My Father, Art Judson, was the USFS Snow Ranger in charge of avalanche control and skier safety in the early 1960’s. I got to spend quite a few nights in the old Ranger station building and Erma Hill let Jud’s kids ski for free. Later My Father founded the first region wide avalanche warning program in the Nation.
I was a part-time ski instructor (weekends) as a 17 year old. at Berthoud Pass Herb Hyna was the ski school director. We used the GLM (Graduated Length Method) where the student was introduced to gradually longer length skis. Cliff Taylor the inventor of GLM was an Evergreen Colorado native. However, PSIA never really embraced the method and it died. I thought it worked though. I was at Berthod Pass for two seasons?? around 1972?? before I left to teach part time at Loveland for many years. Some of my best skiing days were at Berthoud. One year in the sixties there was a good snowstorm on Labor Day and Berthoud opened and managed to stay open until around June. That was probably the longest lift served ski season in Colorado history. I remember when Loveland with artificial snow and Berthoud with natural snow would consistently open by October 15. With climate change, Loveland and now Arapahoe don't open up until November. Somewhere I have a picture of my Father skiing at Berthoud on the trail from behind the lodge to a switchback on the west side of the pass in 1937. I remember skiing down that trail and continuing down until we stopped at about where the Mary Jane entrance is, and then we hitchhiked back to the top of the pass. I also remember when there was a big snowstorm and we skied all the way to Berthoud Falls, a place of a couple of cabins on the East side and hitchhiked back to the top. On the cliff on the double haul cable, double chairlift I skied all of the slots in that area. Shortie GLM skis were the only way to make turns because the slots were so narrow. BTW....the old double chairlift was unique in that it had two cables like present day tramways use, except the hauling cable went around bull wheels like modern chairlifts do. I believe there were only a couple of chairlifts in America that used that system. The Sun Valley (Dollar and Proctor Mt.) chairlifts (started 1936-37 season) used a single cable.
Used to go by this ski area in the late 70's while heading to "Ski Idlewild" right across from Winter Park which has been abandoned for many years now as well. You should look into that one.
I was fortunate to ski Berthoud Pass in the Spring of 2001 when it reopened for the weekend, after receiving a big dump of snow. I remember taking the chair up the eastern slope, skiing down through the forest and picking up the school bus shuttle at the bottom of the pass on the Winter Park side. I still have the sticker “Berthoud Badass”
The badass series was awesome. Berthoud was 1 of 3 stops in North America. Dudes were throwing huge back flips off the big 50' cliff. No one really cared because the skiing was so good that you'd only watch what you could see as you rode up for another lap
Terrific stuff what a great post. As a Bethoud Alum, I was very excited to see your skidoc. Very nice and I'd like to add some more color. I believe BP was the first ski area on US 40, one of the most famous ski highways. The snow was notable some of the very finest, lightest powder. Lighter even than Alta's famous powder. The majority of the terrain is NOT served by lifts, but rather by busses. And finally, BP is actually four distinct faces divided east west by the Great Divide and north south by US40. This required 4 bus pickup locations. Two thumbs up for your work!
Berthoud was one of the very first in Colorado! By technicality, however, Howelsen Hill was the first ski area on 40, but Berthoud was the first to be accessible to Denver. I do wonder if having busses instead of lifts is part of what caused them to go out of business.
Surprised to see a new inch fell up there yesterday. It used to stay open into July sometimes?😮 It'd be interesting to have specifics on those closing dates. Great summary thanks 👍
As an intermediate skier living in Colorado for a few years in the early 2000's I stuck to Indian Peaks and A basin. I didn't hear much about Berthoud pass at the time and now I see why, it was out of my league. Still, really cool to connect those dots now years later. Do they still get 300++ inches these days?
Please consider doing a video on Geneva Basin in Colorado that shut down in the 1980's but was a great local ski area accessible to Denver Colorado residents in the 1970's but very few people know that the resort ever existed.
Great work, guys! Maybe marketing Berthoud Pass as a hardcore, advanced/expert mountain would've been preferable to marketing it as a family mountain, since it was clearly the former and not the latter. Did they think the expert skier market wasn't big enough then? I wonder....
Obviously, Skier 72 knows a lot more about the history of the resort than I do given my role in this, but from what I understand, the bigger, more developed resorts just slowly drained Berthoud's business. It wasn't that they didn't want to market it as a hardcore, expert mountain, but just that a higher percentage of the skiing population of Colorado was lower-level, and so they wanted to tap into that market because there just weren't enough advanced skiers to go around between all of the big mountains and Berthoud as well.
Love this Series there is 2 lost resorts in Utah I don't have much information about either one and would to love to have more. One was in Payson Canyon and the other was in Fairview canyon
Damn, this is great! If you're planning to expand the lost resorts series outside of Canada, will there be episodes on lost ski areas in New England and the Northeast?
Great video... it's too bad these areas more proximate to Denver have closed especially when it isn't unusual to spend three hours on a Sunday idling on I-70 between the tunnel and Lookout Mountain with the rest of the lemmings returning from Summit County or points west.