13 Unique and Fun Winter Trips to Plan Now
Winter opens up endless adventure opportunities. And there鈥檚 no time to hibernate, because it鈥檒l be gone before you know it. Here are 13 unique and fun trips, from backcountry lodges to fat biking to the world's longest ice skating path.
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1. Stay at a Cozy 国产吃瓜黑料 Base Camp
The in Hillsdale, New York, about two and a half hours from Manhattan and Boston, opened in August with 14 rooms that blend 1950s Berkshires ski culture with the feel of a Swiss chalet (from $345). The lodge is set at the foot of the Catamount Mountain Resort, one of the country鈥檚 oldest ski areas, which has 1,000 feet of vertical and 43 trails, including the steepest run in the Berkshires. Back at the lodge, relax in a barrel sauna before dinner at the Tavern, where a James Beard Award鈥搉ominated chef is at the helm.
Farther south, in Pennsylvania鈥檚 Pocono Mountains, the keeps things cozy with 25 tiny homes tucked in 20 acres of snowy deciduous forest (from $320). A sauna, hot tub, and fire pits are on site, and it鈥檚 a ten-minute drive to the slopes of Jack Frost and Big Boulder, where you can night-ski and use your Epic Pass.
In the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains, in North Carolina, the town of Boone is a great jumping-off point for cross-country skiing around 6,285-foot Roan Mountain or downhilling at Sugar Mountain and Appalachian Ski Mountain. Get a suite at the 15-room , a boutique hotel (from $280) in downtown Boone.
Or head north (way north) to the Charlevoix region of Quebec on the Saint Lawrence River, a mini North American Norway, with stunning fjords and dense woodlands. Stay right in the middle of it all in the Laurentian Mountains at , a collection of walk-in geodesic huts (see image above) with private hot tubs, fireplaces, and fully equipped kitchens (from $350). Fifteen minutes away, the ski area has just over 2,500 feet of vertical drop, the most east of the Canadian Rockies.
2. Ride the Winter Trains
In Switzerland, most everyone takes the train to the ski mountain. There are a few locomotive options on this side of the pond, too. The from Denver to Colorado鈥檚 third-largest ski area is back this season. Trains with baggage compartments for skis and boards leave Denver鈥檚 Union Station every Friday through Sunday, January through April, starting at 7 a.m. During the two-hour trip ($29 each way), you鈥檒l roll through 31 tunnels and view the Continental Divide. Returning trains depart Winter Park at 4:30 P.m. Even cooler, if you time your flights right, you can hop the A Line train鈥攚ith commuter service between Denver International Airport and Union Station鈥攁nd skip the rental car.
For a more vintage vibe, board the Mount Washington Cog Railway, which has been chugging up the flanks of New Hampshire鈥檚 tallest, worst-weathered peak since 1869. The three-mile journey to the 6,289-foot summit is unavailable in winter鈥200-mile-per-hour winds, anyone?鈥攂ut you can ride up to Waumbek Station, at about 4,000 feet. There you disembark to warm up with hot drinks and cog-shaped sugar cookies by a fire pit. The ski descent drops 1,300 vertical feet on an easy-to-intermediate trail beside the tracks.
Yet another train trip to experience national parks in the winter is , which runs from Chicago to Seattle and south to Portland, passing within a snowball鈥檚 distance of Glacier National Park. Book yourself on Vacations by Rail鈥檚 nine-day ($3,600) and you鈥檒l stay at Glacier鈥檚 Lake McDonald Lodge for hikes around the lake, stop for a snow-coach outing to spot bison in Yellowstone, and go cross-country skiing in Jackson, Wyoming.
3. Ice Skate On Forever
Almost 200 years ago, a British Royal Engineer completed one of the greatest transportation projects in the world, a 126-mile waterway between Ottawa and Kingston, Ontario, called the Rideau Canal. In winter, a portion of the canal becomes something even cooler: the world鈥檚 longest ice-skating path. It鈥檚 up to Mother Nature when the 4.8-mile opens鈥擩anuary is always a good bet鈥攂ut when it does, you can glide through the heart of downtown Ottawa. Rent skates at one of three locations along the route, or stay at the Westin Ottawa, which offers skating packages. From there you can push past warming huts that serve hot chocolate and BeaverTail pastries topped with cinnamon and sugar.
Meanwhile, in the U.S., some kids in Warroad, Minnesota, 250 miles northwest of Duluth, might argue that their five-mile deserves the longest-skateway title. A couple of years ago, when the pandemic closed the two hockey rinks in town, they built a pair of their own on the frozen Warroad River. Their parents then cleared a path between the rinks, and the route took off. Base yourself at the four-room (from $260) and bring your hockey stick for pickup games.
4. Sled Your Heart Out
Sledding isn鈥檛 just for youngins. in Quebec may have the best skiing east of the Canadian Rockies, but what鈥檚 really a hoot is the five-mile sledding trail that whips down 2,703-foot Mont Liguori. A snowcat will take you up 2,620 vertical feet to the entry point. Strap on a helmet and count on taking two hours to get all the way to the bottom, with a pause at one or more of the warming chalets along the way serving hot chicken soup. For an unforgettable twist, do the run at night with a headlamp.
翱谤别驳辞苍鈥檚 , located in Government Camp, across from its 11,240-foot namesake peak, boasts the world鈥檚 only cosmic tubing park, with 600,000 LEDs, black lights, and lasers dancing in trippy bliss across 14 tubing lanes every weekend and holiday evening. Listen to Portland DJs and live music, or go skiing on 34 lit slopes, the most night-skiing terrain in the country. The midmountain offers up toasty bowls of homemade Hungarian goulash.
Midwesterners have it good, too. Ohio鈥檚 biggest ski area, , outside Columbus, turns 60 this year and has two lifts dedicated to tubers sliding about 300 vertical feet down as many as 20 lanes, depending on the conditions.
5. Earn Your (Delicious) Calories
There鈥檚 night skiing, and then there鈥檚 truly unforgettable night skiing. For the latter, you need alpine touring gear, so make this the winter you finally get yours. Then head to for the full moon on January 6, February 7, or March 7, when you can skin approximately 1,800 vertical feet up the Main Buttermilk Route, with shimmering views of Highlands, Pyramid Peak, and the magnificent Maroon Bells ($69 for a season-long uphill ski pass). There, the Cliffhouse restaurant stays open just for adventurers like you, with fire pits, a bar, and 脿 la carte dining options. Fueled up and warm, strap on your headlamp and cruise back down to the base.
Back east, about 200 miles west of Washington, D.C., West Virginia鈥檚 , a 37-trail ski area with 1,500 feet of vertical drop, features backcountry hut dining in a log cabin just two miles up the Cheat Ridge Trail. Snowmobiles whisk your party to the cabin for a gourmet meal. Try the daytime resort skiing, too: with 180 inches per season, Snowshoe gets the most natural snow in the mid-Atlantic.
6. See the Northern Lights
The northern lights appear to be gathering their might this year. What better place to catch the phenomenon than at , a pod of 20 glass-domed igloos on 100 acres of forest 25 miles outside Fairbanks, Alaska (from $1,793 per person). Guests can rent 12-by-32-foot 鈥渃ubes,鈥 each with a full wall of glass on the northeast end for prime viewing. This place fills up fast, so if you can鈥檛 get in, try the , reachable via a half-hour bush-plane flight from Yellowknife, in the Northwest Territories (from $1,500 for three nights). The lodge, which has hot tubs and about four miles of groomed cross-country trails, sits under the auroral oval鈥攖he belt around the magnetic pole鈥攐ffering some of the best panoramas.
7. Check Out This Cool Ski Resort News
One of the more impressive upgrades this winter is at Snowbird, in Utah. The resort, famous for its thigh-burning steeps, plans to unveil two new tram cabins with viewing panels built into the floor and floor-to-ceiling windows for the journey to 11,000 feet. Nearby has a new fixed-grip quad lift and additional terrain.
For the second time ever, , in Montana, will run a guided night-skiing excursion; at sunset you ride the heated seats of the Ramcharger 8 lift (each chair is enveloped in a weatherproof bubble) for a tour of groomed corduroy off 8,800-foot Andesite Mountain.
This season also marks the grand opening of the $65 million, 2.2-mile Base to Base Gondola at California鈥檚 . It will connect the resort鈥檚 Olympic Valley and Alpine Meadows areas. Close by, at Northstar, a high-speed six-pack will replace the Comstock quad, boosting capacity by 50 percent.
In Vermont, and are adding six-person high-speed lifts, and Killington鈥檚 improved K1 Base Lodge will open in November.
In the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, the ski capital of the Midwest, Big Snow Resort is under new ownership and being upgraded and relaunched as , while the state is investing $20 million to renovate the nearby .
8. Explore the Best of the Backcountry
The stretches for 300 miles through some of Vermont鈥檚 most spectacular terrain鈥攁 wild tableau of snowy peaks, chutes, and forest. Amid that territory, one section near , 25 miles east of Burlington, stands out, offering access to some of the best backcountry skiing in New England.
Trail options are almost limitless here, but consider tackling the nine-mile tour linking Bolton Valley with Stowe鈥檚 (founded by the family of The Sound of Music fame), leading through hardwood forests perfectly spaced for tree skiing. When you finally arrive at the lodge, a brat platter with housemade pickles and an Austrian beer await. Bolton Valley offers guides and shuttles as well as backcountry clinics (from $175).
Next door in New Hampshire, the sits at 2,700 feet in Mount Cardigan State Park and serves as a perfect base for a few days of playing around in the snow. The 1938 cabin has one room with six beds (sleeping up to 12 people total), a propane stove, and a woodstove for keeping warm ($169 a night per person). From there you can tour about half a mile to the exposed summit of 3,121-foot Mount Cardigan, or work your way over to Duke鈥檚 Ski Trail off Firescrew Mountain鈥攐ne of Mount Cardigan鈥檚 three summits鈥攆or a run that will drop you close to the , a full-service hut where a hot family-style meal comes with your overnight stay (from $177).
9. Learn Something New, Like, Yep, Snowkiting
Kiteboarding on snow may sound daunting, but it鈥檚 easier to learn than on water. For starters, you use skis, you鈥檙e already standing up, and a gentle breeze will suffice. Book a lesson with in Fitchburg, Wisconsin, on the southern outskirts of Madison.
Or head 230 miles west to Clear Lake, Iowa; on February 18, it hosts the largest kite festival in the Midwest, where you can also book a snowkiting lesson.
Want to try your hand at fat biking on snow? is home to 20 miles of fat-biking and cross-country trails. Rent a rig from the Northstar Cross Country Center and set out solo, or with a guide, on one of eight beginner-friendly routes.
East Coasters can book a guide with , in that New York city鈥檚 Canalside neighborhood鈥攖he only place in the world where you can learn to ice-bike. Picture a bicycle atop a sled with broad, stable runners and a fork with skate-like blades that allow you to turn.
10. Get Festive at These Awesome Events
No winter is complete without a fun festival celebration. For ice climbers, that means heading to Munising, Michigan, about 175 miles north of Green Bay, Wisconsin, for the lively , February 8 to 12. The action happens at along Lake Superior, home to sheer walls and lots of frozen goodness. The festival includes skills clinics and talks from experts.
There鈥檚 also the in Snowmass, Colorado, March 11 and March 18, with a gondola ride up to Elk Camp, where you can watch fire dancers, go snow tubing, eat s鈥檓ores, and sled down the mile-long Breathtaker Alpine Coaster. Dates this season start on December 28, with select nights in January, February, and March, too.
in the Adirondacks of upstate New York goes big with a ten-day, 126-year-old winter carnival; this season it鈥檚 from February 3 to 12. Tour a giant ice palace, enter a nordic ski race, or play softball in your snowshoes.
Meanwhile, there鈥檚 , a music and art blowout. Dance your face off January 19 to February 11 in minus-25-degree cold to sixty-something acts, most of them EDM.
Or head west for the annual at Bally鈥檚 Tahoe on January 7, where you can take in adventure cinematography and mingle with filmmakers and athletes.
11. Ski Utah鈥檚 Famous Champagne
Welcome to , an incredible multi-resort adventure. This ski trip links to and up to four other resorts, all in a day, all on skis鈥攁nd you don鈥檛 even have to skin (though there are some uphill traverses). Hire a guide through Ski Utah and decide how many resorts you would like to ski to. Longer tours include about 25 miles of skiing down 15,000 vertical feet, starting with a lift ride up at Deer Valley and concluding with a run at Snowbird.
In between you鈥檒l ride lifts and work your way over to , through the backcountry to in Big Cottonwood Canyon, and beyond to in Little Cottonwood Canyon, with a last traverse over to Grizzly Gulch. Finally, a shuttle will take you and your tired legs back to Deer Valley, 40 miles away by road. A steeper and deeper option starts and ends at Snowbird and includes a 20-mile loop with 15,000 feet of skiing across Alta, Brighton, and Solitude. There are shorter tours, too, and guides will tailor the day to fit the group. From $475
12. Take a Hut Tour in Maine
offers a four-day, three-night self-guided tour in the Carrabassett Valley, about 100 miles west of Bangor. Four off-the-grid huts are tucked away among the state鈥檚 4,000-foot High Peaks and are anywhere from nine to twelve miles apart, linked by fat-biking and cross-country-skiing trails. Inside each you鈥檒l find a common space, reading areas, a fireplace, and hot showers. The huts sleep up to 48 people, in rooms for two to six (from $90 per person).
On weekends, caretakers with Huts and Trails serve popular home-cooked meals like lasagna. The highlight of the tour comes on day two when you leave the Poplar Hut and roll for about 14 miles above Flagstaff Lake, gliding through hardwood forests to the Flagstaff Hut. At 1,200 feet, it perches on a peninsula jutting into its eponymous lake, with views of 4,150-foot Bigelow Mountain to the southwest.
13. Nordic Ski in the Cascades
奥补蝉丑颈苍驳迟辞苍鈥檚 , some 200 miles northeast of Seattle, runs like a poker deep into the North Cascades, a famed nordic-skiing hub. The more than 120 miles of groomed trails in the Methow wend through fragrant forests, past warming huts, and out to huge-sky vistas. Base yourself at the (doubles from $200) and grab one of its 16 cabins on Patterson Lake, with 35 miles of trails right outside the door.
The lodge rents all the gear you need. Near Chelan, 80 miles south, the Echo Ridge trail system (day passes, $10) runs for 25 miles through the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. Rent skis at , where you can pick up a map. Work out the kinks afterward at YogaChelan; instructors sometimes offer 鈥渟nowga,鈥 if you require still more time outside. Stay at , with 170 waterfront rooms on lovely Lake Chelan (from $114).