The Most Popular Ski and Snowboard Playgrounds in America

Heavenly run
Heavenly Ski Resort in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., offers skiers 91 trails and 4,800 acres of terrain.



Busy at Beaver Creek
Colorado’s Beaver Creek Snow Resort averages 311 inches of snow per year, gets 300 days of sun and offers more than 1,800 acres of skiable terrain.


Oh boy, Alberta
Whiskey Jack Lodge is pictured at the foot of the ski hills in Lake Louise, Alberta, Canada. Lake Louise Ski Resort is one of the larger ski areas in North America with 4,200 acres of terrain.


2-mile-high club
Looking for a high-elevation rush? The base center at Utah’s Snowbird Ski Resort sits at 8,100 feet. The resort’s highest point, Hidden Peak, climbs to 11,000 feet.


Va-va-va-Vail
Vail, Colo., located west of Denver, is one North America’s better-known ski towns. Vail Ski Resort features more than 5,200 acres of skiable terrain over 193 trails.


Après ski
Skiers and snowboarders can do more than hit the slopes in Vail, Colo. Visitors can visit spas, go shopping and enjoy nightlife, festivals and family-friendly activities.


Take a Telluride
Also located in Colorado, Telluride Ski Resort has 18 lifts, 120 trails, more than 2,000 acres of terrain, and features “Galloping Goose,” the resort’s longest run (4.6 miles).


Road trip!
Ski and snowboard enthusiasts can easily drive to Telluride from the Four-Corner states. Located in Southwestern Colorado, the drive time is seven hours from Denver and Phoenix, 2 1/2 hours from Grand Junction, Colo., and 2 1/4 hours from Moab, Utah and Durango, Colo.


Great spot for beginners
Buttermilk Ski Resort is small compared to some of its Colorado neighbors. Located just outside Aspen, Buttermilk has carved out its niche by focusing on snowboarders and beginners. Buttermilk offers 435 acres of terrian over 44 runs.


Experience required
Aspen Mountain is the backdrop for a horse and carriage ride in downtown Aspen, Colo. Aspen Mountain features 76 trails — 48 percent considered “more difficult,” 26 percent “most difficult” and 26 percent “expert.” If you’re a beginner, you probably want to get your feet wet some place less daunting.


Take a hike
Members of Aspen Center for Enviromental Studies (ACES) take a snowshoe tour in Ashcroft, Colo.Ashcroft Ski Touring/Cross-Country Area offers about 22 miles of groomed trails, and is located 11 miles from Aspen.


Lock and Keystone
Another popular ski option in Colorado is Keystone Ski Area, located about 90 minutes from Denver International Airport. The area features 20 ski lifts, two gondolas and more than 3,100 acres of terrain.


Grab a six-peak
Vermont’s Killington Ski Resort stretches across six peaks. Skiers and snowboarders can reach the area’s 752 acres of terrain with 22 lifts.

Bring the family
Smuggler’s Notch in Vermont bills itself as “America’s Family Resort,” and offers services, activities and education aimed at making sure everyone in your clan has fun.


63 years and going strong
Colorado’s Arapahoe Basin has been operating since 1946. “The inaugural season opened with a single rope tow and $1.25 daily lift tickets,” its Web site reads. Prices and equipment surely have changed, but “A-Basin” offers the skiers and snowboarders 900 acres of terrain — more than half above the timberline.


Long way down
Utah’s Alta Ski Area is scheduled to remain open through April 18, 2010. It features 2,200 acres of terrain, more than 100 runs and an average snowfall of 500 inches per season. It does not, however, allow snowboards.


Not for the faint of heart
Of the 116 runs at Jackson Hole Ski Resort in Wyoming, 50 percent are “expert” and 40 percent are “intermediate.” That’s great news if you pass up the bunny slopes for some challenging skiing and snowboarding.


On — or off — the beaten path
Jackson Hole Ski Resort offers 2,500 acres of terrain, plus an open backcountry gate system that offers access to an additional 3,000 acres.


Sun Valley — how original
Seriously. Idaho’s Sun Valley, started in 1936, claims it is the original ski resort. “Born out of a desire to bring the magic of the European ski resorts to America, Sun Valley quickly became a phenomenon without peer on this continent or any other,” its Web site boasts.


Do you believe in miracles?
American Shaun White is pictured competing during the Nokia Halfpipe Snowboard FIS World Cup on March 4, 2005 at Whiteface Mountain in Lake Placid, N.Y. Lake Placid has hosted the Winter Olympics twice — in 1932 and 1980 — and offers a variety of activities, including downhill skiing, cross-country skiing, ski jumping, ice skating and more.


Old West reminder
Seven thousand feet up in the Colorado Rockies, nestled quietly below one of the largest ski mountains in North America, sits a small ranching community that serves as a constant reminder that the Old West is alive and well. Never far from its ranching roots, Steamboat remains firmly linked to a Western tradition that sets it apart from every other ski resort in the world.


Big skiing in Big Sky Country
Whitefish Mountain Resort in Whitefish, Mont., collects 300 inches of snow each year and features 3,000 acres of terrain, 94 marked trails and a 3.3-mile run called Hellfire.


Sweet on Sugarloaf
Sugarloaf Ski Resort features 1,400 acres of skiable terrain, including Tote Road, a 3.5-mile-long stretch running from summit to base. Sugarloaf’s redesigned terrain park features the 400 foot long Superpipe, a magnet for snowboarders throughtout the region. Portland and Bangor offer airport service to Sugarloaf, and Boston and Montreal are four short hours away.



Crossing borders
With more than 400 inches of snow per year, nearly 8,200 acres of skiable terrain and 200 trails, Whistler Blackcomb Ski Resort in British Columbia, Canada, is an outdoor enthusiast’s paradise.



Carrying the torch
Some athletes will become world champions of their sport on the slopes of Whistler Blackcomb when the Winter Olympics roll into British Columbia early next year.