Northstar-at-Tahoe is known for its nearly mile-long Ground Zero terrain park. Next year, the area will expand the park for all manner of snow toys, including snow bikes, snow scooters, and Zorbs (shown here). It'll be like motocross on snow.
Best of 2000: Progressive Park
Features
related tags:
Related Articles
Tahoe becomes the new battleground in the resort industry.
Making good on decade-long rumors, two of California's biggest resorts combine. Tahoe skiers will be able to access both on one pass.
Sushi, cocktails, and tacos: the best spots around the lake to get your grub on.
The best places to stay in South Lake, North Lake, and everywhere in between.
Opened in 1939 with help from Walt Disney, Sugar Bowl retains its old-school charm with a 1950s-style gondola and a rustic base lodge. But it’s plenty modern too. It offsets 100 percent of its energy through wind credits and has a remodeled 35,700-square-foot lodge and a new skiercross course that’s home to Olympian Daron Rahlves. The best thing about Sugar Bowl, however, may simply be the snow. Each year, the resort gets around 500 inches of Californian fluff.
Kirkwood is off the grid in more ways than one. The whole place runs on generators. Lift lines are six people deep on a powder day. Sierra storms fill the ski-porn-worthy terrain, closing roads and shutting down lifts for days. But with inbounds runs slanted up to 42 degrees, the most reliable snow in the area, and chutes that make big-mountain skiers queasy, it’s hard to believe the resort stays so low-key. Thank the hourlong drive from South Lake Tahoe’s packed casinos and resorts, which ensures Kirkwood remains unsullied by the masses. Just the way skiers there like it.
Bike parks in California.
Squallywood, Shane McConkey, and how to prove that you're the best skier on the mountain. All in one movie.
Recycled features at Heavenly are changing the face of their terrain parks, while helping the environment.
On Monday, Vail Resorts announced a location-based mobile and web app, called Epic Mix. The company's Interactive Director, Mike Slone, sat down with us to discuss check-ins, pins, and where digital experience collides with a typical ski day.
Your Comment
All submitted comments are subject to the license terms set forth in our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use








