Bluewood To Install 2 New Surface Lifts

New skiers and snowboarders will have an easier and faster ride at Bluewood this winter. Two new conveyor lifts, manufactured by SunKid Lifts, will replace the comparatively slow platter pull lift that serves the beginners’ area near the lodge. This is the first major upgrade to lift service since installation of the Triple Nickel chairlift in 1986.
“The conveyor lifts—similar to moving walkways at airports—can transport 1,200 to 1,450 people per hour compared to the current platter pull, which can only handle 350 people per hour,” says Kim Clark, General Manager of Bluewood. “The conveyors will be placed in a staggered configuration where the current platter pull now sits.”
“Skiers and snowboarders of all abilities will appreciate the ease of getting on and riding the new surface lifts,” says Mike Peters, Snowsports School Director at Bluewood. “No more lift lines or congestion. Also, skiing and snowboarding lessons will now start close to the conveyor lifts and lodge. Guests won’t need to walk and carry their gear as far as they did before. This will be a great improvement for beginners, folks returning for more lessons, and the general public.”
The conveyor lifts are scheduled to be installed by mid-October and to be operational by opening day of the 2018-19 ski season.
Bluewood has invested more than one-half million dollars in capital improvements over the past two years, Clark says. Improvements include a new yurt at the summit (to be installed this fall), lodge upgrades, rental shop additions and noise reduction.

Ski Bluewood, formerly known as "Bluewood Ski Area," is an alpine ski area in the northwestern United States, in southeastern Washington. Located in Columbia County, at the northern end of the Blue Mountains in the Umatilla National Forest, the elevation at the base area is 4,545 feet (1,385 m) above sea level, with a summit of 5,670 feet (1,728 m) for a vertical drop of 1,125 feet (343 m). The northward-facing slopes are about four miles (7 km) north of the Oregon border and 50 miles (80 km) west of Idaho, part of the headwaters of the Touchet River, the main tributary of the Walla Walla River.

The only surface access to the base area of the mountain is through Dayton, 22 miles (35 km) to the northwest and nearly 3,000 feet (900 m) below on North Touchet Road. Though the summit is only about twenty miles (30 km) due east of Walla Walla as the crow flies, Ski Bluewood is about an hour's drive as Dayton is 30 miles (50 km) northeast on U.S. Route 12. In addition to Walla Walla, Bluewood is the closest alpine ski area (in mileage) to the Tri-Cities to the west, and the closest chairlift-served area to Lewiston-Clarkston.

Of its 24 runs, Bluewood has 4 green circles (easiest), 12 blue squares (more difficult), and 8 black diamonds (most difficult). Additionally, there is one terrain park and six backcountry runs. The area is open five days per week, Wednesday through Sunday, plus holidays. Bluewood has a reputation for dry powder snow, tree skiing, and a family-friendly atmosphere.

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