Gary Osguthorpe named as York Adventurer of the Year
A PLAQUE has been unveiled at a new outdoor equipment store in York, marking the decision to name mountaineer Gary Osguthorpe as York Adventurer of the Year. Snow Australia – 150 Years of Skiing Part 2
Monster High Team Spirit Fashion Pack Collection. At Monster High school spirit takes on a decidedly different twist and everyone wants the hottest fashions to look killer in the howlways. Ghoulia Yelps has joined the Graphic Novel Nexus Comic Book Club and is prepared with her issue of Dead Fast, hornrimmed glasses and freaky fabulous platform boots. Draculaura is taking scary cool pictures for t…
For a while I have been considering starting a snow boarding business and really do think it is something that will have a lot of potential. In my area there are two slopes near by and there is no local businesses that service us snow boarder’s needs. What I would like to do is start a snow boarding business that sells snow boarding clothing and snow boarding equipment and of course boards themselves. For years I have been trying to think of a business idea and I really feel that incorporating my love for snow boarding with my love for business would be a great idea. I done a degree in business however since achieving this degree I have yet to actually go out there and give it a try in the real world on my own. I am currently a business consultant for an accountancy firm, and although I enjoy my job my true desire is to go out and do it on my own, and for myself.
What I will need to do is get a business loan at first from the bank and buy a property and stock. I was thinking that one of the best ways to ensure that I get business is to position the shop as near to the slopes as I can possibly get. I was also thinking that I could reach agreements with the slopes under which they could effectively drive customers to my shop. In order to do this, I intend to organise a meeting with the managers of both slopes separately and decide on what they think is the best way that we can work together.
I now realise that the next step is going to be to put my business idea into writing and create a business plan. This is something that I do for my customers, and I am now going to have to go out their and do it for myself. I am also going to consider ways that I can market my business on the internet. From speaking with my clients I have noticed that very few actually achieve much success from their online marketing and there is a multitude of reasons why this is. The first thing that strikes me is that although they were willing to invest in a website they were completely unwilling to invest in online marketing. What I tell my customers is what I intend to do myself. I want to incorporate marketing online into my business plan and hopefully I can benefit from my attempts to gain business from a global audience. At the moment I am aware that there is a lot of competition online, however with a carefully articulated online marketing plan I am sure that there is success to be had online.
I am also hoping that in the coming weeks that I can meet with a supplier and hopefully get a better idea of the kind of profit margins that I can be looking towards. I have been told that in order to attain the best results I am going to have to meet minimum order requirements and then the supplier will give me the best prices. I see this as being a very realistic goal, as I am sure that I will be able to think of ways that I can meet the minimum order requirement. Firstly, I could collaborate with another supplier and we could buy in stock together. This is something that several of my clients do, and it results in cheaper rates that both of the buyers can benefit from.
So I have everything planned but I just have to go ahead and actually do it! The thing is that I am also going to have to try and stick with my job for as long as I possibly can. If I decide to leave my job too early then I will spend a period without a wage, however I should really inform management of my intentions.
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Grouse Mountain’s first lodge was hand-built by Scandinavians in the 1920s. They hauled planks up what would become the Grouse Grind hiking trail for the venture. Another company wanted to build a funicular railway for a private resort on the mountain, though that venture never materialized. By the 1930s, a toll road was built to the top via the slope of what is now the mountain’s primary ski run, the “Cut”, to access the lodge.
The area at the bottom of the “Cut” one of Vancouver’s most well-known ski runs is the original base of the mountain, where the area’s first lodge and rope tow were built. The base became known as the “Village” to local skiers, since numerous cabins were built in the trees surrounding the lodge and the base of the old Cut chairlift. Some of these cabins still exist and they are located below and to the west of the old Cut chairlift. The gravel road that was built to access the base, the Old Grouse Mountain Highway, still exists and is currently only used for maintaining the ski area.
In 1949, the mountain’s first double chairlift was constructed, allowing skiing down the Cut from the top of the ridge. Grouse Mountain claims this lift to have been the world’s first double chairlift, however, it was actually the second chairlift in Vancouver after the “Hollyburn” on Cypress Bowl and the third in Canada after Red Mountain; the first chair in the world was at Sun Valley in 1936. Two years later, in 1951, another a longer lift, running from a bus stop on Skyline Drive, at the bottom of the mountain, was opened, known as the Village Chair. This two seater chairlift included wooden towers (some of these towers and the lift line cable wheels are still visible on a hike following the Village Chair’s lift line). Each of the chairs were, for a time, equipped with a metal roof to keep skiers dry on rainy or snowy days during the ride up to the base of the old Cut Chair lift.
Plane crash
On February 12, 1954, a U.S. Air Force F-86 Sabre aircraft entered Canadian airspace from Washington State, and promptly collided with the southern slope of Grouse Mountain near one of the old chairlifts, scattering debris around a wide area. The pilot, Second Lieutenant Lamar J. Barlow, died still strapped in his chair.
Present-day lodge and ski area
After a fire destroyed the original lodge in the winter of 1964, the two original lifts were removed in the 1970s. The government of British Columbia, seeing the possibilities for tourism, provided funding and permits for a new lodge to be built on the ridge, as well as an aerial tramway travelling to the mountaintop from the valley below. The tramway, known as the Blue Tram, was built by Austrian steel company Voestalpine and was opened and inaugurated on December 15, 1966, by Premier W. A. C. Bennett. Ten years later, the mountain was purchased from its original owners by the McLaughlin family in 1976. The new ownership provided additional funding for the construction of a second aerial tramway, known as the Red Tram or Super Skyride, that same year.
The new ski area featured the Peak and Blueberry Chairs which were both built in the 1960s and early 1970s, while the additional Inferno Chair was constructed in 1976. With only partial ownership of the mountain, the McLaughlin family obtained full ownership in 1989 and proceeded to construct Canada’s first high-definition theatre, dubbed the Theatre in the Sky, in 1990 by expanding the present-day lodge.
As the Inferno, Blueberry and Peak Chairs began to age in the 2000s, all three lifts were removed due to insurance issues, beginning with the Inferno in late 2003 and the Blueberry and Peak the following year. All three were effectively replaced by Grouse Mountain’s second high-speed and detachable quad chair built by North American aerial lift manufacturer Leitner-Poma for the 2005 winter season. (The first was the Screaming Eagle on the Cut.) The chair was named the Olympic Express in lieu of Vancouver’s recent designation for the 2010 Winter Games. During the games, NBC Today will be broadcasting its coverage of the games live from Grouse Mountain.
In 2008, Grouse Mountain constructed two new quad chairs; one to replace the Courtesy rope tow at the bottom of the Paradise run and the other to replace the defunct peak chair, which closed after the Olympic Express was built in 2004. Both chairlifts were designed to run at a slower speed to accommodate beginners and children.
Winter operations
Ski and snowboard
uThe ski and snowboard area, located on the southern slope of the mountain, operates in the winter months between December and May, approximately. Accessed by taking the gondola from the base to the mountaintop chalet and lodge, it features four chairlifts (two high-speed quads, the Screaming Eagle and Olympic Express; and two quads, the Greenway and Peak Chairs) facilitating 26 runs, half of which are lit for night skiing and snowboarding.
The most prominent run on the mountain is the Cut, one of two beginner runs, which is easily visible from the Vancouver area. It runs alongside the Screaming Eagle chairlift. East of the Cut are several intermediate runs, which take skiiers and snowboarders down to the Olympic Express which accesses the mountain’s easternmost expert runs, most of which originate from the mountain’s 4,100-foot peak. Altogether, Grouse Mountain features three green (beginner), 15 blue (intermediate), six black diamond (advanced) and two double black diamond (expert) runs. There are also three freestyle terrain parks the novice to intermediate Rookie Terrain and Paradise Jib Parks, as well as the intermediate to expert Quiksilver Terrain Park.
Grouse Mountain is also home to the Tyee Ski Club, an organization for training children and youth to become competitive alpine ski racers in slalom, giant slalom and super-giant slalom skiing. The club also has a newer program for snowboarding racers.
In addition to the 305 centimetres of annual natural snowfall, the mountain uses 37 snow guns, covering 75% of the ski and snowboard terrain, for artificial snowmaking. With the capacity to extend the snow season into the spring and account for fluctuations in weather, the mountain invested in a self-reported $7 million in snowmaking equipment over a decade spanning the mid-1990s and 2000s.
Snowshoeing
The Munday Alpine Snowshoe Park includes four main groomed snowshoeing trails the beginner-intermediate Blue Grouse Loop and three trails circling Dam Mountain and Thunder Bird Ridge.
Ice skating
Adjacent to the mountaintop chalet and lodge is an 8,000-square-foot outdoor ice rink.
Grouse Mountain is also the location of a very popular hiking trail known as the Grouse Grind. It is an extremely steep and mountainous trail that climbs 853 m (2,799 ft) over a distance of 2.9 km (2 mi), with an average grade of 30 degrees. The trail, nicknamed “Mother Nature’s Stairmaster”, is notoriously gruelling due to its steepness and mountainous terrain. Hikers, who often time themselves on the trail, reach the top in approximately 90 minutes on average although some who are very fit can finish in 45 minutes.
Don McPherson and Phil Severy built the Grind in the early 1980s, uninvited by the regional district or the owners of Grouse Mountain.
As of September 2009, these are the fastest officially recorded ascents: (Note: The unofficial record is on the Grind Trail only, while there is a slight additional distance to the finish line for the Grind Mountain Run event. The unofficial record was properly timed, but on a shorter course.)
Event
Person
Time (min:sec)
Date
Overall Unofficial Record
Jonathan Wyatt
24:22
June 12, 2004
Annual Grouse Grind Mountain Run (Men’s)
Sebastian Salas
25:24
September 20, 2009
Annual Grouse Grind Mountain Run (Women’s)
Leanne Johnston
31:04
September 21, 2007
Sebastian Albrecht of Vancouver holds the record for most grinds completed in a 24-hour period, having done the climb 13 times on 22 June 2009.
The difficulty of the trail is often underestimated. North Shore Rescue conducts many rescues each year of hikers who collapse on the Grouse Grind, or begin too late in the evening and are unprepared to find their way in the dark.
Photo gallery
Skyride in October
Closeup of the Skyride
Wolf
Wooden bear carving in wintertime
Wood carving (October)
Grinder and Coola
Trees
Bear habitat
Vancouver as seen from Grouse mountain
The Grouse Grind Trail
Trivia
Grouse Mountain and its aerial tramway stood in for the fictional “Skyland Mountain” in the Blue Ridge of Virginia, in a 1994 episode of TV show The X-Files in which Dana Scully is abducted on top of the mountain. The X-Files was filmed in the Vancouver region for its first five years.
Its ski lodge and facilities were also used in the filming of the modern movie adaptation of the popular cartoon Mr. Magoo
See also
North Shore Mountains
Pacific Ranges
Cypress Mountain
Mount Seymour
References
^ See Tramway Titanyron Riblet, Wire Rope and Western Resource Towns
^ “Pilot’s family reunites at crash site. Lt. Lamar J. Barlow died in a U.S. air force F-86 on Grouse Mountain” (Times-Colonist, June 15, 2009)
^ a b c “Grouse Mountain 2008 Winter Trail Map” (PDF). Grouse Mountain. http://www.grousemountain.com/files/PDF/map-winter-2008.pdf. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
^ a b c “Grouse Mountain Trail Map and Stats”. Grouse Mountain. http://www.grousemountain.com/Winter/skiing-riding/vancouver-bc-ski-snowboarding-trail-map.asp. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
^ “Terrain Parks: A Cut Above The Rest”. Grouse Mountain. http://www.grousemountain.com/Winter/skiing-riding/terrain-park/. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
^ a b “Runner summits Grouse Grind a record 13 times”. CBC News. 2009-06-23. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2009/06/23/bc-grouse-grind-record-set.html. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
^ Ebner, Dave (2009-07-25). “Doing the Grouse Grind”. Globe and Mail. pp. T1/T4. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/travel/doing-the-grouse-grind/article1230259/. Retrieved 2009-07-29.
^ CBC article
^ Grousegrind statistics
^ McMartin, Pete (2009-06-23). “Tackling Grouse Grind 13 times in a day is an uphill battle”. Vancouver Sun. pp. A4. http://www.vancouversun.com/Life/Tackling+Grouse+Grind+times+uphill+battle/1722999/story.html. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
^ Jones, Tim (2005-03-18). “Grouse Grind open for hiking”. North Shore News.
^ Vancouver Sun – Local Entertainment
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Grouse Mountain
Grouse Mountain in the BC Geographical Names Information System
Grouse Mountain Ski Resort Official Site
Grouse Mountain at the Canadian Mountain Encyclopedia
Grouse Mountain Ski Patrol
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Pacific Ranges
Ranges
Bendor Britannia Bunster Cadwallader Calliope Camelsfoot Cantilever Caren Chilcotin Colville Conical Douglas Earle Edwards Fannin Fitzsimmons Franklyn Fraser Garibaldi Gastineau Georgina Koeye Lewis Lillooet Namu Nicholl Niut North Shore Pantheon Pembroke Sir Harry Tantalus Tottenham Unwin Waddington Wharncliffe Whitemantle
Mountains
Alfred Alice Arthur Asperity Birkenhead Bishop Black Tusk Blackcomb Blanshard Brandywine Breakenridge Brew Brew Burke Callaghan Capricorn Castle Towers Cauldron Cayley Cinder Cone Clarke Coquitlam Crickmer Crown Currie Cypress Devastator Dewdney Eagle Edge Elsay Fang Fee Fitzgerald Forefinger Frederick William Fromme Garibaldi Good Hope Grouse Helena Job Judge Howay Kinch Little Finger Little Ring Luna Meager Merlon Middle Finger Monarch Monmouth Munday Nicomen One Eye Opal Cone Overill Pali Plinth Powder Price Pylon Pyroclastic Queen Bess Raleigh Red Tusk Ring Robie Reid Round Serratus Seymour Silverthrone Skihist Somolenko Spearhead Table Tantalus Taseko Tatlow Tiedemann Tuber Vic Victoria Vulcan’s Thumb Waddington Wedge Wellington
Clendinning Duffey Lake Garibaldi Mount Elphinstone Stein Valley Nlaka’pamux Heritage Spruce Lake (South Chilcotin) Upper Lillooet Golden Ears Tantalus Mehatl Creek Birkenhead Lake Joffre Lakes Ts’il?os Bishop River Princess Louisa Marine Callaghan Nairn Falls Brandywine Falls Alice Lake Blackcomb Glacier Tetrahedron Stawamus Chief Murrin Mount Seymour Cypress Indian Arm Pinecone-Burke Shannon Falls Rolley Lake Sasquatch Big Creek Homathko River-Tatlayoko Homathko Estuary Davis Lake
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Landmarks in Metro Vancouver
Buildings
BC Place Stadium | Beatty Street Drill Hall | Bentall Centre | BowMac Sign | Canada Place | CBC Regional Broadcast Centre Vancouver | Central City Tower | Central Heat Distribution | The Coaster | Dominion Building | Empire Landmark Hotel | Former Vancouver Public Library | General Motors Place | Gulf of Georgia Cannery | H. R. MacMillan Space Centre | Harbour Centre | Hotel Europe | Hotel Georgia | Hotel Vancouver | International Buddhist Temple | Living Shangri-La | Marine Building | One Wall Centre | Orpheum | Pacific Central Station | Pacific Coliseum | Park Royal | Royal Centre | Science World | Seaforth Armoury | Sinclair Centre | Stanley Theatre | Sun Tower | Sylvia Hotel | Vancouver City Hall | Vancouver Public Library | Waterfront Station
Bridges
Alex Fraser Bridge | Arthur Laing Bridge | Burrard Bridge | Cambie Street Bridge | Capilano Suspension Bridge | Georgia Viaduct | Granville Street Bridge | Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing | Knight Street Bridge | Lions Gate Bridge | Oak Street Bridge | Pattullo Bridge | Pitt River Bridge | Port Mann Bridge | Queensborough Bridge | Skybridge
Locations
Chinatown | “The Drive” | Gastown | Golden Village | Granville Island | Kitsilano Beach | Metrotown | Punjabi Market | Robson Square | Stanley Park / Vancouver Aquarium
Geographical
Burnaby Mountain | Burrard Inlet | Burrard Peninsula | Cypress Mountain | English Bay | Fraser River | Golden Ears | Grouse Mountain | Indian Arm | The Lions | Mount Seymour | Point Grey | Little Mountain
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Ski areas and resorts in British Columbia
East Kootenay/Columbia Valley
Fernie Kicking Horse Kimberley Panorama Fairmont Hot Springs
West Kootenay/Arrow Lakes
Whitewater Red Mountain Summit Lake Revelstoke Mountain Salmo
South Cariboo-Thompson-Okanagan-Boundary
Sun Peaks Harper Apex Silver Star Big White Mount Baldy Phoenix Crystal Mountain Mount Timothy
Lower Mainland-Sea to Sky Country
Grouse Cypress Seymour Hemlock Valley Manning Park Whistler Blackcomb
Vancouver Island
Mount Washington Mount Cain
North Cariboo, Northern Interior & North Coast
Troll Powder King Ski Smithers Little Mac Tabor Mountain Hart Highlands Shames Mountain Bear Mountain Murray Ridge Purden
Categories: Mountains of British Columbia | Ski areas and resorts in British Columbia | North Vancouver (district municipality), British Columbia | Tourism in Vancouver | Geography of Vancouver | Pacific Ranges About the Author
This digital document is an article from The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR), published by Thomson Gale on January 6, 2006. The length of the article is 600 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.Citation DetailsTit…
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