The trees are bare, the snow is falling, it's time to ski. But where?Colorado, naturally, world famous for sunny days and intermittent dumps of deep dry powder. Which one of the following eight great Colorado ski areas works for you? Read on:
1. Arapahoe Basin, near Dillon. www.arapahoebasin.com; 1-888-272-7246.
Looking for wild and woolly slopes, those deep powder glades and 55-degree steeps? Go for it at Arapahoe Basin, 6 miles from Keystone Resort. Sporting North America's highest marked ski trails (the summit is at 13,050 feet), 63-year-old A-Basin belongs to the locals, powder hounds who'll tell you that skiing isn't a sport; it's all about being out there, getting spiritual in the elements, pushing your limits.
A-Basin is surprisingly small -- 900 skiable acres straddling the Continental Divide -- but size doesn't matter to real ski mavericks. Neither does the fact that there are only two places to eat. Lunch on this mountain is just an intermission between downhill runs.
As the website boasts, "there's no lodges, no condos and no hotels" at this ski area's base. Most people stay at Keystone Resort; most, in fact, ski both resorts on the same trip. Fly to Denver and take a ski shuttle or drive 95 minutes to Arapahoe.
2. Aspen, at Aspen. www.aspen snowmass.com; 1-888-649-5985.
Tempted by bright lights and good eats? How about jazz clubs, celebrity bars and inspired cuisine? If après-ski nightlife puts the wax on your skis, chill out at Aspen, where ski vacations are multidimensional.
The West's most iconic ski area, Aspen is more than a 673-acre mountain where half the trails are rated for experts and half for intermediates. Aspen is where on-mountain dining caters to the rich and famous, and the top-of-the-gondola concierge serves hot cider.