Best For: Big-lunged skiers and boarders with a taste for fine wine
and the mountain high life
Executive summary by darmansjah
Remote and unrelentingly beautiful, Telluride may be the most picturesque
ski town in North America, a Victorian-era silver-mining hamlet set deep in a
box canyon in the San Juan Mountains of southwest Colorado.
The steep runs of Telluride Ski Resort spill right into the edge of the town’s
National Historic District, where a gondola whisks skiers back up into the
area’s almost 4,000 vertical feet of absurdly scenic skiing. Only 12 blocks
long and with no stoplights, neon signs, or billboards, this charming town of
2,325 people combines fine wine lists and funky bars with a spirited culture of
diehard mountain lovers. The town sits at a gasping 8,793 feet above sea level,
and lifts reach to over 12,500 feet, so come prepared to acclimatize.
For a mountain with a well-earned reputation for steeps and bumps, Telluride
in fact offers excellent cruisers and beginner terrain—in the kind of
high-alpine setting that makes even first-timers feel like heroes—on the slopes
around its modern, luxurious Mountain Village. Experts will find bumps, bowls,
and chutes in every corner of the resort, and those willing to hike can access
some of the most extreme in-bounds terrain in the country in Black Iron Bowl
and 13,251-foot Palmyra Peak. Heli-skiing can be hired in the Mountain Village,
and the San Juan Hut System offers shelters and multiday routes for backcountry
adventurers.
Ask a Local
Travel and adventure writer Rob Story has skied in 13
countries on six continents and at 75 North American resorts. When he left his
longtime post as senior editor at Powder magazine in 1998, he knew
exactly where he wanted to move—Telluride. He is the author of Telluride
Storys. Here are his recommendations.
Best Digs
Budget: There’s not much to Mountainside Inn, but it’s ski-in, ski-out.
Swank: The Peaks Resort has a great après deck and spa.
Best Eats
Cheap: Oak, the barbeque place in town at the base of the gondola
Gourmet: La Marmotte is a great French restaurant in the town's old
icehouse.
Best After-Ski Party Spot
The Historic Bar at the Sheridan is the oldest in town.
Best Rest-Day Activity
Walk north up Aspen Street. When it turns to a dirt trailhead, keep going
straight up to beautiful Cornet Falls, a 80-foot waterfall in a small red rock
canyon.
Telluride’s Classic Ski Run
“Plunge, because on the steep parts you can look through your tips at our
tidy, cute, historic town,” notes Story.
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