XC ski week in the White Mountains, NH: Feb 2014

greif

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Joined
Jul 25, 2020
Just got back from a group trip. Skied 5 different XC places. Most places had 2 feet of snow.

We stayed in Gorhan NH, Town and Country Motor Inn and Resort. They have great package deals which include the room, breakfast and dinner. They have on site a large pool, hot tub, sauna, steam room. They are nicely located to XC and downhill places to the East (Maine), West, and South. Dinner is very good with huge portions.

Package includes ordering off the menu (no special limited stuff- one night the special was whole lobster,
which several of us had). They are very large (300 rooms?) and get busloads of kids from England, Ireland, and other parts of the world or this country, so things can be noisy sometimes. On weekends they also get quite a few snow-mobilers.

XC places

Great Glen- 15 minutes South, excellent lodge (fireplace, views, comfy!)and cafe, very good snow and grooming. Almost all trails are pretty easy greens and blues (they tend to be on the easy side). Great Glen often has snow when other don't. They do get a lot of wind, being close to Mt. Washington, but once you scoot past the open area you are in woods.

Jackson Village- this is the first time I have been there that they have had enough snow so all their trails
are open and groomed (this is like 100 miles of trails! Got to ski some brand new trails (the Wave trail to
Black Mountain, had lunch at the Black Mountain ski lodge (noisy- crowded-drafty)) Very fun trail coming back down. Jackson lodge is very pretty and has a smallish area around a fireplace, but only small snacks. Greens, Blues and Blacks seem accurately graded.

The Outdoor Center at Sunday River- mostly flattish green trails and a few fun blues. There are 3 black trails (one perm closed, one closed due to logging(?), last one very very steep- now marked one way up. Also plenty of snow to cover trails (this is not normal for them- they usually are short on snow.) Greens and Blues tend to the easy side.

Bretton Woods has a huge trail system and is very often short on snow. They also get a lot of wind and you must get past the golf course before you get out of it. Golf lodge serves as day lodge, some food available, but they seem to run out fairly quickly. Grooming is excellent if they have snow. If they are short of snow they don't groom so they don't kill their base, but makes for hard pack nastiness. I am not sure of overall trail grading accuracy as I have only been there once with decent snow.

Bear Notch is on the other side of the pass from Bretton Woods and seems to get four times as much snow. They take great care of their trails and grooming. It is a small family run place with a rustic lodge. They have home made breads and soups which are great. Some of the trail connections through town can be tough to find and follow, but each group of trails is well marked and numbered. Blues and Blacks tend to be on the easier side, but close.

Also visited the New England Ski Museum in Franconia (at Canon)- If you like ski history this is great!
 
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