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Little Ski Hill

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Little Ski Hill
Little Ski Hill is located in Idaho
Little Ski Hill
Little Ski Hill
Location in Idaho
Little Ski Hill is located in the United States
Little Ski Hill
Little Ski Hill
Little Ski Hill (the United States)
LocationAdams County, Idaho, U.S.
Nearest major cityMcCall - 2 miles (3 km)
Coordinates44°55′48″N 116°09′47″W / 44.93000°N 116.16306°W / 44.93000; -116.16306
Vertical   405 ft (123 m)
Top elevation5,600 ft (1,707 m)
Base elevation5,195 ft (1,583 m)
Skiable area50 acres (20 ha)
Lift system1 T-bar
Snowmakingnone
Night skiingyes
WebsiteLittle Ski Hill.org

The Little Ski Hill is a modest ski area in the western United States, located in west central Idaho, two miles (3 km) west of McCall. Adjacent to Highway 55, immediately west of the county line in Adams County, it was formerly known as the "Payette Lakes Ski Area."[1]

Built in 1937 as a winter diversion for local forest workers, the Little Ski Hill has served the region's youth and skiing community for over eighty years. The small but action-packed facility has an alpine hill served by a T-bar surface lift, providing 405 vertical feet (123 m) of terrain on the only lighted ski area in the vicinity. It has a summit elevation of 5,600 feet (1,707 m) above sea level; the slopes face north and west.

The ski area also has 18.6 miles (30 km) of groomed cross-country ski trails and a biathlon range.

Ski legend and fifty-year McCall resident Corey Engen taught at the hill for years before developing the nearby Brundage Mountain in 1961.

The area formerly had a 50-60 meter Nordic ski jump on its lower north slope, near the bend in the highway.[1] The aging jump was destroyed by a microburst wind in the 1990s. A 25-30 meter Nordic ski jump is still in use.

Patty Boydstun, a World Cup alpine ski racer, grew up in McCall and learned to ski at the hill. She finished eighth in the slalom at the 1972 Winter Olympics and had ten top-ten finishes in slalom on the World Cup circuit.[2]

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Transcription

References

  1. ^ a b "10 ski slopes within easy driving distance of Lewiston; Emida Bowl reopens in fall". Lewiston Morning Tribune. May 24, 1970. p. 27.
  2. ^ FIS-ski.com - Patty Boydstun - accessed 2022-03-31

External links

This page was last edited on 7 September 2022, at 02:41
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