Beginner area lacking
Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 11:03 am
My friend asked me to post her experience with Tremblant's beginner area from our 3 full days on the hill last week.
She hated it! Equilibrium is a joke if you ask me, WAY too small for the amount of instructors and people that were accessing the hill, whether that's holiday time or anytime. It's sad when 3 Ontario hills (Blue Mountain, Moontone & Horseshoe Valley) blow away the biggest hill in Eastern Canada when it comes to a dedicated beginner area.
I thought it was horribly small and inadequate, they need to address that issue as soon as possible in my mind. The one at Blue Mountain is so much better it's not even funny, it's triple the width and probably triple the height as well. Each of the hills I've been to has multiple "carpet" runs and even bigger beginner runs.
Nansen and P'tit Bonheur were not options in my view for someone that couldn't link turns. We simply couldn't bring her up on the chairs for risk that it would take her an hour to get down and many bumps and bruises. Also, the number of flat spots on Nansen is not conducive to learning on a snowboard, she would have been stuck all over the place and having to unstrap is frustrating to beginners.
I think Tremblant has to address this glaring problem if they want to keep getting the beginner crowd. I found it to be very beginner "unfriendly" and more importantly, so did my friend.
She hated it! Equilibrium is a joke if you ask me, WAY too small for the amount of instructors and people that were accessing the hill, whether that's holiday time or anytime. It's sad when 3 Ontario hills (Blue Mountain, Moontone & Horseshoe Valley) blow away the biggest hill in Eastern Canada when it comes to a dedicated beginner area.
I thought it was horribly small and inadequate, they need to address that issue as soon as possible in my mind. The one at Blue Mountain is so much better it's not even funny, it's triple the width and probably triple the height as well. Each of the hills I've been to has multiple "carpet" runs and even bigger beginner runs.
Nansen and P'tit Bonheur were not options in my view for someone that couldn't link turns. We simply couldn't bring her up on the chairs for risk that it would take her an hour to get down and many bumps and bruises. Also, the number of flat spots on Nansen is not conducive to learning on a snowboard, she would have been stuck all over the place and having to unstrap is frustrating to beginners.
I think Tremblant has to address this glaring problem if they want to keep getting the beginner crowd. I found it to be very beginner "unfriendly" and more importantly, so did my friend.