Belleayre, NY: 01/16/10: The Beast

jamesdeluxe

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Jul 17, 2020
Saturday was Press Day at Belleayre, so I invited rising blog star Harvey for his first-ever ski day at New York State’s red-haired stepchild. After seeing my dozens of TRs about Belleayre over the years (and the fact that Jason and I ski there more than the other Catskills areas), he was curious to check it out.

We and eight other writers had breakfast with the Belleayre crew, including master of ceremonies Tony Lanza, whom we grilled on a variety of subjects. Tony did his usual smooth job of explaining the complicated ins and outs of running a ski area under the aegis of the state and the Department of Environmental Conservation. It was especially interesting for Harvey to note the differences between Belleayre and Gore/Whiteface. Besides the fact that they’re all state-run mountains, there are actually not a lot of similarities, and it could be argued that Belleayre –- despite being able to draw from a huge population base within a 2.5-hour drive –- has the most challenges.

Breakfast wrapped at 9 and Tony took us out for a morning tour, starting with the beginner’s trails at the bottom of the hill. Belleayre has a network of green runs that are completely separated from the blue and black terrain, and it’s something I plan to take advantage of with my son. We then got on the HSQ, which already had a five-minute line (that would more than double in size during the afternoon). I’m pretty sure that yesterday was Belleayre’s biggest day of the season so far with more than 4,500 guests. Thank god that we had line-cutting privileges as even the normally ski-on Tomahawk and Lift 7 chairs had waits, which is rare, even on weekends.

The Beast


The trails we skied before lunch were a bit crunchy for my taste, especially up top, but I told Harvey to withhold judgment until the afternoon when ski-school director Don Boyce took us up on the Belleayre Beast. Not quite a typical snowcat, more like a 35-year-old re-purposed amphibious military assault vehicle, we loaded up at the top of the Super Chief lift and drove ¾ of a mile to the far skier’s right. There, we took two runs on the beautiful Cathedral Brook trail: a narrow, rolling East-Coast special that had everyone smiling. Jason and his two kids loved it too. No other NYS ski area has something like the Beast, and it’s a great feature, especially if you don’t want to do the skate out to the Cathedral area.

The Belleayre Beast


For anyone doubting the ability of Belleayre’s natural-snow terrain to be skiable on only 48 inches (and that’s total snow this season, not the base), this was Exhibit A. The snow was fantastic and even in spots where the loose powder was skied off, it was completely edgeable. I pointed out some of my favorite tree-skiing out there (the woods to the right and left of Cathedral Brook). The only disappointment was that we couldn’t ski all the way into Pine Hill village (a 2,100-vert run) because they decided that it was a bit thin down toward the bottom.

The rest of the afternoon we did laps on the upper mountain, hitting Winnesook, Tongora, and Yahoo repeatedly. As opposed to the morning, everything we touched (including the upper bumps) was in beautiful condition. All of us were in awe of Don Boyce’s bump steeze (pic below), truly something to admire.

Don Boyce on Cathedral Brook"
 
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