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Photo courtesy of Garnet
Hill Lodge |
| At Garnet Hill, you can stick to groomed
trails or explore the nearby Siamese Ponds Wilderness. |
Garnet Hill’s a jewel
Comforts of home in a wild setting
By Robin Ambrosino
The first person I spoke to at Garnet Hill
Lodge’s ski shop said, “Oh, no. You’re not going
to tell everyone about our little spot, are you?”
She was joking, for the most part, but this
place does have the feel of a well-kept secret. Big crowds are rare
even on winter weekends with bluebird skies and plenty of snow.
But given its 55 kilometers of groomed trails, 2,000 feet of elevation,
full-service ski shop and staff that offers lessons in Nordic and
telemark techniques, it seems a shame not to share.
Cross-country
ski centers
Cross-country skiers who prefer groomed
trails have plenty of options in the Park, including these
five ski centers.
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For recent converts from downhill skiing like
myself, Garnet Hill comes as a pleasant surprise. The $14 day buys
access to a great variety of skiing terrain, with tracks set on
both sides of most trails and groomed ski-skating lanes in the middle.
My favorite intermediate cruiser was Trapper Trail, which started
out wide and flat, then progressed to a series of hills that were
just steep enough to make the wind rush by. On the beginner slopes,
I cruised along wide, level grades that passed views of Mount Marcy,
a working sugarhouse, and a kid-pleasing group of pigs and llamas
that live at the farm on the North Acres loop. There were also steep,
narrow, twisty trails like Skullbuster Hill and Joe Pete’s
Run, marked with black diamonds for skiers who enjoy hairpin turns
and little room for error. But I was too chicken to check those
out myself.
The day I was there, a middle-aged couple
was taking a lesson in front of the ski shop while a group of backcountry
skiers finished a guided trek from Gore Mountain, located 10 miles
away. “Once in a while advanced skiers blow by you like you’re
standing still,” joked ski instructor Julia Stanistreet. “But
overall I’d say most people who come here are beginners or
intermediates.”
Regardless of ability, all the skiers I met
seemed friendly and low-key. When I stepped into the shop at lunchtime,
I found the whole crew winding down for a midday respite. Skiers
were stretching, peeling off layers and digging into coolers full
of healthy stuff from home. Drinks, candy, homemade soup and chili
were available for sale, but there was no large-scale concession
stand. Conversation was easy and quiet, background music was low,
and when most skiers went back out to ski, a couple of stragglers
stretched out on lunch-table benches for an afternoon snooze.
“It’s a different crowd,”
said Queensbury resident Ann Hague, contrasting Garnet Hill to a
downhill lodge where her son’s helmet was stolen. “That
just wouldn’t happen here. Everyone’s so friendly. And
no matter how often we come, we never get bored. We know which trails
have views, and the rest we use for exercise.”
Hague’s husband, Brad, used to ski competitively,
and the couple has made tracks throughout New York, Vermont and
Canada, trying out different cross-country trail systems. That they’ve
been season-pass holders for seven years at Garnet Hill says a lot
about their feelings for the place. “For skating, you’d
have a hard time finding better terrain,” Brad said.
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Map by Nancy Bernstein |
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Just make sure you don’t underestimate
the terrain you cover. If you decide to ski out to the easternmost
edge of Garnet Hill territory, keep in mind that it’s a four-mile
uphill trek back to the ski shop. If you forget that little fact,
as I did my first time here, there’s the real chance of dropping
from exhaustion when you reach the shop’s door. It’s
a great workout if you’re up for it; otherwise it’s
a great way to wear yourself out. Luckily, for those of us who could
be in better shape, there’s a less grueling option. Sign up
for one of the shuttle buses that runs every 45 minutes on weekends,
and when you get to the bottom of the hill on your skis, a friendly
driver will pick you up and bring you back to the lodge. Then you
can turn around and do it again . . . or take a nap on one of the
benches.
If you can tear yourself away from the skiing
for a while, other parts of Garnet Hill’s 600 acres are worth
exploring, too. As the name suggests, Garnet Hill was first developed
as a garnet mine in 1905, and a small village sprang up here during
its heyday in the early 1900s. The mine closed in the 1920s, but
many of the surrounding buildings were converted into vacation homes
that today are part of a network of 23 outbuildings available for
rent on a weekly or winter-weekend basis.
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Photo courtesy of Garnet
Hill Lodge |
| Garnet Hill Lodge, at 2,000 feet, is
the highest hostelry in the Park. |
During my weekend here, I stayed at Garnet
Hill’s Log House in a comfortable room whose birch-framed
balcony overlooked Thirteenth Lake and the surrounding mountains.
Before and after meals, I relaxed in the Adirondack lounge, reading
with other guests in front of the huge fieldstone fireplace. Meals
were very good from beginning to end—but especially the end,
when I sampled a flaky, delicious, mixed-berry pie made by the inn’s
baker and pastry chef, Mary Jane Freebern. One guest book entry
read, “Mary Jane is #1!” and I agree. You can take a
pie home if you place your order by 11 a.m. the day before.
While crowds at Garnet Hill are rare during
most of the year, it does get busy during winter holiday weekends.
If you’re looking for solitude, this is a perfect time to
explore the Siamese Ponds Wilderness, located just off Garnet Hill
grounds. But be prepared for a big difference between groomed trails
and the backwoods conditions. The 9.6-mile wilderness route between
Thirteenth Lake Road in the north and Route 8 in the south can be
crunchy before the sun softens the snow. According to Garnet Hill
ski shop manager Dick Carlson, the passage can range from novice
to advanced-intermediate depending on the conditions. “Novices
are OK after a snowfall,” he said, “but otherwise it’s
pretty solid intermediate terrain. The best time to go is between
10 a.m. and 2 p.m. After about 3, things start icing up again.”
Under any conditions, even intermediate skiers
should be aware of a steep hill on the end of the trail near Route
8. In Classic Adirondack Ski Tours, Tony Goodwin mentions that many
skiers opt to start at the south end of the trail and climb the
0.3-mile, 240-foot grade rather than attempt the descent after having
already skied 10 miles. It’s worth noting, however, that the
trail from the north is mainly downhill, while the other way around
is mostly uphill. Either way, unless you’re staying at Garnet
Hill overnight, leaving a car on both ends is a must.
Garnet Hill Lodge
Phone: (518) 251-2444
E-Mail: mail@garnet-hill.com
Web: www.garnet-hill.com
DIRECTIONS
From North: Northway to Exit 26.
Follow NY 9 south to NY 28; then go west to Thirteenth Lake Road.
Go left on Thirteenth Lake Road and follow the signs to the Garnet
Hill Ski Shop.
From South: Northway to Exit 23.
Follow NY 9 north to NY 28. See above. To Siamese Ponds Wilderness
Area: Bear right off Thirteenth Lake Road onto Old Farm Road. At
the parking area, follow tracks to DEC trailhead and register. (Using
groomed trails requires a Garnet Hill ski pass.) |