Mad River Glen, A Unique Eco-Resort Celebrates 60+ Years
Hate the whoosh of snowboards and the heavy metal beat as you glide down the slopes? Curious to see wildlife only the dawn Ski Patrol ever encounters? Then the unique Mad River Glen in Waitsfield, Vermont, winner of the 2000 National Ski Areas Association Silver Eagle for Environmental Education, should be your next destination.
Under its Naturalist Program Director, Sean Lawson (who holds an M.A. in Forest Ecology), the eco-education schedule has evolved into a four season exploration of this mountain resort. Their Kent Thomas Nature Center is open on the mountain for year-round displays and hands-on activities.
Mad River Glen is America's only ski cooperative, a resort owned and maintained by 1900 of its frequent skiers since 1995. It is one of only three slopes (the others are Alta and Deer Valley in Utah) to ban snowboarding.
Its 2,037 feet of vertical drops cover 115 acres and are considered the most challenging expert terrain in the East. Its 45 trails are serviced only by a single chairlift, a ca.1948 diesel-powered classic, plus three renovated doubles and a new Handle Tow for novices. In 2005, the Mad River Glen Cooperative began its campaign to preserve the single chairlift, hoping to make it safer and longer lasting without imposing a multiple carrier like more modern chairlifts. By the summer of 2008, they had raised the required $1.65 million and the restoration project is scheduled to be completed by the season of 2010.
To protect its mountain ecosystem, Mad River Glen's skier-owners have committed to maintaining the forest, managing the wildlife habitat, monitoring the watershed (no artificial snow-making), and minimizing the environmental impact of the ski operations by limiting construction on the mountain.
During the 2008-2009 campaign to offset the carbon footprint of its skiers, Mad River Glen charged an additional $1 per day. Their philosophy is, "If you don’t build it in the first place you won’t have to offset its long-term environmental effects," notes a spokesperson, and with the help of local foundations, the funds raised are used to buy carbon offsets from Native Energy which are passed on to Vermont farmers.
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