Marble Mountain Ski Resort

Marble Mountain is a ski resort located in the town of Steady Brook, on the west coast of Newfoundland in the Long Range Mountains.

Marble Mountain Resort
LocationSteady Brook, Newfoundland
 Canada
Nearest major cityCorner Brook
Coordinates48°56′12″N 57°49′38″W
Vertical536 m (1,759 ft)
Top elevation546 m (1,791 ft)
Base elevation10 m (33 ft)
Skiable area225 acres (0.91 km2)
Runs39
5 – Easiest
17 – More Difficult
10 – Most Difficult
6 – Expert
Longest runCountry Road 4.5 km (3 mi)
Lift system4 lifts: 1 high-speed quad chair; 2 fixed-grip quad chairs; 1 magic carpet
Terrain parks
2 – Terrain Park, 7 mogul runs
Snowfall5m (16ft)/year
WebsiteSki Marble

The resort is located on a series of steep ridges forming part of the southern side of the Humber River valley on Mount Musgrave at Steady Brook, approximately 7 km (4 mi) east of Corner Brook. As the name implies, marble is present but it forms only a minor part of the bedrock, which is mostly schist.[1] The peak is named in honour of Sir Anthony Musgrave, a colonial governor of Newfoundland.

Marble Mountain is the site of the largest alpine ski resort in Atlantic Canada. Environment Canada's doppler weather radar station "XME", part of the Canadian weather radar network is located near the resort at the summit of Mount Musgrave.

The Marble Mountain Ski Resort is known to have some of the best skiing east of the Rockies with an average of 5 m (16 ft) of snow each year, compared to Mont Tremblant's 3.65 m (12 ft). In the winter of 2013/2014, the resort saw more than 21 feet of natural snowfall and in the 2014/2015 season, nearly 20 feet of natural snow fell. Marble Mountain was a key venue for the 1999 Canada Winter Games hosted by Corner Brook.

Marble Mountain boasts the only detachable high speed quad lift in Atlantic Canada, the Lightning Express. It is 1,660 m (5,446 ft) in length and has a ride time of approximately 7 minutes.

On June 29, 2018, the provincial government announced that it would be seeking a request for proposals to divest the government of ownership of Marble Mountain.[2] The resort has been operated by the provincial government since 1988 through the Marble Mountain Development Corporation. The ski hill receives an annual subsidy of close to $1 million.

Trails

Easy Intermediate Difficult Very Difficult Freestyle
5 17 10 6 2
Broadway (beginners area) Steinbergs Kruncher (m) Macleod Nine (m) Crocker's Run
Upalong Ho Chi Minh Trail Cruiser Boomerang (m) Hot Dog
Country Road Old Sam Blow Me Down (OMJ) Humber View (m)
Little Heart's Ease Marble Chute Musgrave (m) Autobahn (m)
Sleepy Hollow Nature Trail Tower 16 Ugly Stick (g)
Chilliwack Deep Bight
Hansen's Run Corkscrew
Twister Tuckamore Tangle (g)
Knute Chute Chicken's Way Out
Bonavista Cabot Straight
Caribou Road
Jigger
Crooked Feeder
L'anse Aux Meadows
Random Passage
Major's Path
Langins Lane
  • (m) – mogul runs
  • (g) – gladed trail with trees

Lifts

Lift Name Length Vertical Type Ride Time Make Build Year
Lightning Express 1,660m 519m High Speed Detachable Quad 6 Mins Leitner-Poma 2014
Black Mariah 1,106m 427m Fixed Grip Quad 10 mins Poma 1993
Newfie Bullet 473m 220m Fixed Grip Quad 6 mins Doppelmayr 1986
Magic Carpet 91m 28m Surface Lift 2 mins N/A 2009

See also

References

  1. http://www.steadybrook.com/images/steady_brook_watershed_plan.pdf Hearn, Dawe, Holloway and Soper, 2005. Steady Brook Watershed Plan, p.7
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