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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Hoodoo
is ready. Where's the snow?
It's like being
ready for the prom but not having a date.
That's where it stands right
now for Hoodoo Ski Area at the summit of Santiam Pass.
The popular local family ski
area has sunk millions of dollars into capital improvements, but it still
lacks the one thing that ski areas need most.
"The lodge is finished!" said
Hoodoo's new Marketing Director, Pam DeMarsh. "What else do we need? Oh
yeah, SNOW!"
Like everyone else in the
Pacific Northwest, DeMarsh is wondering where the winter snow pack is
hiding.
Naturally, she and the rest
of the staff at Hoodoo believe that the snow is just around the corner,
and weather forecasters are hinting that they may be right.
In the meantime, Hoodoo Ski
Area -- which is celebrating 65 years of operation this year -- is putting
the finishing touches on its brand new 60,000 square foot lodge. The huge
new lodge has dining facilities for more than 1,000 people.
DeMarsh says that all the
pictures and Christmas wreaths are hung, and the computers are ready to
start spitting out lift tickets.
When skiers and snowboarders
do hit the slopes this year, they will find that the summit and red chairs
have been replaced by new quad lifts, four-seaters that will double the
previous capacity.
DeMarsh said that Hoodoo had
to bring in helicopters to install the new stands for the quad lifts.
She reports that the new lifts
have passed their load tests and are ready to go.
Another new feature this year
is a 20-foot wide snowmobile trail that has been cut through from the
Ray Benson Sno-Park.
The new trail will allow safe
and easy access to the new facilities at Hoodoo, and snowmobilers will
not be tempted to use automobile roads to enter the facility.
A parking area near the old
south lodge will also be available for up to 100 snowmobiles. Between
the Sno-Park and the ski area, Hoodoo is adding a new tubing hill that
will be groomed to have three or four runs.
The poor snow season has thus
far had the beneficial side effect of facilitating construction of this
new project. The tubing area covers about five acres and completion is
now scheduled for December 21.
Although Hoodoo President
Chuck Shepard seems to be taking it in stride and with a sense of humor.
When asked by one reporter to sum up the season thus far, Shepard replied
that it was good because "we have not had one ski or snowboard injury
so far."
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