
Big Sky Resort has more than 5,800 skiable terrain and 320 named ski runs (Photo: Ethan Schumacher/Big Sky Resort)
When life gives you poop, make鈥now? At least, that鈥檚 what one ski resort in Montana is planning to do.
, with over 5,800 skiable acres, announced that it will be the first public ski area in the state to convert treated water into skiable snow. The Ikon Pass mountain follows a similar sustainable snowmaking initiative put forth by the Yellowstone Club, a private, invitation-only ski community in Big Sky whose guest list includes the likes of Bill Gates, Justine Timberlake, and Jessica Alba.
According to Big Sky Resort, there are more than a dozen other ski areas across eight states that use recycled water for snowmaking. Ski resorts in Canada, Switzerland, and Australia are doing the same.
Big Sky Resort told 国产吃瓜黑料 that the project will be built out in two phases, the first of which will use up to 23 million gallons of recycled water each year from Big Sky鈥檚 new state-of-the-art water treatment facility, which produces the highest reclaimed water classification recognized by the State of Montana.鈥 The Spanish Peaks Mountain Club, a private residential club at the resort, will create a base layer of snow on the Spirit and Andesite Mountains. Passholders can access these areas through two public lifts, Southern Comfort and Sacajawea. During the second phase, up to 44 million gallons of water will be used each year from the broader Big Sky community.
Supporters of the initiative say the move will help聽fill in the gaps where natural snow is not available.
鈥淲e are seeing less snowpack each year, and I have heard from several ski areas across Montana that are also interested in this technology. I am hopeful recycled snowmaking will become the standard practice someday in our headwater state,鈥 said Rich Chandler, vice president of Environmental Operations for Lone Mountain Land Company, which owns Spanish Peaks Mountain Club, in a statement emailed to 国产吃瓜黑料.听
Other environmental groups, including Trout Unlimited, American Rivers, and the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, have also written letters in support of the project.
Daniel Roditis (Lil鈥 Dan, to his friends) is a lift maintenance technician at Big Sky with ten years of experience in the industry. He says that the transition is a 鈥渨ell-timed, sincere initiative that finds common ground.鈥
鈥淎 cumulative 65 million gallons of water isn鈥檛 just water under the bridge, even for America鈥檚 most skiable acreage,鈥 said Roditis. 鈥淚鈥檝e personally worked in the reclaimed snow here at the club as a snowmaker鈥攖here is no perceivable difference in snow quality whatsoever.鈥
鈥淚t passes everything but the taste test,鈥 said Roditis. All jokes aside, the water doesn鈥檛 actually taste or smell like poop.
That鈥檚 because the used water undergoes an extensive reclaimation process. Since 2012, snowmaking has been an approved use of reclaimed water, according to a statement Big Sky Resort sent to聽国产吃瓜黑料. The state regulates the snowmaking process using recycled water to a higher standard than traditional snowmaking processes.
And if you鈥檙e wondering whether this means it鈥檚 OK to do your dirty business off-trail, the answer is: No.
鈥淲e鈥檙e skiing blues and blacks here, not browns. Help us keep it that way,鈥 said Roditis.
