For what? Only the lower elevation trails are open right now due to the amount of snow we had over the winter. For that you use the Silver Lake express. Some other lift opens during Norba to take you to the top of NCS but I forgot what it's called. Once the upper trails open, Sterling Express is the way to go.Can anyone tell me what lift we use at Deer Valley?
Yeah, it's still the same.Any course updates or is it going to be samo DH course; 5 pedal strokes, rock dub, w.fall, b.rubble, breathe, 2x step down, rut, drop, warp speed singletrack, spin cycle, huck to finish...
NCS is a go, everything else is "half-baked XC downhills"I'm heading up to Park City on Wednesday for the IMBA conference. Is anything meriting my big bike (Uzzi vpx) going to be open for riding, or should I just bring the XC bike? I'd much rather ride lift-served DH, but I'd rather not get stuck pedaling the 40 lb freeride bike up for some half-baked XC downhills... thanks.
They haven't started making it yet. They'll build it two days before the race and then tear down the berms but leave the doubles after the race is over.any word on the slalom track? i don't have a dh bike now, but might race the slalom if things work out... & can get a bike together! ha
Are you sure this will be the case again? not ball bustin' just wondering.They haven't started making it yet. They'll build it two days before the race and then tear down the berms but leave the doubles after the race is over.
If DV ever chose to remove their collective heads from their hineys, there would be HUNDREDS of people willing to help.Isn't there some RM members that would be willing to help these guys build the track?
These kinds of things suck to hear. Are you talking about DV ski hill staff in general-or the MTB guys that come in and put on the event? No amount of being 'warm and sincere' helps the matter?If DV ever chose to remove their collective heads from their hineys, there would be HUNDREDS of people willing to help.
They are pretty much immune to taking any intelligent action regarding lift-serviced DH.
JMH
Yup, it's a huge bummer. The owners tolerate bikes and are willing to let us pay them for the chairlift rides. The lifties and trail crew are actually seem pretty stoked, but they don't have the numbers, equipment or support to execute serious improvements or even keep up with deteriorating trail conditions during the summer. We have a 50+ member group (WAFTA) that would love to help them with pretty much ANYTHING but DV doesn't seem too interested.These kinds of things suck to hear. Are you talking about DV ski hill staff in general-or the MTB guys that come in and put on the event? No amount of being 'warm and sincere' helps the matter?
There's a race there this weekend and it's been fully open for about a month.Come on Dear Valley is just a large real estate play. Every year they put up more houses and condos. It has so much potential but little of it realized. Is wolf mountain open this year?
Yes, yes and yes.I hear all this stuff about DV and I have some doubts. This mountain was one of the firsts in the country open to bikes. They actually had a Downhill Mania (4 man DH race w/slalom eliminations) way back in '94. The owner must be loaded to the hilt, so I doubt they care about making money off the handful of riders, therefiore the owner must like biking on the mountain for some reason other than profit.
I was there in '94 and 2004- not much changed, but that was a good thing. I do remember the locals saying building jumps really wasn't allowed at the time.
Anyway, I'd hate for it to get back to the DV owner that we're putting words in his mouth and not appreciative, I for one am. Building jumps and rewriting a guy's insurance profile is probably a scary thing, so unless someone knows the owner personally, I think we should give him the benefit of the doubt.
It's about negotiation, communication and delivery- all RM monkey's are obviously experts in those fields!!!
All this Deer Valley ranting makes me miss my real mountains.Yup, it's a huge bummer. The owners tolerate bikes and are willing to let us pay them for the chairlift rides. The lifties and trail crew are actually seem pretty stoked, but they don't have the numbers, equipment or support to execute serious improvements or even keep up with deteriorating trail conditions during the summer. We have a 50+ member group (WAFTA) that would love to help them with pretty much ANYTHING but DV doesn't seem too interested.
It's the DV philosophy, they don't allow snowboards either. Archaic, backwards, call it what you want - Their most devout clientele are literally dying off, 60 year old tools in $2000 ski suits straight out of Dumb and Dumber.
"this town needs an enema!"
MM
It's actually a group of people. Some are either in favor of development or ambivalent. There is one holdout that blocks any serious progress, and that's his prerogative. They know how riders feel, they have been approached every year by different groups of varying credibility and the song remains the same. This includes personal friends, successful businesses/lodges WITHIN Deer Valley, etc. It won't make them sad to see me criticizing their policies, they are quite content and I am just one person. Insurance is not the issue.Anyway, I'd hate for it to get back to the DV owner that we're putting words in his mouth and not appreciative, I for one am. Building jumps and rewriting a guy's insurance profile is probably a scary thing, so unless someone knows the owner personally, I think we should give him the benefit of the doubt.
Yeah, the lack of semi-affordable on mountain food sucks. Always hit up El Chubasco once we were finished up there...As others have said it is a bit of a surprise that DV even caters to DHers at all. The DV ski customer is usually very wealthy and spends $1000s at the mountain each ski trip. So for them to welcome your average $20 a day DHer who packs his own lunch I am thankful.
As far as I know the DH course is the same as last year and there is not much dirt left. It's rocky top to bottom. Hopefully, they will fix or remove that boulder drop near the middle that claimed a lot of riders last year.
errrrr... don't know for sure because it's a motorhome... but i know that they don't allow overnight camping (in previous years at least), so i'm "guessing" that motorhomes are considered "camping" in their eyesAnyone know if I can park a motorhome in the main event parking lot, overnights?
isn't the point of having a course for separate classes so that actually fit the skill set? if i was a beg rider i wouldn't wan the course description to be "gnarly"The sport/beg course is awful. It has short uphills and would probably be fastest on a 6" bike. On the other hand, the expert/pro course is real DH. It's fast and gnarly and a ton of fun.
No, No and No. Not even the satellite lot below, I'm sure. If you've ever gotten an event pamphlet from the Deer Valley Nat, you will see a prominent snipe on each and every page: "NO CAMPING IN DEER VALLEY." I'm surprised all those multimillionaires with their used-once-a-year multi-million-dollar vacation homes tolerate us riff-raff up there even on a day-use basis for a raceAnyone know if I can park a motorhome in the main event parking lot, overnights?
Sport course they've had in past years isn't gnar (although 'gnar' is a relative term..). Not sure if it's the same this year, but I would suspect it is. There is some pedalling as mentioned, but I don't recall there being any serious "uphills". I haven't raced that course in years but usually get a run or two in on it because it's fun.I just did my first lift assisted DH race the other day at N*. My time was like 5:02 and most of the course was a rockgarden. I was beat when I got to the bottom...mostly because of how long and rough the course was. It was a huge contrast to the races in Southern CA that are generally smoother and shorter.
Are there different DH courses for all classes at Deer Valley? How gnar is the course? I race sport.