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snow skiing
This website is being researched and should be online early 2021.

When it comes to mountainside activities, winter brings an embarrassment of riches to the Rockies — so Colorado ski resorts have simply extended the fun well into the evening. From sunrise to sunset, here are some of our favorite places (and ways) to play.

Eldora Mountain Resort 

Easygoing Eldora, just 21 miles from Boulder, boasts an incredible variety of groomed terrain within its modest 620 acres — including everything from blue cruisers to double-black diamonds.

Day: Eldora Nordic Center
Eldora’s Nordic Center has exclusive bragging rights to “40 kilometers of freedom”: an extensive network of trails that begin just a few steps beyond the lift lines. From rentals and lessons for absolute beginners to secluded expert-level escapes, the center is a haven of expansive alpine meadows with dedicated trails for cross-country skiing, skate skiing or snowshoeing.

Night: Eldora Nighthawks
Six dark winter nights a year, you can live out your Olympic dreams — even if you only dream of being a spectator — with the annual Eldora Nighthawks rac­ing league. On courses lit by floodlights or headlamps, amateur alpine, uphill, cross-country and snowshoe racers brave single-digit temps to grab that glory.

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Purgatory Resort

Tucked away in the rugged San Juan Mountains, Purgatory near Durango is more than 2 miles high at its summit, with an annual snowfall of more than 21 feet and terrain that skews heavily toward intermediate and advanced.

Day: Dog Sledding
Friends, here’s the thing about dog sledding: Though your groundspeed will likely top out at around 12 miles per hour, it feels really fast when your view is fluffy tails and flying snow. Purgatory partners with Durango Dog Ranch to offer daily peak-season mushing tours with scenic Engineer Mountain views.

Night: Twilight Snowshoe Tour
Instagram … or alpenglow? An optical phenomenon that bathes the mountains in a spectacular rosy glow, alpenglow is an exceptionally ’grammable real-life occurrence that mere filters can’t match. Feast your eyes and fill your feed with a guided snowshoe tour through Purgatory’s backcountry; you’ll learn about local geology, flora and fauna while surrounded by pink-hued peaks.

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Snowmass

Snowmass likes to say it’s “never the same mountain twice,” and with nearly 3,500 acres of skiable terrain and 150 miles of trails — the longest clocking in at 5.3 miles — they might be right.

Day: Snowbiking
A snowbike is basically a simplified bicycle frame fitted with short ski blades instead of traditional tires. The rider also wears shortie skis, and it’s a good thing, too — it’s the bike’s only braking system. Daily snowbike tours depart twice a day from Snowmass Base Village; your instructor will show you the ropes before taking you up the Elk Camp Gondola for two exciting top-to-bottom runs.

Night: Ullr Nights at Elk Camp
The Norse god of snow takes center stage on peak-season Friday nights, transforming Elk Camp into a legit winter wonderland — with live music, gourmet cuisine, tubing and riding the new Breathtaker Alpine Coaster. Get your fill of chill, then cozy up to the bonfire for s’mores.

Vail

With more than 300 days of sunshine and 370 inches of snow annually (not to mention majestic views of the surrounding Gore and Sawatch mountain ranges), Vail is indeed “like nothing on Earth.”

Day: Vail’s Back Bowls
Vail’s seven epic back bowls alone comprise more skiable acres (3,017) than the majority of North American ski resorts. Roughly 6 miles of unbounded powder stretch from Ptarmi­gan Ridge to the farthest edges of Outer Mongolia Bowl, and it’s possible to ski them all in a single day. If you dare, bring a friend and consult the experts before hitting these ultra-remote slopes.

Night: Adventure Ridge
You wouldn’t turn your little ones loose on the NASCAR track, but that’s exactly how they’ll feel on the Blizzard Speedway at Vail’s Ad­venture Ridge. When the kids feel the need for speed (and when don’t they?), specially made mini-snowmobiles help them keep steering and velocity in check for fun times under the stars.

Keystone Resort

A quick drive from Denver in Summit County, Keystone is the ultimate family playground. Kids 12 and under ski free with lodging; daily offerings include crafts, scavenger hunts and snow forts.

Day: Keystone Snowcat Tour
Sometimes, you like your mountain majesty with a side of enclosed transportation. And for those days, the Mountaintop Family Adven­ture Tour is clutch: After a scenic gondola ride to the top of Keystone’s Dercum Mountain, you and the crew will board a heated snowcat to Erickson and Bergman bowls for panoramic views and snowy shenanigans.

Night: Night Skiing
Keystone is home to the longest ski day in all of Colorado, with select lifts and lighted trails open ’til 8pm on weekends and select holidays. For a peak night-skiing experience, watch the sunset from the summit and warm up between runs with hot cocoa at the Summit House.

Copper Mountain

If Colorado’s ski resorts were people, Copper would be your friend who’s super fun at parties — fizzing with a sun’s out, fun’s out vibe even during the darkest days of winter.

Day: Rocky Mountain Coaster
Gravity’s on your side here, no matter how you prefer to get down. Choose the tubing hill to careen gleefully down one of four meticulously groomed freestyle tubing tracks. Or ride the Rocky Mountain Coaster to take the fast track to high-speed thrills — with a mile-long, gravity-powered descent through the forests surrounding the American Flyer lift.

Night: Moonlight Dine + Ski
Don’t get us wrong: Your friend who’s fun at parties also cleans up nicely. Copper’s captivat­ing Moonlight Dine + Ski experience starts with a private twilight ski session. A gourmet candlelit dinner and live music follow inside Solitude Station, then it’s back into those boots for your final run — with only the stars (and your headlamp) to guide you.

Sunlight Mountain Resort

For about half the price of a mega-resort lift ticket, you can enjoy a no-frills day exploring Sunlight’s uncrowded trails in Glenwood Springs … before warming up in the nearby hot springs.

Day: Uphill Skiing
Like to do things the hard way? Colorado makes it easy. Uphill skiing, also known as skinning, alpine touring or ski mountaineering, involves skipping the ski lift in favor of climbing to the top of each run. It’s called earning your turns, and Sunlight allows you to do it for free — provided you wrap up your last run before lifts open. Early birds … get after it!

Night: Glenwood Hot Springs
If you were up with the chickens uphill skiing, we think you’ve also earned an epic wind-down. Nearby Glenwood Hot Springs Resort has a natural hot pool that’s nearly two city blocks long, brimming with healthy minerals like calcium, potassium, magnesium, iron and zinc. Enjoy a soak, schedule a spa treatment or book a room in the lodge — and start all over tomorrow.

Crested Butte Mountain Resort

Though its skiable acreage seems modest by most standards, Crested Butte is home to some of the most adventurous terrain in North America — with a thrill-seeking clientele to match.

Day: Crested Butte Terrain Park
With five different terrain parks to play in, Crested Butte is a great place to nail that gnarly Double McTwist (a daredevil trick made famous by Olympian Shaun White). Start with the small, simple features of Ten Peaks Progression Park and work your way up to expert-level Cascade Park, a wonderland of hybrid rails, technical jibs and big air.

Night: Nordic Magic Meadows Yurt Dinner Experience
To fully embrace Crested Butte, you’ll have to venture off the beaten path — and there’s no better way to do it than the Nordic Magic Meadows Yurt Dinner Experience. Enjoy a guided, groomed snowshoe or Nordic ski jaunt to a secluded backcountry yurt for an artisan-crafted meal featuring small-batch local spirits and the delicious creations of acclaimed local chefs.

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Arapahoe Basin
Best known for having one of the longest ski seasons in North America (often from mid-October to early June), A-Basin also boasts North America’s highest elevation terrain park and its own “beach,” the infamous early-riser parking lot, which serves as home base for concerts, parties and tailgating. Snow Conditions

Aspen Highlands
When new snow at Aspen Highlands reaches mammoth proportions, you’re in for a epic day of Colorado’s signature light-and-dry powder. Insiders at the ski area recommend studying the trail map to find hidden gems that drop into gladed, untouched expert areas. Snow Conditions

Aspen Mountain
While Aspen is known throughout the world as a posh winter playground, more skiers are discovering the mountain’s challenging double blacks and chutes. In town, stop into the numerous galleries and the Aspen Art Museum or see a show at the Wheeler Opera House or the Harris Concert Hall. Snow Conditions

Beaver Creek Resort
Beaver Creek charms with fantastic extras: Heated moving walkways, fresh-baked cookies, a first-tracks program for early risers, a white-carpet club, wine-and-snowshoe excursions and acres of corduroy and powder waiting for skiers and riders to swish through. Snow Conditions

Breckenridge Ski Resort
Breckenridge is one of North America’s most popular resorts, in part because of its variety of terrain: long groomed trails, monster mogul runs, steep chutes, glades and plenty of family-friendly beginner areas. The resort was also one of the first to allow snowboarding on its slopes, and its Freeway Terrain Park is arguably one of the best in North America. Snow Conditions

Buttermilk
Buttermilk has a well-earned reputation as a great venue for beginner skiers and snowboarders. Wide, rolling trails are ideal for those just getting their snow legs, and none of its runs are rated expert. For an unprecedented 18 straight years, it has been the home of ESPN’s Winter X Games, where the likes of Olympians Shaun White, Hannah Teter, local Gretchen Bleiler and many more have captured snowboarding medals. Snow Conditions

Copper Mountain
People who ski and ride Copper love to tout its perfect layout. They have Mother Nature to thank for arranging its slopes so adeptly: Beginner, intermediate and expert runs are each clustered with like-leveled terrain, ensuring beginners won’t make a surprise trip to the top of a steep, mogul-laden run. Snow Conditions

Crested Butte Mountain Resort
Crested Butte has it all: wide-open green and blue trails, expert bowls and plenty of unexplored lines and uncrowded slopes. One thing to really take advantage of, however, is the CB Backcountry Guide. Professional instructors teach would-be backcountry enthusiasts how to navigate safely and explore untouched powder. Snow Conditions

Echo Mountain Resort
Just south of Idaho Springs you'll find 60 acres of skiable terrain, making it the closest ski resort to Denver. Complete with a redesigned lodge featuring a restaurant and bar overlooking the Continental Divide, Echo Mountain is an affordable option for skiers and boarders along the Front Range. For those who can’t get up there before the work day ends, the slopes are open til 9pm for skiing under the stars. Snow Conditions

Eldora Mountain Resort
Eldora’s proximity to Boulder and Denver is one of the reasons it’s known as a “locals’ mountain.” The fact that they have terrain to keep the whole family busy all day doesn’t hurt either. The Eldora Nordic Center features a network of nearly 25 miles of peaceful cross-country ski and snowshoe trails just steps from the downhill ski area. Snow Conditions

Hesperus Ski Area
Eleven miles west of Durango, Hesperus has been is an especially great option for families in the southwest part of Colorado since 1962, and it's the region's largest night-skiing operation. Hesperus' unassuming, small-ski-area ambiance makes its 26 trails and 160 acres an idyllic winter escape. Snow Conditions

Howelsen Hill Ski Area
Routinely in the shadow of its much larger neighbor, Steamboat, it's easy to forget Howelsen's pedigree. Open since 1915, it's the oldest ski area in Colorado, has the largest natural ski-jumping complex in North America and has long been a training ground for Olympic skiers. It’s also one a handful of resorts in Colorado to offer after-dark skiing. Floating through the night beneath the glow of the slope’s lights is an other-worldly experience. Snow Conditions

Kendall Mountain Ski Area
Situated in Silverton, Kendall Mountain is loved by locals for its intimate, family-friendly ambiance. The ski area has four groomed trails, a terrain park and tree skiing. Off-the-slopes activities include ice skating, sledding, snowshoeing and cross-country skiing. Snow Conditons

Keystone
Keystone boasts three mountains full of bowls, steeps, trails, a lift-served tubing hill and one of the state’s longest ski days. Skiers can watch the sun set at 11,000 feet and ski into the night. After a day on the slopes, a moonlight gondola ride takes you to the top of North Peak for a romantic dinner at Alpenglow Stube. Snow Conditions

Loveland Ski Area
One of Loveland’s favorite things to brag about is that it averages nearly 400 inches of snow each season, more than any other Front Range ski area. You’re more likely to find untracked snow even days after a storm. For added convenience, they have two separate base areas, one catering to beginners with wide-open terrain and one for intermediate to advanced skiers and riders with runs steep and deep. Snow Conditions

Monarch Mountain
Monarch’s perch, high atop the Continental Divide, makes it one of the best spots in the state for fresh powder. A short walk from the parking lot to the lifts, roomy slopes and one of Colorado’s most laid-back attitudes has made it a hit with families. Ride to the top of the narrow, between-tree Panorama Lift for 360-degree views of the divide. Snow Conditions

Powderhorn Mountain Resort
This resort near Grand Junction has one of the most unique views in Colorado’s ski country. Located on the Grand Mesa, the largest flat-top mountain in the world, skiers and riders will see something more like the Grand Canyon than the typical alpine view. Snow Conditions

Purgatory Resort
Purgatory's (formerly Durango Mountain Resort) unintimidating slopes, Old West fun park and Pitchfork Terrain Garden beginners’ park are a few things that make it a hit with families. Within its boundaries are 88 trails, five terrain parks, a racing course and 35,000 acres of snowcat skiing and snowboarding. Snow Conditions

Silverton Mountain
As Silverton’s motto proclaims, this southwest Colorado ski area is “All thrills, no frills.” Colorado’s highest and steepest ski mountain serves up un-groomed, no-easy-way-down expert terrain for those who prefer skiing the old-school way. Snow Conditions

Ski Cooper
Ski Cooper is famous for being the former training site for the 10th Mountain Division, the legendary World War II ski troops. Its sweeping runs follow some of the same paths used by the soldiers who skied Europe’s mountain battlefields. Today, it’s popular with families looking for a cheerful and low-stress skiing holiday. Snow Conditions

Ski Granby Ranch
Ski Granby Ranch’s fun lesson programs, easy pace and affordable prices make it a long-time family favorite. There’s no better place to wind down at the end of the day than the fire pit at the base of the mountain, where the hot cocoa flows and everyone recounts the day’s snowy triumphs. Snow Conditions

Snowmass
The mountain itself is enormous. Snowmass trumpets that 36 Disneylands could fit within its boundaries. At 4,406 feet, “Snowmassive” also has one of the highest vertical rise of any ski area in the country, and runner-up for Colorado’s longest run — a staggering 5.3 miles of peaceful schussing before you even have to think about the lift line. Snow Conditions

Steamboat
Steamboat feels so confident about the special-ness of its powder, it trademarked it so you’d know just where to find the genuine article: Champagne Powder™. It’s light, it’s dry, it’s smooth and it’s only found in this 112-year-old western town. Despite its size — six breathtaking peaks and 3,000 acres — Steamboat still manages to stay true to its friendly, down-home roots. Snow Conditions

Sunlight Mountain Resort
Affordability, friendliness and a mix of terrain are Sunlight’s hallmarks. Hundreds of acres of mild greens, intermediate slopes and black-diamond extremes satisfy all abilities. The slope’s proximity to the world’s largest hot springs pool at Glenwood Hot Springs lets you reward your ski muscles’ big day with a long soak. Snow Conditions

Telluride
Driving into the authentic, Victorian-era town of Telluride, it’s hard to imagine 2,000 hundred acres of ski terrain and towering, glossy, modern resort amenities are moments away. That’s because it’s all hidden behind a soaring mountain ridge. A quick gondola ride ferries you to everything from refined, groomed runs to challenging moguls to freestyle parks. Snow Conditions

Vail
Vail sets the standard for ski resorts in North America, and the bar is only getting higher. With its famed seven back bowls, 193 trails and a staggering 5,289 skiable acres, it’s one of the nation’s largest ski areas. Add to that an array of luxury accommodations and residences, shopping and dining, and endless off-slope activities. Snow Conditions

Winter Park
Winter Park proudly boasts award-winning diverse terrain, deep snow, friendly employees and top-notch lodging and dining options. If you’re looking for a bumpy ride, Winter Park is your destination. Skiing Magazine rated Mary Jane (one of the park’s three peaks) No. 1 in North America for mogul skiing. Snow Conditions

Wolf Creek Ski Area
Wolf Creek Ski Area is famous for getting the most snow of any resort in Colorado — an astounding annual average of 430 inches. So if you like floating through powder, this is your destination. Wolf Pups ski school is the ideal way to ensure the kids become lifelong powder lovers. Snow Conditions

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