replaced it with corporatism which deeply favors the largest players. Their focus becomes only on expansion, profits and the bottom line. I miss the old locally and family owned resorts. They had more character and much less greed ;)

  • @gfcohen2381
    @gfcohen2381 Місяць тому +6

    one thing you haven't mentioned was that Vail hires foreign workers, most of them from South America, where the labor contracts end in the last week of March. So, most of Vail resorts plan to close in the second week of April despite the snow conditions in many years were fine to ski. People feel like got cheated. Most of iKon-pass resorts don't do that, where they try to stay open as long as they can. Vail is a mismanaged, greedy company

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      That’s an interesting fact. I wasn’t aware of that..

    • @gfcohen2381
      @gfcohen2381 Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th yep, just go visit a Vail resort sometimes in March and first week of April, you would see numbers of employees dramatically reduced starting April 1st and some of the lifts and restaurants are starting to shut down. And the local employees would be struggling to keep the place running efficiently. I have seen that in the past five years. From Vail's annual report, Vail makes 17% operating profit and 9% net profit, those are ok numbers, not great numbers, Somehow, some of the costs and management team incentives were not explained in details in the annual report. So, I felt like the current management team just want to jack up the stock price and look for a way to sell of their options (they don't care if Vail can grow the sport or not)...

    • @CaptainFransBanninckCocq
      @CaptainFransBanninckCocq Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th Vail extensively uses J1 visas which are meant for "cultural exchange" but in reality are abused to bring in cheap labor from Peru.

    • @comesatime123
      @comesatime123 Місяць тому

      I just skied at Sun Valley, independently owned but on Ikon pass. 90% of staff at the resort: lifties, hotel staff, food service, etc. were from Peru, Uraguay, Argentina, etc. It is on their name tags.

    • @bobl6139
      @bobl6139 Місяць тому +1

      Ikon does the same and in the east the only mt opened in April is killington vt

  • @liquidrobot
    @liquidrobot Місяць тому +2

    From Vail's own mission statement: Create the experience of a lifetime!

    • @MacThreinfhir
      @MacThreinfhir Місяць тому +2

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      Never specified if it’s a good or bad experience they’re creating 😂

  • @patrickd8770
    @patrickd8770 Місяць тому +3

    Idaho still has great, locally owned mountains (Tamarack and Brundage). Might be the last hope.

    • @WTHenry2023
      @WTHenry2023 Місяць тому +2

      🤫

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +2

      Hahaha don’t let the secret out!

    • @patrickd8770
      @patrickd8770 Місяць тому +3

      Sorry update to this- skiing in Idaho is awful. Everyone there is super mean and the conditions are terrible. Don’t look into it, just go to vail

    • @WTHenry2023
      @WTHenry2023 Місяць тому +1

      @patrickd8770 😂😂😂

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      I heard it’s $1500 for a day pass and $10k a night at a hotel too! 😂

  • @summers5903
    @summers5903 28 днів тому +1

    Thank you. I've watched Whistler go downhill ever since. Prices up, service is less and the lovely Whistler feeling from local business owners has gone, as leasing tenants and corporates occupy the shops.

  • @BulletRain100
    @BulletRain100 Місяць тому +3

    Vails problem has nothing to do with Private Equity, and those who say so are trying to get clicks by working on viewers ignorance.
    The problem with Vail is that their business model has run it's course. Their model was to increase revenue by increasing the more people skiing, and they are wildly successful. They made skiing much more accessible and many more people are skiing today. The problem is that the essentially reached the limit of skiers their resorts can handle so they can no longer increase revenue by getting more customers. The reason the stock crashed is because all the long term investors realized ski resorts have no long term plan.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      This is a great take (including the part about generating clicks 🫡)

  • @MacThreinfhir
    @MacThreinfhir Місяць тому +1

    I’ve been skiing for about 40 years. While some things have definitely improved (lift capacity, for example), the experience is much worse, largely due to cost. As a young person in the 80’s and 90’s, my friends and I would take trips to Utah, we could afford a condo and we’d ski at a different resort every day. We did not have great fiscal means at the time but we could do it and we had a great time. Now, the cost to do this is absurd… and we have the means. We refuse to pay the lift ticket prices out of principle. It’s sad to me because I have so many great memories from years ago but the costs today make it impossible for young people now to have that experience. The current business strategy seems very short sighted.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      I hope the industry figures out a way to make this more accessible again. I miss the good old days.

  • @Skye-JP
    @Skye-JP Місяць тому +2

    The middle class can't afford to ski there and yet it is still extremely over-crowded? That part of the video doesn't make sense. Is the price of the Epic season pass beyond the reach of the middle class? 🤔

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      The Epic Pass is ~$1,000 a person. A day’s lift ticket is $200+. For a family of four that becomes an expensive day, let alone a week vacation. I don’t think the big crowds indicate the middle class is present. I think it shows the higher income families are willing to pay.

    • @agentbb007
      @agentbb007 Місяць тому +2

      This was exactly my thought, obviously the price isn’t high enough. Double it and people will gladly pay it if the lines are reasonable.

    • @Skye-JP
      @Skye-JP Місяць тому

      @@agentbb007 Agree.

    • @Skye-JP
      @Skye-JP Місяць тому +4

      @@Galbra1th I completely disagree. My family was definitely middle class when I was in highschool. My parents found a way to afford a $400 season pass to my local mountain because it was a priority. And that was only 1 mountain in 1993. Here it is, 30 years later, and you can get an Epic value pass for $731 that gets you to a high number of resorts. Children for $344. I think that is totally within reach of the middle class. In fact, it hasn't even kept up with inflation. A season pass to ski just at just Killington in 1998 was over $1229. In my opinion, the passes are over-sold and too cheap relative to the experience. That's one reason that there are massive crowds at Epic mountains.

  • @titter3648
    @titter3648 Місяць тому

    $350 for a single day lift ticket? That is insane! I was thinking $60 for a daypass was starting to be a little excessive where i live...

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Sheesh. Where are you able to get $60?

    • @titter3648
      @titter3648 Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th Norway. And that is a expensive country in general.

  • @tinywhoopfan
    @tinywhoopfan Місяць тому +3

    As soon as I heard about the Indy pass I was sold. I used to love going to Okemo as a kid until Vail bought them. Now it has been so crowded and expensive. They used to do can drives for the hungry, vail ended those.
    If you get an EPIC or IKON pass, you are trading easier access to skiing today at the largest mountains in the US, for higher prices and lower quality of service in the future.
    If you get an Indy pass, you support independent resorts, visit ski resorts that focus on skiing and not being bougie.

    • @WTHenry2023
      @WTHenry2023 Місяць тому +1

      Yep, I cut my teeth skiing at Okemo in the early 80s when they had one chair lift and several poma lifts. Ludlow was a sleepy town and it was a magical time. I can't imagine a crowded Okemo.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      I haven’t heard of the Indy Pass but I’ll have to check it out! It’s similar to Epic, but just with a ton of independent mountains?

    • @tinywhoopfan
      @tinywhoopfan Місяць тому

      @ indy pass is its own company that works with independent resorts to get them to be on the Indy pass. I assume the resorts get some payment or revenue based on redemption. The Indy pass gives you 2 free and one half off day at all of their Indy pass mountains.
      There are passes with and without blackout dates and the Indy pass is cheaper if you have a season pass to an Indy mtn

  • @Real100Talk
    @Real100Talk Місяць тому +2

    Vail has got me thinking this is the last year of my 30+ years skiing.

  • @misterfunnybones
    @misterfunnybones Місяць тому +3

    Skiing & snowboarding are elitist sports. Like Disneyland, I've never seen so many people spend so much to stand in line.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      You don’t like paying $30 for a burger and fries? Lol

  • @bdcochran01
    @bdcochran01 29 днів тому

    I am old enough to be Mr. Galbraith's grandfather.
    1. I remember sitting in the coffee shop at Mammoth ski resort decades ago. The next table were the oldsters who pioneered skiing in Southern California. They were the original enthusiasts.
    2. I remember being in Nepal in the 1970s. Now, you see crowds of tourists wanting to climb the highest peak - when the line on the rope on the mountain side is like standing in line at Disneyland.
    3. I was in the Louvre in 1985 and could stand there looking at a classical painting for 20 minutes, with no crowds. By 2010, the Louvre would be packed in each room with morons taking cell phone photos of classical paintings!
    The answer is simple. Find somewhere else to go and something else to do. One day my late wife and I are at the top of St. Moritz in Switzerland. There is a group of Americans on "the tour". We marvel that they will be down the mountain and in London before we have completed our "walk" back to the private room where we are staying.
    Don't be the tourist who insists on going to Hollywood Blvd. There are plenty of more interesting places in the LA area.
    If you don't like Park City, find somewhere else. If you don't want to be around snow boarders, take up cross country skiing.

  • @Antaeus-gi7sv
    @Antaeus-gi7sv 29 днів тому

    I have skied almost every week during the ski season in Utah for 45 years. I have never waited more than 15 minutes to get on a lift. The problem is people like the status of skiing at Park City, because of this it is over priced and crowded.

  • @natecote1971
    @natecote1971 Місяць тому +2

    The cost of lift tickets has got absolutely ridiculous! The hate that resorts/ski slopes have towards any ski alternatives like snowboards, skibikes, ski scooters and snogo/ski trike is annoying and ridiculous! I am a disabled veteran, my body dont allow me to ski/snowboard anymore I tried out and ended up buying 2 snogo ski trikes, I can ski all day with no pain no issues but found most resorts only want skis and reluctantly snowboards. I had to get my adaptive skiing card to be allowed at many but they still restrict me to only some of their trails/lifts even though i have to pay the same as everyone else and my wife cant ski or board but she crushes it on the snogo but then we are limited to only a few places alomg with the fact that it cost $500+ for me to take her and my 2 kids!

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому +1

      I’m sorry to hear that. My stepfather is disabled and it’s hard enough without ski resorts charging you extra… I’m glad you’re still able to find ways to enjoy the snow!

  • @fishfoolishness4222
    @fishfoolishness4222 Місяць тому +1

    Back in the 70s my family of 8 got season passes at little Geneva Basin for $125.00. Those days and Geneva Basin are long gone.

  • @RobbieIsbell
    @RobbieIsbell Місяць тому +1

    I loved it when I was a kid to my early 20s until I left Utah in 2004. I came back in 2022 and I quickly learned that this has taken the joy out of snowboarding. 2034 will be a nightmare due to Winter Games if we already have this many people here.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Argh yes it’s most likely only going to become more popular as people try to find ways to disconnect from their phones..

  • @j.thomas7128
    @j.thomas7128 17 днів тому +1

    Before Vail acquired Park City, i could buy a weekend single lift ticket for $150. After acquisition, Vail raised rates. Now, it can be as high as $330 for a one day pass.
    DO NOT SKI/BOARD VAIL!

  • @pinotrini7716
    @pinotrini7716 Місяць тому +1

    dude you nailed it ! Spot on.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Thanks for the support!

  • @martinschulz9381
    @martinschulz9381 28 днів тому

    I skied Park City 25 years ago while working in Utah. Great powder and the lines and crowds were not bad at all.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  28 днів тому

      Clearly a thing or two has changed in 25 years haha

  • @teacherguy5084
    @teacherguy5084 26 днів тому +1

    Many of the ski areas, particularly in the Western U.S., are located on U.S. National Forest lands. They pay a fee for use of the lands but it's not much, around 1% of their total revenue. Those resorts should be forced to provide reasonable pricing for folks who can't afford a season pass. If they don't, the corporations should be booted off those public lands and community non-profits should run the resorts on those lands.

  • @rickfricchione694
    @rickfricchione694 22 дні тому +1

    There is no focus on guest experience. Period. Golf courses have exactly the same problem (maximizing revenue from a fixed amount of real estate). Vail would have dozens of groups on a hole at the same time, and try to convince you that getting hit by someone else’s golfball is something you should pay for. You cannot run an experience based business via spreadsheet. Vail will often talk about massive investments in lifts but then you find them only running 1 day/week and opening mid morning at the earliest. Snowmaking and grooming continue to degrade as they are now managed as a cost, not part of providing an experience.
    The issue is really why people keep coming back. The Park City meltdown was nothing new. It’s been this way for 3-4 years now.
    The pass is (in fact) too cheap. No one thinks the pass is too expensive. They get you to the mountain and stick you once there for $1200 lessons, $24 hamburgers and $14 beer.
    People need to make the market fix (or fail) companies like Vail. Not just hope.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  6 днів тому

      Yeah the $24 burger is the worst

  • @FRDOMFGTHR
    @FRDOMFGTHR 16 днів тому +1

    I am no fan of vail, they bought out my local mountain and have since completely ruined it they fired all the good staff that had been there for years and gutted it about 40-60%, took away the beginner park, made the expert park and jump line half the size and expanded “family friendly” areas to essentially cover the entire mountain besides one tiny likely section, I’ve also never seen the entire mountain open since they took over, they’re pushing away people that would routinely pay for lift tickets by trying to draw in family’s that will rent and buy food for 4-6 ppl instead of just me and my buddy getting a pass and making sandwiches in the lot

  • @MattVenezuela
    @MattVenezuela Місяць тому

    Back in 1990 my last year in the Canadian Rockies, I skied 20 out of 30 days in November that year, never once did I pay more than $60 CAD for a day pass at Sunshine & Lake Louise, it's truly insane what it costs today

  • @ashbowersock4294
    @ashbowersock4294 Місяць тому

    I rocked an Ikon pass for years, but after the last 3, watching prices go through the roof, cutthroat tactics, and not seeing anything going back into the mountain, I just can't in good conscience give them any more of my money. I've taken to the backcountry and am much happier for it. I'd rather spend all day skinning up a mountain for one run than spending all day in a line to hop on a lift that may break down because it hasn't seen any maintenance in years. The saddest part is that this affects the potential next generation of ski/snowboarders the most. I mean seriously, learning to ski/board can be difficult and not all that much fun until you are at least decent at it. And at $300+ for a day pass, not including rentals, nobody is going to be having a good day.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      That’s true. Nobody wants to pay $300+ to get their butt kicked lol

  • @theodorejay1046
    @theodorejay1046 28 днів тому +1

    $350 for a lift ticket is your first clue 😁

  • @kimwiser445
    @kimwiser445 Місяць тому +1

    They got Park City because someone forgot to renew the lease, I think by a few hours or a day and Vail jumped in and got the lease. To me this seems very fishy.

  • @Spencer-r6r2l
    @Spencer-r6r2l Місяць тому +1

    I hope the corporate ski situation improves....so that the Backcountry doesn't get more congested.

  • @rahkinrah1963
    @rahkinrah1963 Місяць тому

    I left Vail in 1992. Locals were already being pushed down valley. Same thing happened in the roaring fork valley. Billionaires bought out millionaires and they bought out everything else, pushing "locals / workers" past Glenwood down to Rifle. The real estate industry caused this.

  • @siddumt
    @siddumt Місяць тому +2

    For a different reason I’m choosing not to buy an epic pass next year because of the business practices solely. I wanted a refund on my season pass and they wanted so much personal information like doctors notes, dates, really personal info to just get a refund bro. Screw that

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      That’s odd. They required proof of injury or something to give you the return??

    • @siddumt
      @siddumt Місяць тому

      @ exactly, signed by a real doctor. They had an upload pdf option. They wanted to know when the exact date I got laid off.

  • @blkcoupequattro
    @blkcoupequattro Місяць тому

    I’ve been a pass holder since 2003 at Kirkwood, this is the first year we elected to not buy season passes 21 years, Kirkwood was bought by Vail in 2012 claimed they were going to make updates to the mountain, they instead decommissioned a relatively new lift. The have continued to let the property decline, everything just looks worn out now especially the main lodge, the old lodge has not received hardly any improvements and looks like it did back in the 1973-74, there is an area near the cafeteria and condo complex that still has rebar sticking out of the ground, and Timber Creek and learn to ski area is still in a temporary building/tent. 13 years no improvements, excessive wind holds for even lower lifts that don’t service the top of the mountain have left me questioning why am I even coming here anymore. Heavenly Valley is also looking worn down, granted some improvements have been made there, it’s not anything like it use to be to especially the food prices.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Argh sorry to hear that! I hope you still have some fond memories from the last 21 years!

  • @JimTakeoutademocrate-ir1be
    @JimTakeoutademocrate-ir1be Місяць тому

    I skied Vail through the seventies as my uncle was a sky patrol man and had a condo there. I partied in beaver creak long before they had slopes there. Day pass was expensive then, can't imagine how much a day pass is today? Many fond memories from Vail and heavenly at south lake taho. I had a blessed upbringing!

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Great memories! Beaver Creek is awesome but around just as expensive as Vail now!

  • @jackjmaheriii
    @jackjmaheriii 29 днів тому

    I’m sticking up for Veil, but the real problem is the US Park Service. The last resort approval was issued 25 years ago and no major resort has been permitted since Regan administration.

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  28 днів тому

      This definitely needs to change!

  • @maestrolimpio86
    @maestrolimpio86 Місяць тому

    I'm a lifelong skier and I don't even know when I'll be able to go skiing again. I WILL NOT pay those prices for one day of skiing. Sorry, but I have better things to spend money on, than $300-$400 for 8 hrs of skiing. It's gross and disgusting

  • @giuseppiforte592
    @giuseppiforte592 29 днів тому

    I ski at a midsized independent ski area in Vermont. They limit ticket sales based on both trail capacity and anticipated lift lines. In the last 5 years I've waited no more than 10 minutes in a lift line. The 10 day was when a lift needed to be taken out of service.
    Support and ski the indies!

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  28 днів тому +1

      Sounds like they’re doing it right!

  • @st-ex8506
    @st-ex8506 Місяць тому +1

    Imagine! For hardly more than the price of a single day ticket at Vail, you can buy a season ticket valid at 2 dozens Swiss ski resorts... several of them offering better skiing than Vail!

    • @Galbra1th
      @Galbra1th  Місяць тому

      Oh boy 😂

    • @st-ex8506
      @st-ex8506 Місяць тому

      @@Galbra1th Yes! The Magic Pass is a season pass costing CHF 399 (ca. $445), and valid in 70 Swiss resorts (not 2 dozens..I checked), including world-renowned Gstaad (as of 5.1.25, though) or Saas Fee, plus a few French and a couple of Italian ones!
      So, even if you come to Switzerland for only a week, it stays a great deal!
      It used to be accepted at the huge Crans- Montana ski area, unit the lifts there were bought by... Vail resorts, Inc... which.. you guessed right... pulled out of the deal!

  • @jaysmiles2
    @jaysmiles2 Місяць тому +1

    Yes. Pay them in the summer for an annual pass and expect the runs and lifts to be open. Well shame on you the consumer. Nothing is going to change

  • @btimms4585
    @btimms4585 Місяць тому

    The price of lift tickets in Canada and the US is absolutely outrageous. Profiteering and corporate greed is destroying local ski hills and people’s ability to access them, by jacking up lift tickets and catering to tourists only.