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All Press Releases for March 21, 2005 Subscribe to this News Feed      
 

Bode Miller & Cannon Mountain: A New Hampshire Pure" Thing

From the car, Cannon Mountain seems a bit too accessible, too close to civilization, and just too normal to produce a skier that flew down a mountain in Switzerland at upwards of 60 mph last week to claim the first American skiing title in twenty-two years.

(PRWEB) March 21, 2005 -- The mountain that taught the best skier in the world how to ski arches over Interstate 93 like a massive gate to New Hampshires snow-covered North Country

But, when you turn off the exit, drive a few hundred yards to the base lodge, and strap on your skis, you begin to see the mountain that raised skiings answer to Larry Bird and Tiger Woods.

Cannon is a skiers mountain first. According to local legend, the first trails from the top of the 4,186 foot high peak were carved into the evergreens a century ago by releasing huge boulders from the summit. The curving, bouncing paths the rocks took became trails like Upper Cannon and Upper Ravine – natural ski runs that are marked by snow-crusted pine trees and a view that goes all the way to Canada on a clear day.

Two decades ago, when World Champion Bode Miller grew up on the slopes of Cannon Mountain, it wasnt just a skiers mountain first. It was a skiers mountain, period.

Today, improved snowmaking, new lifts, and trail expansions have turned Cannon into a place where families can ski together, with one of the widest ranges of skiing in New England. Snowmaking now supplements New Hampshires winter snowfall on 158 of the mountains 165 acres, and the first aerial tram in North America has been replaced by two red and yellow trams that whisk skiers to the top of the mountain 70 at a time to keep lift lines short.

Last year the mountain opened a new Brookside area, nine trails for beginners that combine the gentle slope of a training trail with the tree-lined paths of the higher elevations.

But along with the new expansions, the same runs that have challenged skiers for decades still stretch across the mountains east side with a deceptively inviting smile. Standing at the top of Garys -- a trail that separates the intermediate skiers from the beginners -- the view of the highway snaking through Franconia Notch is the same as what a young world champion-in-the-making saw when he would spend entire winters at Cannon Mountain.

I didnt miss one day when the lifts were open," Miller recently told a London newspaper of his years growing up on the slopes. I would be up there when they opened and there when they closed."

Above the ski rental window in Cannon Mountains base lodge is a picture of Miller crouched over, leaning into a right turn with the edges of his skis almost vertical to the powdery snow. The writing scrawled on the top in silver marker is more of a yearbook message than an endorsement. For the boys at the Cannon Mt. rental shop – Bode Miller USA 2002."

The boys" at the rental shop – along with the ‘lifties, the ruggedly hansom ski patrol director, and the 74-year old local who shovels the walkways at 4 a.m. every morning – are what make the mountain often feel more like a big family or a summer camp than a resort.

Families come to Cannon Mountain because they see the same people working the lifts year after year," explains Marketing Director Amy Bassett, who sheepishly admits she has only worked on the mountain for twelve years. Twelve years is nothing here."

The locals will tell you that becoming the best skier in the world isnt just about raw speed. So will the experts.

Harmony and balance," explained Jean Claude Killy, the 1968 Olympic skiing legend to the LA Times last month before Miller faced the world championships. He has got it all together."

Miller just calls it that pure" thing.

Reading his words on a white bulletin board full of newspaper clippings posted next to the ticket window, it is easy to wonder whether Miller is talking about his skiing or the mountain where he learned how to ski.

And while families laugh, teenagers pant out of breath, and couples warm their hands by a large stone fireplace after coming in off the slopes, you realize that maybe a ‘normal mountain in New Hampshire isnt such an unlikely place to produce a world champion after all.

Cannon Mountain, in rugged Franconia Notch State Park, NH, is operated by the Division of Parks and Recreation of New Hampshires Department of Resources and Economic Development. With nine lifts and 55 winter trails, lift tickets at Cannon begin at $25 for teens and children and $38 for adults midweek ($38/45 weekends). For more information on Cannon Mountain or its special deals for the February school vacation week, visit www.cannonmt.com or call 603-823-8800.

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Amy Bassett
Cannon Mountain
603 271 2006
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Cannon Mountain

Best in the east

Slopes of fire

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