A
high
point
in
the
Adirondacks
as
skiers/riders
anticipate
Hoyt's
High
11/12/2012
WILMINGTON,
N.Y. --- Hoyt's High
Trail on Whiteface Mountain has always relied on Mother
Nature to cover its 1,400 feet of vertical. Sometimes she accommodated, but
often she did not, teasing skiers and riders with its long stretch of
expert terrain as they rode the triple chair to the top of Lookout
Mountain.
Cut in 2008
and named in honor of Whiteface veteran ski patroller Jim Hoyt Sr., the 4,700
foot long expert trail has only been open for a handful of days. That will change this winter, as crews began installing piping for snowmaking
beginning in August.
Installing the
more than 9,000 feet of snowmaking piping has been no small task... mostly due to
the trail's length and steepness.

Snowmaking installation on Hoyt's High (ORDA Photo)
"The terrain
on Hoyt's High is even more challenging than the Wilmington and Lookout Below
trails. That's why snowmaking infrastructure was postponed," said the mountain's
general manager Aaron Kellett. "There's really no machine access on the whole
trail and the only way to install the piping is to push from the bottom and pull
from the top. In that, I mean one bulldozer is at the top pulling the piping,
while a bulldozer is pushing from the bottom."
In order to
groom the trail, crews needed to install winch pins along the entire trail.
This will allow them to groom the trail in sections rather than try to groom the
entire trail at once.
If conditions
allow, snowmaking on the Olympic mountain is slated to resume on November 13 and
snow guns will begin covering Hoyt's High in early January.
"Traditionally
we've opened Lookout Mountain at that time of year," added Kellett. "The
Wilmington Trail will be covered first and we plan to move the guns over to
Hoyt's next."
Once there's
snow on Hoyt's, skiers will have an expert trail that will allow them to get
back to the Lookout Mountain lift. In the past, Lookout Below was the only
expert trail that allowed skiers and riders immediate access to the triple chair
lift.
Kellett
believes that more skiers and riders will probably choose Hoyt's High over
Lookout Below even after the novelty has worn off.
"Really Hoyt's
is a more traditional type of ‘expert trail,'" Kellett mentioned. "Hoyt's will
certainly be labeled as such, but I think we'll find that while it'll be
challenging, it won't offer the same challenges as Lookout Below, therefore we
anticipate more skiers and snowboarders to choose this
option."
Additional
work on Whiteface's Lookout Mountain is also scheduled for the upcoming summer.
Plans include adding one more expert trail and an access road that will provide
a second spot to anchor a winch cat. This improvement is still in the
permitting process.