On February 9, 2016

Snowdon Triple mid-station back in action

By Robin Alberti

KMS student-athlete Alex Lewis, a 10th grade freestyler from Carlisle, Mass., cut the ribbon at the newly opened Snowdon Triple mid-station. Since KMS student-athletes are the ones benefitting most from the Highline Trail improvements, KMS Head of School Tao Smith felt it was fitting to have a student do the honors. Pictured are: (l-r) Tom Sell, Cort Jones, Mike Solimano, Alex Lewis, Jeff Temple, Mike Hone, Tao Smith, Mike Castellini, Mel Boynton, Jim Bianchi, and Sherry Albert. 

KILLINGTON—It’s official: the mid-station on the Snowdon Triple is open, the Killington Mountain School announced in a Jan. 28 press release. The project has been a long time coming, and the folks at Killington Resort worked overtime to make it happen. An official opening ceremony to celebrate this exciting venue was held Saturday, Jan. 30 at 7:45 a.m.

Head of School Tao Smith took the first chair up over the weekend, conducting an impromptu interview with a young athlete on the chair next to him. It took just over five minutes to get up to the mid-station.

The ongoing improvements to the Highline trail and the addition of the mid-station to the Snowdon Triple will have a significant impact on athlete performance. With the current turnaround time, athletes typically get five to six runs in a three-hour session; the mid-station will drastically improve that number. With athletes now able to increase their daily volume, the overall intensity of their training will increase as well. These two factors–volume and intensity– are critical to improving performance at all age levels. This change also means that athletes will be ready to compete at their best much earlier in the year.

“The mid-station allowed for a faster lap time,” said senior Alpine athlete Tommaso Auerbach, after a recent training day. “We got a lot of runs in, and having a shorter lift ride allowed for a higher level of focus. In addition, less time spent sitting on the lift allows muscle memory to build up more quickly because you spend more uninterrupted time doing something. We got in seven runs today, and there’s the potential to get up to ten on a day when the lift is running full speed. It improved training, without a doubt.”

Bobby Ryan agreed. “It doubled our training today and made it more beneficial to be on the hill for sure.”

PG Freestyle athlete Myles Frendel added, “Today we were able to build our mogul course in one day, something that usually takes two days without the mid-station, due to time spent sitting on the lift. It really helped us tremendously.”

Despite a strong initial fundraising push last winter, KMS has borrowed money to complete this project. More remains to be accomplished in this final phase: additional funds must be raised to finish paying for the mid-station and also to bury the power pole on Highline, which is slated to take place this spring.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Killington receives positive snow control for Audi FIS Ski World Cup race Nov. 30-Dec. 1

November 21, 2024
KILLINGTON—Killington Resort received a positive snow control announcement from FIS (International Ski and Snowboard Federation), the governing body of the Audi FIS Ski World Cup. With this announcement, Killington Resort can assure international race teams and ski racing fans traveling to central Vermont for Thanksgiving weekend that both the giant slalom and slalom races will…

One dead, two arrested in Rutland shooting

November 20, 2024
By Alan J. Keays / VTDigger Two Massachusetts men pleaded not guilty Monday afternoon, Nov. 18, to charges in the killing of a Rutland man. The prosecutor said the Friday night shooting was drug-related, and the two suspects may have been targeting someone else. Dylin Wainscott, 28, of Westfield, Massachusetts, faces charges of first-degree murder,…

Mountain Top Resort’s cross-country ski routes caught up in legal dispute

November 20, 2024
By Greta Solsaa/VTDigger Generations of cross-country skiers have flocked to Chittenden’s Mountain Top Resort to spend wintry days gliding along bucolic, snow-capped paths nestled in the shadow of Killington. As the popular cross-country skiing destination celebrates its 60th year in business, Mountain Top finds itself locked in a legal battle with its neighbors, John and…

Rutland weighs changes to its water filtration system 

November 20, 2024
By Adam Davis An event at the Rutland Recreation Community Center held last week by local and state officials and sparsely attended by the public outlined potential solutions to the rising levels of haloacetic acids in the city’s water supply.  The city is now looking to change how it will decontaminate its tap water as…