Unofficial Guide: Revelstoke Mountain Resort, BC
By Jim Kenney
April 9, 2018
This is an abbreviated unofficial guide to Revelstoke Mountain Resort, BC and more of a placeholder, than a finished product. I hope others who frequent the mountain more often than I will contribute useful details to this guide.
Revelstoke Mountain Resort (RMR) is a really big place that has the vibe of a really small place.
RMR Base Village, elevation 1680'/512m.
Overview
I have skied at nearly 100 ski areas in North America and Europe over the last 50+ years and this winter I visited a ski area that has to rank number one on my personal list of big places that have the feeling of a small place: REVELSTOKE. There is a small resort complex at the base, but it would be a lonely place to spend a week. Most guests drive over from the nearby town of the same name, which is somewhat more lively due to popularity with vacationing snowmobilers. When I was at Revelstoke for two weekdays in mid-March 2018 it seemed like there were only a few hundred other skiers on a mountain with 3000+ skiable acres and 5620'/1713m vertical. It's the kind of place you better bring a friend or make some friends quickly, because you could get seriously lost skiing the more remote parts of the mountain by yourself.
RMR mid-mountain lodge with the Columbia River in background. It is actually only 800 vertical feet above the base. The transition point from the first to second phase of the gondola occurs at the top of the magic carpet lift to right. Total vertical rise of the gondola is 3839'/1170m.
Lifts and Terrain
Revelstoke has only three primary lifts: a long, two-phase gondola, and two HSQ chairlifts. There is some fine high alpine bowl skiing that you have to traverse and/or climb to access, but only 69 designated ski trails. It's almost like the ski area is a giant forest with a few trails and bowls that get in the way of all the tree skiing and off-piste.
View of the North Bowl after taking the higher line hike from the top of The Stoke Chair.
Looking up The Stoke Chair to highest lift served summit of the mountain at elevation 7300'/2225m. The vertical rise of this chair is 2073'/632m. Nice tree spacing, eh?
Photo taken just after skier descended through notch in upper center. This is in the vicinity of a hike-to alpine area called Meet the Neighbors.
The only problem during my visit was that the lower 3000 vertical feet of the mountain was not too user-friendly due to a recent rain-freeze event. This limited the enjoyable skiing to the terrain served by the two upper mountain HSQ chairs. This is still about 2500' of vertical and some great stuff, but it gave the mountain a more limited feeling compared to other large ski areas I visited on the same trip. The second day we were there the upper terrain got 6-8" of new snow and that was a lot of fun, although visibility in the alpine bowls was challenging at times.
Looking up The Ripper Chair, great tree skiing on either side of lift line here. The vertical rise of this chair is 1640'/500m.
A little clearer view of North Bowl.
Skiing Greely Bowl on a 6" powder day.
The Upside
If you happened to be at Revelstoke during a major snow storm when the whole mountain was in play, it could potentially be really, really special. You would have lots of trees to duck into and minimal competition for the goods. If you got sun after powder, the high alpine would be glorious and probably the nearest thing to heli-skiing without a helicopter. Revelstoke is separated from the Calgary population base and points east by some occasionally challenging driving over the Trans-Canada Highway, including snowy Rogers Pass.
This is an open, alpine area called Separate Reality that is accessible with a short traverse from the summit of The Stoke Chair.
This gully is in a tree skiing area called the Big Woody on the way from Greely Bowl to the base of The Ripper Chair.
PugSki was here.
Link to RMR trail map: https://www.revelstokemountainresort.com/resort/trail-maps
By Jim Kenney
April 9, 2018
This is an abbreviated unofficial guide to Revelstoke Mountain Resort, BC and more of a placeholder, than a finished product. I hope others who frequent the mountain more often than I will contribute useful details to this guide.
Revelstoke Mountain Resort (RMR) is a really big place that has the vibe of a really small place.
RMR Base Village, elevation 1680'/512m.
Overview
I have skied at nearly 100 ski areas in North America and Europe over the last 50+ years and this winter I visited a ski area that has to rank number one on my personal list of big places that have the feeling of a small place: REVELSTOKE. There is a small resort complex at the base, but it would be a lonely place to spend a week. Most guests drive over from the nearby town of the same name, which is somewhat more lively due to popularity with vacationing snowmobilers. When I was at Revelstoke for two weekdays in mid-March 2018 it seemed like there were only a few hundred other skiers on a mountain with 3000+ skiable acres and 5620'/1713m vertical. It's the kind of place you better bring a friend or make some friends quickly, because you could get seriously lost skiing the more remote parts of the mountain by yourself.
RMR mid-mountain lodge with the Columbia River in background. It is actually only 800 vertical feet above the base. The transition point from the first to second phase of the gondola occurs at the top of the magic carpet lift to right. Total vertical rise of the gondola is 3839'/1170m.
Lifts and Terrain
Revelstoke has only three primary lifts: a long, two-phase gondola, and two HSQ chairlifts. There is some fine high alpine bowl skiing that you have to traverse and/or climb to access, but only 69 designated ski trails. It's almost like the ski area is a giant forest with a few trails and bowls that get in the way of all the tree skiing and off-piste.
View of the North Bowl after taking the higher line hike from the top of The Stoke Chair.
Looking up The Stoke Chair to highest lift served summit of the mountain at elevation 7300'/2225m. The vertical rise of this chair is 2073'/632m. Nice tree spacing, eh?
Photo taken just after skier descended through notch in upper center. This is in the vicinity of a hike-to alpine area called Meet the Neighbors.
The only problem during my visit was that the lower 3000 vertical feet of the mountain was not too user-friendly due to a recent rain-freeze event. This limited the enjoyable skiing to the terrain served by the two upper mountain HSQ chairs. This is still about 2500' of vertical and some great stuff, but it gave the mountain a more limited feeling compared to other large ski areas I visited on the same trip. The second day we were there the upper terrain got 6-8" of new snow and that was a lot of fun, although visibility in the alpine bowls was challenging at times.
Looking up The Ripper Chair, great tree skiing on either side of lift line here. The vertical rise of this chair is 1640'/500m.
A little clearer view of North Bowl.
Skiing Greely Bowl on a 6" powder day.
The Upside
If you happened to be at Revelstoke during a major snow storm when the whole mountain was in play, it could potentially be really, really special. You would have lots of trees to duck into and minimal competition for the goods. If you got sun after powder, the high alpine would be glorious and probably the nearest thing to heli-skiing without a helicopter. Revelstoke is separated from the Calgary population base and points east by some occasionally challenging driving over the Trans-Canada Highway, including snowy Rogers Pass.
This is an open, alpine area called Separate Reality that is accessible with a short traverse from the summit of The Stoke Chair.
This gully is in a tree skiing area called the Big Woody on the way from Greely Bowl to the base of The Ripper Chair.
PugSki was here.
Link to RMR trail map: https://www.revelstokemountainresort.com/resort/trail-maps
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