ICaryHi Friends,
Looking to get some inside info from some west coast riders. Always lived on the east coast and ride PA, Vermont, NH every year. Usually make it out west to CO or UT a few times a year with the boys to ride. This season the lady and I are wanting to go to Tahoe area. I can ski any and everything, the lady on the other hand is a beginner and this will be her first time out west. I ultimately just want her to be comfortable and have fun. So looking for the most beginner friendly trails. We like the idea of a village at the base so we can just bop around at night to different bars/pubs. Any insight on which mountain has more open terrain or a nicer village?
Thanks for all the summer lookers who are on this right now.
For what you describe, Northstar for sure. I don't particularly like either but they are on the pass with kirkwood so sometimes it makes sense. In my experience, Heavenly has more interesting and wider variety of terrain, at the expense of one of the worst mountain layouts ever and the absolute worst crowd I have ever seen. On the plus side you'll feel like a great skier with all the clueless jerries around. On the downside they are terriblle on the mountain- never look where they are going or aware of their surroundings. Northstar is honestly much better in those areas. The people who ski there are they type to have a vacation home and go up there frequently so at least they aren't clueless, just rich pricks.
Anyways this is how I'd break it down. Both are crowded so I won't add that as a negative, it's just fact.
Northstar:
+Great tree skiing
+Arguably best park in Tahoe
+Long, steep groomers on backside and lookout mountain
+Good division of areas between beginner and advance so you will not run into too many jerries on the backside and lookout mountain and often the lines are much shorter over there.
+Ton of beginner friendly terrain, honestly the entire frontside is completely benign (to a fault for advanced skiers)
+sheltered and good ops during storms
+one of the only actual villages in Tahoe
-Parking situation and getting into northstar sucks dick
-Rich pricks and shit is expensive (so is heavenly tho)
-Terrain very same-y, no cliffs and hardly even a boulder
Heavenly:
+Variety of terrain- gunbarrel is the steepest meanest mogul run I've seen, Mott/ Killebrew is some real shit, fun terrain scattered throughout the mountain and it is very big.
+Tons of places to stay and walk to heavenly gondola, also there are 3 different entry points to the resort
+high elevation so the snow quality is sometimes better than N*, but usually less quantity. The vert is also high so the bottom can get rained on while the top gets decent snow. But better than N* which will be rained on almost to the top sometimes.
-beginner terrain is a joke here, everyone just treats the blues as greens basically, creates a shit show all over the mountain
-During any weather event where they shut down part of the mountain, the mountain degrades into a disjointed shit show
-Type of people who go here range from instagram influencers, to people trying skiing for the first and only time, to people who came for the casinos, to people who have skied here forever and think it's their mountain. All have in common is that the have basically no mountain etiquette
Real quick on kirkwood, it's in the middle of nowhere and it's paradise if you want to shred. Beginner areas are totally fine, imo beginners don't need or truly want to explore the whole mountain and there's plenty here to test your skill at all levels. They have to be careful what lift they are riding though- here they can get into trouble just by riding the wrong lift. They've got elevation and snow quantity, it's the fuckin best. But not very tourist friendly and not as many lodging options. Most lifts are fixed grip also. Great if everyone (beginner to expert) is there to ski. Not so great if you are worried about stuff to do outside of the resort.