December 02, 2021
Colin Connor
from
USA - California
Hands down the best skiing terrain in Washington State. Lots of really cool alpine bowls and challenging terrain.
The only flaw here is getting the mountain is a rough (ed?) and it is expensive. It is a local skiing icon, and a super fun mountain when the crowds are not too crazy.
Not stoked about them charging for parking this season.
Crystal Mountain is great and a super beautiful resort. As a beginner/intermediate I've enjoyed Forest Queen (green) and the surrounding blues. I'm looking forward to Lucky Shot and other blues further up the mountain. I find it interesting that someone in a previous review called Crystal Mountain workers "mask Nazis"... I don't think real Nazis told people to wear masks for public safety reasons. Nazis killed people. Anyway, go to Crystal Mountain. Wear a mask. When folks gently tell you to put yours on once you are back at the lift, just do it. It's a rule we agree to when we enter and it keeps places that should be safe, like ski lifts, safe. Thank you Crystal Mountain staff for making the mountain a safer place for us skiers and snowboarders, as I'm sure you have done for decades.
I would not recommend going to Crystal Mountain. For the price you pay, they don't deliver. They were mask nazis and even got in the faces of my friends 3 yr old and 8 yr old. The skiing wasn't that great either and the terrain park was poorly done. I also felt very limited because I got yelled at for going off groomed trails, or going in the terrain park but not going on any of the features. I was definitely underwhelmed by the skiing part and the people there were controlling, domineering and mask nazis.
Crystal is a skiers mountain. The amenities, the access to the hill, the parking, are all pretty mediocre. If you want to take 3 laps, complain about the lines, go get lunch for 90 minutes, take 4 more laps and call it a day, Crystal is not a great place for that. But if what you like to do is ski, a lot, especially on rowdy terrain, then Crystal is for you. The snow is plentiful, there is significantly more alpine and sub-alpine than anywhere else in Washington, and a lot of exciting, challenging terrain.
If you live in the Seattle area and can ski when the storms hit, there is no need to ski anywhere else. Because each winter you'll catch 20-30 primo powder days. And if those days are mid-week it's like having your own private resort area. Also Crystal has lots and lots of terrain for all levels.
The only drawback is that more and more people are discovering this jewel. Oh well.
Crystal Mountain fancies itself to be the best "resort" in Washington state. As they like to say in Texas, that claim is all hat and no cattle.
The Boyne Corporation that owns Crystal has had big plans for years. Give them credit for persevering against the forces of No and the National Forest Service to get the Campbell Basin lodge and High Campbell chair, the Northway chair and now the gondola built. While the latter does nothing really to improve uphill capacity (it was built more with an eye to summer tourism). Even if Boyne can build it's proposed hotel, Crystal still won't be a ski "resort" and will never be a four season resort (if you don't like to hike, there's nothing else to do there in the summer). What lodging they have now is no better than motels you find adjacent to interstate highways.
I've been skiing off and on at Crystal for about 35 years. It can be an enjoyable mountain on the rare sunny days if you ski midweek, with an unsurpassed view of Mt. Rainier from the top of the Rainier Express. But because West Side Cascade snow is so marginal, because the mountain is full of traffic choke points and never properly/sufficiently groomed, it's pretensions of being a serious ski resort are just that. It will always remain a favorite with the side/back country enthusiasts, and the new Northway chair has opened more of that up to those of us who don't want to spend most of our day hiking for 600' of vertical. But otherwise, it will never be a destination for people outside the PNW or even a vacation resort for locals.
Crystal veered a bit further into the ditch this off season by building a new terrain park under the Forest Queen 6-pack. Doing this has assured that this part of the mountain, already the most crowded, will be that much more so as a couple hundred acres is given over to a relative handful of customers. At the same time, Crystal has an aged, rarely used double chairlift in a more or less sequestered area that would have been much more suitable for a park and better served the needs of the majority of the area's customers.
I wish them luck because there is still untapped potential, but I have faith that they have management to realize this and so I, again, won't be making the 90-minute trek many times this season unless I can somehow do so weekdays.
Crystal Mountain is world class. While it is a mid-sized resort, it has myriad different aspects and terrain features. I have skied there, hard, for 15 years and I am still learning new hidden powder stashes. Crystal is all about powder. The groomed runs are fine if you are into that, but it is the ungroomed steep terrain that makes Crystal special. The only place that has a feel like it, that I have been to, is Jackson Hole. It is very possible to get seriously hurt falling off things at both resorts. On the other hand, don't get too worked up about coming to Crystal Mountain if you want a nightlife. The Snorting Elk bar is an old-school classic, and the attached restaurant is great but not cheap. Otherwise, best to bring an RV and your family and just ski hard.
Good terrain and operations. That's the end of the good for Crystal. I only ride the west coast so I can't speak for everywhere else but, if you take the worst 10% (for whatever reason) of the people from W-B and stack 'em deep thats how just about everyone is here. I'll never go back, it's absolutely surreal lameness.
February 03, 2004
David Rubin
from
USA - California
I don't know why I am telling u all this but Crystal is the on of the best resorts I have ever skied at. I make an annual pilgrimage to Crystal after watching the snowfall. On a decent powder day the skiing is reminiscent of Alta or Sugar Bowl. Lots of off-piste skiing. bowls, chutes, cliffs, trees, steeps, Hike to backcountry and bowls. It was recently ranked the number 12 ski resort in North America. The only reason why it was ranked low was because of the low elevation pacific northwest snow and its lack of nightlife.
But if you really could care less about nightlife then Crystal is the best. I rank it in my top five favorite places to ski. And I've been around.