The History of Mt. Rose Ski Tahoe
Since
1930, long before the present Mt. Rose Highway
was built, or even chairlifts were constructed, Reno
and Washoe County locals have been skiing in the
area currently known as Mt. Rose - Ski Tahoe. Shortly
after World War II, a lodge called Sky Tavern was
built in the area where a few surface lifts had been
operating since the late 30's. Sky Tavern was, and
continues to be located on the Mt. Rose Highway (SR
431), 11 miles west of US 395, just south of Reno. Eventually this historic
ski lodge would be sold to the City of Reno where it still operates the
cityâs
Junior Ski Program.
From Sky Tavern, devoted skiers hiked up to the 9,700' peak of Slide
Mountain and skied in the location of the present
Mt. Rose - Ski Tahoe. By widening the existing logging
trails for better ski terrain, these former powder
hounds were cutting some of the first ski trails
in the Sierra Nevada. In 1950, the old Mt. Rose Hwy
was merely a summer road connecting Reno with beautiful
Lake Tahoe. As the years marched on, the old SR431
continued to be improved allowing winter travel to
higher elevations; therefore more ski terrain became
easily accessible. The original Reno Ski Bowl was
constructed on the east slope of Slide Mountain (currently
the East Bowl of Mt. Rose), and at one point was
connected to the Sky Tavern area by the old Ringer
Chair. This lift
spanned Bum's
Gulch, taking it to the base of the Reno Ski Bowl.
Remnants of this lift can still be seen on the highway
about 2 miles below the Mt. Rose main lodge where
a lone, rusty lift tower remains standing. When Squaw
Valley hosted the 1960 Winter Olympics, the Reno
Ski Bowl was actually chosen as an alternate site
for skiing events if Squaw did not have adequate
snow coverage.
The
60's saw large changes on the slopes of Slide Mountain.
The Reno Ski Bowl evolved into the Slide Mountain
Ski Area and in 1964, the north face of Slide Mountain
became Mt. Rose Ski Area. The Mt. Rose Development
Company was formed to direct the future of the ski
resort. Over the years, Slide and Rose operated
independently, each expanding in their own ways with
more lifts and lodge improvements. The Mt. Rose lodge
rented 42 hotel rooms until they discontinued lodging
guests in 1984. In 1980, 180 acres of new trails
were cut at Mt. Rose between the Sunset ski trail
and the Mt. Rose Hwy. Also, the Lakeview chair was
built, offering spectacular views of Lake Tahoe and
increasing uphill capacity. The 1984-85 season saw the 20th anniversary
of operation and two new chairlifts. The existing Northwest Passage double
chairlift was replaced with a new triple chair, and the Galena triple
chair was installed providing increased terrain for beginner and novice
skiers. In 1985, Around the World was
cut adding a new 2.5-mile long ski run for long relaxing
cruising.
The
Iron Curtain between Slide and Rose finally came
down in 1987 when Mt. Rose acquired the Slide Mountain
Ski Area terrain under a lease agreement with the
U.S. Forest Service. Combining the two ski areas
increased the overall terrain of Mt. Rose to 900+ acres, now making Rose
a significant player in the Lake Tahoe Basin.
As Rose moved into the 90's, improvements continued to take place on
the hill with the upgrading of the Zephyr chair to
a quad lift in 1989, and later the Ponderosa lift
also evolved from a double to quad chair in 1993.
Both new lifts vastly increased uphill capacity and
aided in boosting the overall image of the resort.
The expansion of U.S. 395 to SR 431 created a six
lane freeway now extending to the Mt. Rose highway
providing high speed, non stop access for the 22 mile trip from Reno.
1994-95 shined as the 30th anniversary for Mt. Rose and this landmark
year produced some of the most significant facility improvements in the
resorts history including a 2.5 million dollar remodel of
the main lodge, which included a monster outdoor
BBQ deck and a 300% expansion of the indoor dining
area. Over 550" of snow blanketed Mt. Rose that season
putting an alarming end to the eight-year draught
and rewriting the record book with the most snow
in history for Mt. Rose. Top to bottom snowmaking
was also introduced to the resort in the late 90's
giving the mountain the insurance policy it needed to have
consistent early season openings.
Mt. Rose screamed into the 21st century with its first high speed lift
when the Northwest triple became the Norwest Magnum
6. Following in its wake was the upgrade of the Zephyr
quad lift to the Blazing Zephyr 6 high speed chair
in 2004 giving Mt. Rose dual high speed, base-to-summit
rides to the top. But big fast chairs were the only
the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Separating the
east and north slopes of Slide Mountain lives the
extreme terrain known as The Chutes. After 10 years of groundwork, Mt.
Rose officially adopted these 200 acres into its trail system including
the addition of the Chuter lift providing an exit back to the Slide lodge.
There was a time when skiers were allowed in the Chutes area at their
own risk. Shuttle busses actually ran from the Slide Mountain Junction
to the base of the Reno Ski Bowl from the late 1950's to the mid 60's
transporting everyone who ventured over to the backside. The mid 1960's
saw the closure of this area until it's
official opening in 2004.
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