
Southern Ontario ski destinations fight Mother Nature and public perception amid warmer temperatures
CBC
As ski destinations across southern Ontario contend with an unusually warm and low-snow year, some cross-country destinations are being forced to consider making their own snow to preserve business while downhill attractions say their biggest challenge is a "perception problem."
At Snow Valley Ski Resort in Minesing, Ont., where skiers whipped down snow-covered ski hills Monday, some of the snow is real, and some is made by the resort.
But even though the destination can make its own snow, Snow Valley general manager John Ball says some people in larger cities like Toronto might not realize skiing is a go amid the warmer temperatures.
"We have some natural snow as well as the snow that we make. We've been able to have a great surface," he said. "Some of it is perception."
It's a similar situation at Horseshoe Resort in Barrie, Ont.
"Our biggest challenge is communicating to the people in Toronto and Toronto areas that there is still snow on the slopes," said CEO Jonathan Reid. "It's changing that mindset when they look at the window of green grass, that there's still great skiing to be on."
Horseshoe has made snow to maintain its slopes, but doesn't have the same capacity for its cross-country offerings across the road, which have suffered all season and were closed Monday due to conditions.
"We're probably down at least 50 per cent," Reid said of cross-country skiing visitors this year.
That has the resort seriously considering investing in snow-making for cross-country trails to insulate that side of the business the way it has the downhill business, he said.
And it's not alone.
As snow seasons become shorter, some cross-country skiing businesses that typically don't have the same resiliency of nearby downhill destinations, are being forced to consider what their future offerings look like and if snow-making should be in their future as well.
Mansfield Outdoor Centre, southwest of Barrie, Ont., is among them.
Mansfield offers cross-country skiing, snowshoeing and fat biking in the winter months. But facility manager David Dingeldein says it's seen half the number of cross-country skiers this year compared to last.
Despite a great Family Day weekend, the destination closed its ski trails after just a few days when temperatures warmed. And Dingeldein fears the pause in cross-country skiing might be the end of the season there.













