NEWS RELEASES


You may use this information without further permission. Please contact Mandy Gauldin at 970-945-5534 for more information, to request a media kit by mail, or schedule a visit or interview. Click here to visit our online Media Kit.


Ski Cooper Offers Affordable, Family Friendly Ski VacationsBack to News Releases
Posted: 11/17/2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For more information, contact:
Mandy Gauldin, 970-945-5534


LEADVILLE’S SKI COOPER/CHICAGO RIDGE SKI AREA PREPARES FOR THANKSGIVING DAY OPENING
This Colorado Gem offers $42 lift tickets, a “Never Ever Ski Package” for beginners with lessons, lift tickets and equipment for just $60, and expanded backcountry Snow Cat tours

LEADVILLE, Colo. (Nov. 17, 2009) — The Ski Cooper/Chicago Ridge Ski Area, located atop Tennessee Pass west of Leadville, will open on Thanksgiving Day for the 2008-2009 season, weather permitting. This Colorado Gem offers $42 lift tickets, a “Never Ever Ski Package” for beginners that includes lessons, lift tickets and rental equipment for just $60, backcountry Snow Cat tours, and fun and funky special events such as “Chix on Sticks and Babes on Boards” days for women-only backcountry outings. To make sure ski vacations remain an affordable option for its customers, Ski Cooper and Chicago Ridge have kept the prices for lift tickets, season passes, rentals and lessons the same as last year, and lowered the price of its Snow Cat tours.

“Providing our guests with a fun and affordable ski experience has always been our priority at Ski Cooper,” explained Bob Casey, Marketing Manager for Ski Cooper.  “To us, fun means providing exceptional customer service, long runs and short lines.”

With a history that dates back to World War II, Ski Cooper and Chicago Ridge have developed a reputation as one of the friendliest and most affordable ski resorts around. Five lifts, 2 chair and 3 surface, serve 400 ski-able acres. There are 26 runs: 30 percent beginner, 40 percent intermediate and 30 percent expert, and a Terrain Park that will be expanded this year. Ski Cooper averages 250 inches of natural snowfall a year. The longest run is Trails End, at 1.4 miles. The base sits at an elevation of 10,500 feet, with the summit at 11,700 feet.

Snow permitting, Ski Cooper will be open Nov. 26- 29; Dec. 4-6; and Dec. 11- 13. The resort will be open daily for the season from Dec. 18, 2009, through Apr. 4, 2010. Full day lift tickets are $42 for adults; $23 for children 6-14; $31 for seniors 60-69; and $18 for seniors 70 or better.  Ski Cooper is offering discounted lift tickets to members of the military: $37 for adults and $20 for children (ID required.) A season pass is $280 for adults and $136 for children. Group discounts and multi-day passes are also available. Visit www.skicooper.com or call 1-800-707-6114 for more details.

For first-time skiers and riders, Ski Cooper’s Never Ever Ski Package is one of the best deals around. Choose a two-hour lesson with equipment rental and a Beginner Lift Ticket for $50, or a two-hour lesson with equipment rental and a Full-Mountain Lift Ticket for $60.
 
The base facilities include the Ski School, which offers alpine, telemark and snowboard instruction; a Day Lodge with guest services, ticket offices, first aid room, lunch room, restaurant and bar; a rental shop; the Children’s Center, featuring a Children’s Ski School, rental equipment and Day Care for children ages 3-7; the Tennessee Pass Nordic Center, with rental equipment for cross country skiing, telemark gear and snowshoes; the Tennessee Pass Cookhouse; and Chicago Ridge.

Chicago Ridge offers 2,500 acres for a guided, backcountry experience accessible only by Snow Cat, adjacent to the lift-served area. Last year, Chicago Ridge has added a second Snow Cat, providing seven-day-a-week access to the treed slopes and open bowls in terrain suitable for advanced to expert skiers and riders. Ski Cooper also added a new yurt to the Chicago Ridge operation for serving lunch for the guests who ski or ride the Ridge.

The Tennessee Pass Cookhouse offers a unique dining adventure with some of Colorado’s most spectacular views. To get there, grab snowshoes or cross-country skis and hit the groomed one-mile trail to the yurt. An elegant, four-course gourmet dinner awaits featuring elk tenderloin, rack of lamb, salmon, roasted chicken and vegetarian specials.  The Tennessee Pass Cookhouse serves dinner daily and lunch on weekends. (Call 719-486-8114 for reservations.)

Ski Cooper and Chicago Ridge host events throughout the winter. Highlights include Après Ski Saturdays in January with live music, Special Olympics, the 5th Annual Telefast, Chix on Sticks and Babes on Boards days for women-only backcountry outings, Santa visits with live reindeer, telemark and women’s clinics, Senior Days, a Nastar race course, Youth Ski League Championships, Masters, High School races, Speed camps and the Tenth Mountain Division Annual Reunion.

Ski Cooper’s origin goes back to World War II, when the U.S. Army developed Cooper Hill and nearby Camp Hale as a training site for the ski troopers of the famed Tenth Mountain Division. Following the war, Cooper Hill opened to the public as a county-operated ski area under the auspices of the U.S. Forest Service since it’s located in the San Isabel National Forest.
Just a few minutes south of Ski Cooper, Leadville and nearby Twin Lakes are affordable, authentic mountain towns, with charming specialty shops, restaurants, galleries, and coffee shops. Lodging options range from charming inns, modern motels and B&Bs, to lodges, cabins, and vacation rentals. At an elevation of 10,152 feet, Leadville is the highest incorporated city in North America, located in the geographic center of Colorado, 103 miles west of Denver and 129 miles northwest of Colorado Springs. All of the highways in Lake County have been designated as the Top of the Rockies Scenic and Historic Byway, making it one of the most scenic journeys in the state.

###

About Leadville and Twin Lakes
Leadville, the highest incorporated city in North America, is located in the geographic center of Colorado, 103 miles west of Denver and 129 miles northwest of Colorado Springs, on US Highway 24, part of the Top of the Rockies Scenic and Historic Byway. Once one of America’s richest, longest-lived and bawdiest mining boomtowns, 70 square blocks of the downtown area has been designated as a National Historic Landmark of Victorian architecture. Activities include skiing, fishing, camping, golfing, hiking, whitewater rafting, four-wheeling, biking, museums, historical tours and train rides. Nearby Twin Lakes, located 15 minutes from Leadville at the eastern entrance to Independence Pass, is also a National Historic District and a popular summer destination for camping, boating, hiking and fishing. Go to VisitLeadvilleColorado.info for more information.