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Outside Magazine, January 2006

Dispatches Travel
Cat Fever
You don't always need a bird to find powdery perfection in British Columbia

By Lindsay Yaw

Intro/ White Grizzly Adventures & Baldface Lodge | Retallack Resort, Alpine Adventures, & Valhalla Powdercats

outdoor adventure image
(Mike Wiegele/British Columbia Tourism)

WHEN IT’S HAMMERING SNOW and the choppers are grounded, superstars like freeskier Seth Morrison head to Nelson, British Columbia, where they often find the best snowcat skiing on the planet. Nelson's surroundings offer 3,000-foot shots of fall-line tree skiing, cliffs fit for backward off-axis flips, regular three-foot dumps that keep the landings downy soft, and eight operators less than a couple hours' drive away. Here's a look at Nelson's best cat-ski operations. Oh, and did we mention you'll spend an average of 70 percent less than you would on a week of heli-skiing?

White Grizzly Adventures
If crowds aren't your thing but steep tree skiing is, head to White Grizzly, a five-bedroom log cabin tucked in a secluded cedar forest. The Jacuzzi out back and the single-malt Scotch in front of the fireplace might give the impression that the White Grizzly experience isn't core. Don't be fooled. Its 5,000-acre terrain is home to some of the most technical tree slalom in existence, and the 12-person groups mean more runs and an average of 18,000 vertical feet per day.
»Where: 56 miles north of Nelson on Provincial Highway 31
»Cost: US$527 per person per day,
including meals
»SWEETEST STASH: Love Triangle is steep, tight, and full of small cliffs
»Contact: 250-366-4306, www.whitegrizzly.com

Baldface Lodge
Start off with a quick heli-ride from Nelson to this mountaintop handcrafted-timber lodge and seven surrounding cabins with a rock-star clientele, then go in search of fall-line freshies that stretch over 36,000 acres, followed by a feast of buffalo steaks, curries, and cedar-plank salmon topped off with bowls of chocolate soufflé. Bring your snowboard—many of the guides are uni-plankers and choose runs that don't call for traversing.
»Where: A five-minute heli-ride due north of Nelson
»Cost: US$575–$700 per person per day, including meals
»SWEETEST STASH: Go airborne at Lunch Lake, which offers multiple cliffs with perfect long, steep runouts
»Contact: 250-352-0006, www.baldface.net



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Intro/ White Grizzly Adventures & Baldface Lodge | Retallack Resort, Alpine Adventures, & Valhalla Powdercats



LINDSAY YAW is a writer and athlete based in Boulder, Colorado.

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