Powder King Mountain Resort | |
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Location | British Columbia, Canada |
Nearest major city | Prince George, 194 km (121 mi) |
Coordinates | 55°21′47″N 122°37′29″W / 55.36306°N 122.62472°W |
Vertical | 640 m (2,100 feet) |
Top elevation | (lift serviced) 1,575m (5,166 ft) |
Skiable area | 597 ha (1,475 acres) |
Trails | 37 total 33% beginner 43% intermediate 24% expert |
Longest run | 6 km (19,685 ft) |
Lift system | 3 total 1 triple chair 1 T-Bar 1 Rope Tow |
Website | www |
Powder King Mountain Resort, commonly referred to simply as Powder King, is located in the Pine Pass area of the Northern Rockies of British Columbia's Northeastern Interior. It is the only year-round destination alpine resort in North America found alongside a major route (Highway 97).[1] Ranked #4 in all of North America for snow,[2] the area boasts the best snow quality of all Canadian ski hills.
Powder King's slopes offer a mix of beginner, intermediate and expert runs, with one three-person chairlift to mid-mountain, one T-bar to the top, and a handle tow at the base to assist and teach beginners. Most of the 37 run names have a Beatles theme (including Upper & Lower Abbey, Octopus’s Garden, Anytime At All, Good Day Sunshine, Twist and Shout, Come Together, Roll Over Beethoven, Nowhere Man, Hard Day’s Night, Hippy Hippy Shake, Ticket to Ride, Paperback Rider (sic), Get Back, Revolution, Let It Be, I Will, Blue Jay Way, Getting Better, Penny Lane, Lovely Rita, and Strawberry Fields).[3]
Originally envisioned as a "Whistler of the North", little of the grandiose plans of various owners came to fruition. Now known for its less crowded and more intimate environment, “Whisper of the North” has become the slogan. The current complex has a full-service restaurant, 35-room ATCO hostel-style hotel, and a small resort community of individual homes and condominiums.[4] Members of the Canadian Ski Patrol regularly keep watch over the hill.[5]