I second that, there are plenty of cliffs to hit, tons of tree skiing, backcounty, powder. It will never be the worst day of skiing, as it has the tallest vertical drop in the midwest, most runs, and biggest area. It is true that you should try to time going there after a storm, because they don't groom their runs, and eventually rocks start poking out of the snow. If you can go after a decent storm, you will have a blast.
The mountain it self is challenging . They have some double blacks there, that if were longer in length would rival anything out west.
The mountain is in the middle of nowhere, there are not any hotels around. You best bet would be to sleep in the yurt for 20 bucks a night, or you can rent a ski in ski out cabin trailside for pretty cheap. The mountain doesn't have restaurants, bars, nightlife, basically two lifts on a very large hill, with a yurt for a lodge. It is def roughing it....