Spring Break starts this weekend, folks! This means we'll be extending our hours to accommodate all of your skiing, snowboarding, snowshoeing and outoor needs!
Don't forget that Daylight Savings takes place at 2:00am this Sunday, March 13th. Remember to get up one hour earlier and come get some fresh tracks before everyone else realizes the clocks have changed!
Here is a list of our updated hours during spring break (March 12th-27th):
- First Skyride is at 8:15 am
- Outpost rentals will be open at 8:30 am
- Starbucks will be open at 7:00 am
- Grouse Grind Coffee bar will be open at 8:00 am
All winter outerwear and apparel from the following brands have been added to the Outfitter’s Winter Clearance Sale:
- North Face 30-50% off
- Rossignol 30-50% off
- Spyder 40-50% off
- Salomon 30-50% off
We also continue to have a great selection of winter apparel from Burton and Descente and our Oakley Factory Sale; all at 30-50% off.
Thanks everyone, and please share your pictures and experiences on our Facebook wall!
News & Events: What's New
Friday, March 11, 2011
Spring Break & New Specials
Friday, February 25, 2011
Altitude Bistro Drink Features

Friday, November 19, 2010
Bears Build Bed - Close to Hibernation Now!
On Thursday morning, November 18th, Grinder and Coola suddenly decided it was time to build their hibernation bed! We had provided them with lots of nice soft fir branches a couple weeks before hand but they had gone largely ignored until today. The trigger for their bed building was probably our dropping temperatures and our first serious dump of snow. The snow, cold and short days are all triggers that the bears should begin their winter sleep.
It was all over in a couple short hours and the bears were enjoying their new mattress! As the snow continues to build over the next few days the bears will spend an increasing amount of time sleeping inside. Once we are sure they are spending most of the day inside the den we will close the outer door to their 'bear hotel' and they will spend the winter inside.
Here are a few screen shots of the bed making activity from our infrared cameras inside the den - remember it's pitch black in there!
The first few branches are dragged in.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Bears ready for hibernation!
Grinder and Coola are now inhabiting their hibernation habitat around their bear den. Both bears are super plump and have put on more weight than in previous years - maybe this is a sign of a long and cold winter to come?
They are spending their days laying around with the occasional foray to eat, although food is being left behind each day which is a sign that the bears are happy with their weight and feel prepared for the upcoming winter.
Yesterday we provided them with a huge mound of Silver-fir branches which they will drag into their sleeping quarters and use to create a mattress of branches for their long winter sleeps. As of this morning they have not begun to create a bed but it shouldn't be far off as we received a few inches of fresh snow today.
After we've received our first significant snow fall we will cut off food and this lack of food, combined with short days and cold, snowy, weather will trigger hibernation.
Here are a few shots of Grinder lounging around the hibernation habitat!



Friday, October 22, 2010
Bird Calls at Night
For the past few weeks here on Grouse Mountain, if you wandered around late at night, you would have heard a strange cacophony of bird calls and sounds that you never hear in the light of the day.
These are the calls of the nocturnal migrants. Many bird species migrate at night for safety. Predators such as bird's of prey are not active, and because temperatures are cooler, less energy is spent in staying cool during the long demanding flights of migration. It's the equivalent of going for a late evening or early morning job before the heat of the day hits.
As always, there is safety in numbers so many species, or even mixes of species, migrate together and stay in touch through contact calls. Due to poor visibility, contact calls are the best way to stay in touch with your neighboring migrants during the night. Many of these flocks touch down briefly or pass overhead of the local mountains while flying at altitude. This is why we can hear them so clearly on top of Grouse Mountain.
It's an amazing experience to hear a chorus of birds at one o'clock in the morning! Experts study radar images of migration to determine the quantity and timing of migration. Vast flocks of thousands of birds show up as distincts groupings on radar images and allow ornithologists to study this unique phenomena.







