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Trail Conditions
- Unknown
- Snow Groomed
- Snow Packed
- Snow Covered
- Snow Cover Partial
- Freeze/thaw Cycle
- Icy
- Prevalent Mud
- Wet
- Variable
- Ideal
- Dry
- Very Dry
Trail Flow (Ridden Direction)
Trailforks scans users ridelogs to determine the most popular direction each trail is ridden. A good flowing trail network will have most trails flowing in a single direction according to their intension.
The colour categories are based on what percentage of riders are riding a trail in its intended direction.
The colour categories are based on what percentage of riders are riding a trail in its intended direction.
- > 96%
- > 90%
- > 80%
- > 70%
- > 50%
- < 50%
- bi-directional trail
- no data
Trail Last Ridden
Trailforks scans ridelogs to determine the last time a trail was ridden.
- < 2 days
- < 1 week
- < 2 weeks
- < 1 month
- < 6 months
- > 6 months
Trail Ridden Direction
The intended direction a trail should be ridden.
- Downhill Only
- Downhill Primary
- Both Directions
- Uphill Primary
- Uphill Only
- One Direction
Contribute Details
Colors indicate trail is missing specified detail.
- Description
- Photos
- Description & Photos
- Videos
Trail Popularity ?
Trailforks scans ridelogs to determine which trails are ridden the most in the last 9 months.
Trails are compared with nearby trails in the same city region with a possible 25 colour shades.
Think of this as a heatmap, more rides = more kinetic energy = warmer colors.
- most popular
- popular
- less popular
- not popular
ATV/ORV/OHV Filter
Max Vehicle Width
inches
US Cell Coverage
Legend
Radar Time
x
Activity Recordings
Trailforks users anonymized public ridelogs from the past 6 months.
- mountain biking recent
- mountain biking (>6 month)
- hiking (1 year)
- moto (1 year)
Activity Recordings
Trailforks users anonymized public skilogs from the past 12 months.
- Downhill Ski
- Backcountry Ski
- Nordic Ski
- Snowmobile
Winter Trails
Warning
A routing network for winter maps does not exist. Selecting trails using the winter trails layer has been disabled.
x
Missing Trails
Most Popular
Least Popular
Trails are colored based on popularity. The more popular a trail is, the more red. Less popular trails trend towards green.
Jump Magnitude Heatmap
Heatmap of where riders jump on trails. Zoom in to see individual jumps, click circles to view jump details.
Trails Deemphasized
Trails are shown in grey.
Only show trails with NO bikes.
Save the current map location and zoom level as your default home location whenever this page is loaded.
SaveMap defaulted to winter mode.
"Mad River Glen first cranked up its now famous Single Chair on Dec. 11, 1948. Roland Palmedo, the mountain’s founder, had built the Single Chair at Stowe in the 1930s. Early on in Stowe’s skiing history, he became disenchanted with vying commercial interests there and became committed to developing a new ski area where sport, not profit, would be the objective.
Palmedo, a Navy pilot that served in both World Wars I and II, took to his plane and scoured the Green Mountains for the perfect location to start his new venture. After carefully considering various options that included Killington Peak, Mount Abraham and Mount Ellen, he settled on the relatively diminutive General Stark Mountain. He selected it because of the trail and terrain potential, its northern exposure, the abundance of snow, and that it resided entirely on private land. He purchased over 700 acres from the Ward Lumber Company and began work toward fulfilling his dream.
Palmedo believed that “a ski area is not just a place of business, a mountain amusement park, as it were. Instead, it is a winter community whose members, both skiers and area personnel, are dedicated to the enjoyment of the sport.” Mad River Glen developed over the years with this vision of community as its foundation. He also believed in working with nature and not against it. “Only by walking up, down and across the mountainous bowl Palmedo chose for Mad River Glen could he feel, sense, see where and how the trails should be cut to fully utilize the terrain’s contour thereby providing the best possible fall-line skiing experience,” as Mary Kerr describes Palmedo’s trail building philosophy in her tome, “Mad River Glen. A Mountain Love Affair.”
He engaged the American Steel & Wire Company to build a state-of-the-art Single Chair which, at the time, was the fastest in the world. The mountain opened for the 1949 season with a network of five trails. Mad River Glen was considered a “top shelf” ski area that went toe-to-toe competing with New England’s best known early ski operations. Over the ensuing decades the new Sunnyside Double Chair was added in 1961 along with its gentle terrain, followed by the Birdland novice area in 1967, and the Practice Slope Chair in 1971. As the ski industry changed with the advent of snowmaking and increased grooming, Mad River Glen remained relatively untouched by time. This was due mostly to the fact that there was precious little water for snowmaking and the steep, raw terrain did not lend itself towards more grooming.
In 1972, a group led by Truxton Pratt purchased Mad River Glen with his wife, Betsy, taking controlling interest of the Mad River Corporation upon his death in 1975. Over time and in many ways, Mad River became a skiing backwater, year after year became increasingly unique in the ski industry. Betsy Pratt worked hard to maintain Palmedo’s vision and stewarded Mad River Glen by protecting it from the many changes in the ski industry. When Pratt decided to sell the ski area, she wanted to sell it to the only people she felt she could trust: Mad River Glen’s loyal skiers. After several failed attempts she stumbled upon the idea of creating a cooperative ownership structure to achieve her goal.
On Dec. 5, 1995, a new era began when the Mad River Glen Cooperative was formed, creating the first and only cooperatively owned ski area in America. This meant that the Mad River Glen’s famously devoted skiers owned their mountain and controlled the destiny of the legendary ski area. The sale of Mad River Glen to its skiers occurred in an age when the ski industry was consolidating and becoming homogenized and “corporate.” Mad River Glen bucked the trend by remaining independent and preserving a ski experience that exists nowhere else. Shareholders in the Mad River Glen Cooperative came together to fulfill their mission “… to forever protect the classic Mad River Glen skiing experience by preserving low skier density, natural terrain and forests, varied trail character, and friendly community atmosphere for the benefit of shareholders, area personnel and patrons.”
When Mad River Glen was purchased “by the skiers,” the future success of the endeavor was certainly not a foregone conclusion. The co-op has achieved remarkable results: paying off the original mortgage, growing the community, creating a shared mission and vision, solidifying the business model and finances and most importantly, reinvesting nearly $5 million in the mountain’s infrastructure. These re-investments include catching up on years of deferred maintenance, replacing key components of the Sunnyside Double, hours upon hours of on-mountain trail work largely cut by hand, and the historic restoration of the iconic Single Chair
This project represents the embodiment of the Mad River Glen spirit. When faced with the question of what to do with it aging Single Chair more than 80 percent of the co-op shareholders opted to spend a premium to restore the iconic lift and retain the existing uphill capacity rather than build a more modern and less expensive double chair (or, heaven forbid, a quad). Not only did the co-op make this bold decision but they also embarked on a never-before conceived campaign to raise money for the project. Partnering with the Stark Mountain Foundation and the Preservation Trust of Vermont the Mad River Glen community raised the entire $1.8 million price tag for the project through donations.
While the co-op has certainly been a tremendous success there are environmental and economic challenges that will always require thoughtful consideration. The Mad River Glen Cooperative is an amazing and unique organization that will find a way, the “Mad River Way,” to ensure its future.
Today, Mad River Glen is the only ski area in the nation on the National Register of Historic Places. It has more than 1,800 individual skier-owners who have purchased more than 2,200 shares. Unlike other ski areas, Mad River’s goal is to maintain and preserve the experience rather than to overhaul or upgrade it. Both the skier-owners and the management understand that skiers come to Mad River for the unique combination of legendary terrain, sense of community, low skier density, and intimate atmosphere. Ski it if you can!" - Mad River Glen
Palmedo, a Navy pilot that served in both World Wars I and II, took to his plane and scoured the Green Mountains for the perfect location to start his new venture. After carefully considering various options that included Killington Peak, Mount Abraham and Mount Ellen, he settled on the relatively diminutive General Stark Mountain. He selected it because of the trail and terrain potential, its northern exposure, the abundance of snow, and that it resided entirely on private land. He purchased over 700 acres from the Ward Lumber Company and began work toward fulfilling his dream.
Palmedo believed that “a ski area is not just a place of business, a mountain amusement park, as it were. Instead, it is a winter community whose members, both skiers and area personnel, are dedicated to the enjoyment of the sport.” Mad River Glen developed over the years with this vision of community as its foundation. He also believed in working with nature and not against it. “Only by walking up, down and across the mountainous bowl Palmedo chose for Mad River Glen could he feel, sense, see where and how the trails should be cut to fully utilize the terrain’s contour thereby providing the best possible fall-line skiing experience,” as Mary Kerr describes Palmedo’s trail building philosophy in her tome, “Mad River Glen. A Mountain Love Affair.”
He engaged the American Steel & Wire Company to build a state-of-the-art Single Chair which, at the time, was the fastest in the world. The mountain opened for the 1949 season with a network of five trails. Mad River Glen was considered a “top shelf” ski area that went toe-to-toe competing with New England’s best known early ski operations. Over the ensuing decades the new Sunnyside Double Chair was added in 1961 along with its gentle terrain, followed by the Birdland novice area in 1967, and the Practice Slope Chair in 1971. As the ski industry changed with the advent of snowmaking and increased grooming, Mad River Glen remained relatively untouched by time. This was due mostly to the fact that there was precious little water for snowmaking and the steep, raw terrain did not lend itself towards more grooming.
In 1972, a group led by Truxton Pratt purchased Mad River Glen with his wife, Betsy, taking controlling interest of the Mad River Corporation upon his death in 1975. Over time and in many ways, Mad River became a skiing backwater, year after year became increasingly unique in the ski industry. Betsy Pratt worked hard to maintain Palmedo’s vision and stewarded Mad River Glen by protecting it from the many changes in the ski industry. When Pratt decided to sell the ski area, she wanted to sell it to the only people she felt she could trust: Mad River Glen’s loyal skiers. After several failed attempts she stumbled upon the idea of creating a cooperative ownership structure to achieve her goal.
On Dec. 5, 1995, a new era began when the Mad River Glen Cooperative was formed, creating the first and only cooperatively owned ski area in America. This meant that the Mad River Glen’s famously devoted skiers owned their mountain and controlled the destiny of the legendary ski area. The sale of Mad River Glen to its skiers occurred in an age when the ski industry was consolidating and becoming homogenized and “corporate.” Mad River Glen bucked the trend by remaining independent and preserving a ski experience that exists nowhere else. Shareholders in the Mad River Glen Cooperative came together to fulfill their mission “… to forever protect the classic Mad River Glen skiing experience by preserving low skier density, natural terrain and forests, varied trail character, and friendly community atmosphere for the benefit of shareholders, area personnel and patrons.”
When Mad River Glen was purchased “by the skiers,” the future success of the endeavor was certainly not a foregone conclusion. The co-op has achieved remarkable results: paying off the original mortgage, growing the community, creating a shared mission and vision, solidifying the business model and finances and most importantly, reinvesting nearly $5 million in the mountain’s infrastructure. These re-investments include catching up on years of deferred maintenance, replacing key components of the Sunnyside Double, hours upon hours of on-mountain trail work largely cut by hand, and the historic restoration of the iconic Single Chair
This project represents the embodiment of the Mad River Glen spirit. When faced with the question of what to do with it aging Single Chair more than 80 percent of the co-op shareholders opted to spend a premium to restore the iconic lift and retain the existing uphill capacity rather than build a more modern and less expensive double chair (or, heaven forbid, a quad). Not only did the co-op make this bold decision but they also embarked on a never-before conceived campaign to raise money for the project. Partnering with the Stark Mountain Foundation and the Preservation Trust of Vermont the Mad River Glen community raised the entire $1.8 million price tag for the project through donations.
While the co-op has certainly been a tremendous success there are environmental and economic challenges that will always require thoughtful consideration. The Mad River Glen Cooperative is an amazing and unique organization that will find a way, the “Mad River Way,” to ensure its future.
Today, Mad River Glen is the only ski area in the nation on the National Register of Historic Places. It has more than 1,800 individual skier-owners who have purchased more than 2,200 shares. Unlike other ski areas, Mad River’s goal is to maintain and preserve the experience rather than to overhaul or upgrade it. Both the skier-owners and the management understand that skiers come to Mad River for the unique combination of legendary terrain, sense of community, low skier density, and intimate atmosphere. Ski it if you can!" - Mad River Glen
Access Info:
• Mad River Glen Cooperative •
• 57 Schuss Pass Road •
• PO Box 1089 •
• Waitsfield, VT. 05673 •
• (802)-496-3551 •
• 57 Schuss Pass Road •
• PO Box 1089 •
• Waitsfield, VT. 05673 •
• (802)-496-3551 •
Links
Activities Click to view
- Downhill Ski
38 trails
Region Details
38 downhill ski trails
Region Status
Open as of Apr 3, 2023Downhill Ski Stats
- State Ranking
- #179
- Trails (view details)
- 38
- Trails Downhill Ski
- 38
- Lifts
- 5
- Total Distance
- 12 miles
- Total Descent Distance
- 12 miles
- Total Descent
- 13,025 ft
- Total Vertical
- 1,916 ft
- Reports
- 12
- Ridden Counter
- 3,488
Popular Mad River Glen Skiing Trails
status | title | difficulty | rating |
---|---|---|---|
Upper Antelope w | |||
Catamount w | |||
Lynx w | |||
Canyon w | |||
Lower Gazelle w | |||
Lower Lift Line w | |||
Fox w | |||
Chute w | |||
Moody's w | |||
Chipmunk Bowl w | |||
Vixen w | |||
Broadway w | |||
Snail w | |||
Grand Canyon w | |||
Lower Glade w |
Recent Trail Reports
status | trail | date | condition | info | user |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Catamount w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Groomed | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Lower Lift Line w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Covered | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Grand Canyon w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Covered | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Canyon w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Covered | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Moody's w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Covered | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Broadway w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Packed | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Upper Antelope w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Groomed | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Lower Gazelle w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Covered | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Porcupine w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Packed | mappermook TRAILFORKS | ||
Snail w | Apr 2, 2023 @ 9:44pm Apr 2, 2023 | Snow Packed | mappermook TRAILFORKS |
Activity Feed
username | action | type | title | date |
---|---|---|---|---|
mappermook | add | report | activity #38701861 and 11 more | Apr 3, 2023 @ 8:18pm Apr 3, 2023 |
kyleluvsdh | add | trail | activity #26851780 and 10 more | Feb 14, 2022 @ 12:48pm Feb 14, 2022 |
kyleluvsdh | add | trail | activity #26699036 and 17 more | Feb 8, 2022 @ 2:54pm Feb 8, 2022 |
kyleluvsdh | add | trail | activity #26669688 and 9 more | Feb 7, 2022 @ 6:08am Feb 7, 2022 |
Nearby Riding Areas
name | distance | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sugarbush Ski Resort | 3.1 km | ||||
Sugarbush Resort | 2 | 15 | 3 | 4 | 4.5 km |
Cochran's Ski Area | 4 | 9 | 5 | 13.4 km | |
Bolton Valley Resort | 3 | 7 | 15 | 6 | 16.1 km |
Planned Trails | 21.6 km |
Local Badges
-
Completionist1 awarded
- By kyleluvsdh
& contributors
- Admins: MRR
- #49155 - 774 views
- mad river glen activity log | embed map of Mad River Glen mountain bike trails |
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