Second Winter Season with Delta Flying In!

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

AIR SERVICES RECOMMENCE MID-DECEMBER

T
he world’s largest airline and Canada’s newest international airport announced today that winter flights between Salt Lake City, Utah and Cranbrook, British Columbia are set to continue in December. 

 

 

Delta Air Lines will be flying into the Canadian Rockies International Airport three times a week starting on December 19th with the service running through March 28, 2010. 

This is the second year of the highly successful service that saw the spectacular Kootenay Rockies Region of British Columbia and all of its world-class ski and outdoor adventure offerings made easily accessible to virtually every major city in the United States. American travelers can leave their homes in the morning and have lunch on the slopes of Kimberley Alpine Resort within hours!

For Canadians traveling south, Salt Lake City is less than two hours away, where connections to any of Delta’s 500 destinations are convenient and economical.    The Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday flights will depart Salt Lake at 11:10 AM and return from Canadian Rockies International at 1:50 PM and feature the comfortable 50-seat, CRJ 100 jet aircraft.

 

Tickets can be booked through any travel agent or online at www.Delta.com.
“This is an opportunity for winter sports enthusiasts from all over the United States to enjoy an experience of a lifetime” said Chris Dadson, President of the Kootenay Rockies Tourism Association. “The region boasts eight alpine ski resorts, thirty heli-ski and snowcat lodges, four National Parks and the best scenery in Canada.” 

 

 

The Delta service to the traditional vacation escapes of Las Vegas, Phoenix and Los Angeles has made travel from the Kootenay Rockies quicker and more convenient than ever before. Highly competitive fares and great connections make traveling to the southern USA out of Cranbrook the most sensible vacationing option. With Delta taking reservations now, the flights will fill quickly. 

 

 

Canadian Rockies International Airport (Photo by Carl Lyle)

Sep 25, 2009 – City of Kimberley gives go ahead for Conference Centre

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

It’s been a long time coming… finally the City of Kimberley has announced the go ahead for the construction of the 500 person capacity Conference Centre and Paralympic Training Centre in Kimberley Alpine Resort, just a few hundred metres from Mountain Spirit Resort and Spa.

This is superb news for Kimberley as a whole. Conferences will tend to be held during the quieter parts of the year (the shoulder season) and the associated business travelers typically spend two to three times what an average tourist spends. Owners at Mountain Spirit who opt to join the rental program will also be pleased. Mountain Spirit was designed to include studios and one bedroom suites in addition to two and three bedroom suites, with the future business travelers, who travel alone, in mind.

The construction is anticipating to start soon by New Dawn Developments, the same construction company who constructed Mountain Spirit Resort and Spa, and many other resort properties in Panorama and Fernie Alpine Resort in their porfolio. New Dawn is recognised for the high quality workmanship and in their preference for local trades and staff.

Read the full article in the Kimberley Daily Bulletin online by clicking here.

Kimberley Summer Fun – Part 3 – The spirit wedding

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Well it’s time to put the spotlight on the spirit blogger for once… This summer the spirit tied the knot! If you live in Kimberley, you really don’t have to go far to find a spectacular location for a romantic summer wedding – Lazy Lake. Friends and family travelled from near and far (including Taiwan, England and Ireland).

The spirit stayed with family at Mountain Spirit the wedding eve, and set off with dad to Lazy Lake in a 1967 Wild Cat!

Being a rower, it seemed only natural to arrive by canoe rather than walking up an aisle! The geese came long to watch too.

Guests watched from the beach, from kayaks, and from sailing boats!

Len Robbins married us with 60 guests to witness – all with this fabulous view!

It was truly a beautiful day!

Kimberley builds a global reputation

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

This article which appeared in the Vancouver Sun on Friday, highlights the imminent development of a 500 person conference centre and paralympic training centre at the base of Kimberley Alpine Resort, just a few hundred metres from Mountain Spirit Resort & Spa…

Kimberley builds a global reputation

By Bruce Constantineau, Vancouver Sun, August 28, 2009


The small East Kootenay town that morphed into the Bavarian City of the Rockies in the 1970s wants to become the Paralympic training centre of Canada in the new millennium.

Kimberley expects to have Paralympic ski teams from Canada, the U.K., Australia, New Zealand and other countries training on a dedicated run at Kimberley Alpine Resort just before the Paralympic Games next year.

The Dreadnaught run was developed to accommodate downhill, slalom, giant slalom and super-G events, with safety netting from top to bottom and new communications and timing equipment.

The facility is fully equipped with ski equipment required by disabled athletes and International Paralympic Committee World Cup events were held there in 2005 and 2007.

Now, city officials hope to capitalize on the run’s international reputation by building a $6-million Paralympic Training and Conference Centre at the base of the mountain by late 2010.

“International teams are talking to us now about the possibility of coming here and training in the future,” Kimberley Mayor Jim Ogilvie said. “So throughout the Olympics, we’ll make it known we’re going to have this centre available.”

The provincial government committed $3.9 million to Kimberley’s Paralympic vision four years ago and the city has used some of those funds to help develop the ski run and to make its civic arena and curling rink more accessible for disabled athletes.

The arena’s players’ benches and penalty boxes now are at ice level, allowing for smooth transitions on and off the ice for sledge hockey players, while dressing rooms have been renovated with automatic doors, accessible washrooms and showers, wide benches and equipment boxes.

Curling venue upgrades include covered ramp access and automatic doors leading into the building. The city’s two-year-old aquatic centre is also wheelchair-accessible.

“What we’re saying is come here and train here because we really do have the complete package,” Ogilvie said.

The package won’t be totally complete until the new ski-in, ski-out training and conference centre is built next year, but he said most of the project funding is already in place — including $2.5 million left from the provincial grant, another $2 million in federal-provincial infrastructure funding and $1 million from the city.

The facility will have training facilities, change rooms, meeting rooms, audio-visual equipment and conference space for up to 500 people.

Kimberley didn’t send delegations to previous Games, but Ogilvie noted several international sport federations found out about the city’s Paralympic aspirations at the B.C. Pavilion in Turin in 2006.

He credits renowned Canadian ski instructor Jerry Johnston for giving Kimberley so much credibility as a centre for training disabled athletes. The 73-year-old member of the Order of Canada moved to Kimberley from Alberta in 1980 and brought his groundbreaking training skills with him.

He began training disabled skiers in the early 1960s and he and his wife, Annie, established Canada’s first disabled skiing program; they created the Canadian Association for Disabled Skiing in 1976.

Johnston helped establish the Japanese Handicapped Ski Association and headed the disabled skiing exhibition at the Olympic Winter Games in Calgary in 1988. He’s not an active trainer these days, but he remains an important consultant in Kimberley’s Paralympic plans.

“Paralympic skiing in Kimberley has been very successful,” Johnston said. “Things have really opened up for a lot of teams to train here and they don’t have to run around looking for equipment for speed racing.

“A lot of resorts won’t shut down a hill, but we have an agreement that we can do that for training.”

Kimberley will continue to attract high-level competitions for disabled athletes, he said, but it will be hard to become a permanent fixture on the IPC ski circuit because so many countries want to hold the events.

“It’s good to move the events around because that helps increase the popularity of the sport,” Johnston said. “Disabled athletes still aren’t respected at all in some countries and we have to change that. People thought we were crazy the first time we went to Japan but they really accepted the sport when they saw what the athletes could do.”

Kimberley Alpine Resort representative Matt Mosteller said the proposed new training centre will become a year-round facility for able-bodied and disabled athletes, with fitness and dryland training taking priority in non-winter months.

“The sport has been a very big positive for the community,” he said. “Athletes come to live and train in the area and there’s an economic win when you create and host events.”

Kimberley will host a Nor-Am competition for able-bodied snowboarders just before the Olympics in February next year, then hold a Nor-Am event for disabled skiers before the Paralympics begin in March.

The city expects to attract disabled curlers to its curling venue before the 2010 Paralympic Games and the Canadian men’s sledge hockey team is scheduled to play against an international opponent in the Kimberley Civic Centre on March 1.

Steve Bova, an instructor who runs a disabled ski academy at the resort, noted the Canadian snowboard team trained on the mountain last year and the Nor-Am snowboard event will attract snowboarders from all over the world.

“The main thing is to market what we have now and get the people here,” he said. “From a coach’s point of view, the venues are what’s important and we have them.”

bconstantineau@vancouversun.com

ECONOMICS OF THE OLYMPICS

The third in a four-part series looking at the economic impact of the 2010 Winter Olympics on communities throughout British Columbia:

Aug. 7: Comox Valley

Aug. 14: Prince George

Aug. 21: Kamloops

TODAY: Kimberley

Kimberley Summer Fun – Part 2 – Rafting the River

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Another great way to spend the delightful summer in Kimberley is rafting the St. Mary’s River. We chartered two rafts for the St. Mary’s Float with the Kimberley Raft Company. A few extra folks floated alongside in dinghies, which was a nice idea until the people on the rafts found the water cannons and started the biggest water fight I’ve ever seen! The fun didn’t stop from getting onto the rafts at St. Mary’s Lake, to stopping for smokies on the edge of the river, to the end of the float, about 4 fun packed hours later.

Setting off on St. Mary’s Lake:

Passing the hoodoos on St. Mary’s River:

The water fight:

St. Mary’s Lake is also popular for fishing, canoeing, kayaking, swimming and, of course, a starting point for rafting.

Kimberley Summer Fun – Part 1 – Hot Springs

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Kimberley is on the hot springs circle route and a favourite outing from Mountain Spirit Resort is Lussier Hot Springs, found on the way to Whiteswan Lake Provincial Park. These are a big favourite as not only are they totally natural and free, but there are lovely rock pools of different temperatures located right next to the creek. This means you can sit in the hottest pool and then gradually cool down in each neighbouring pool, finishing off with a refreshing dip in the creek… and then return back to the hottest pool to warm up and tingle!

Success for Kimberley at the Calgary Stampede!

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Congratulations to Stan Salikin and his team; the City of Kimberley and the Kimberley & District Chamber of Commerce. The float representing Kimberley featured our favourite Kimberley icon, Happy Hans!

We look forward to the floats at the July Fest Parade on 18th – 19th July! Click here for more information on July Fest 2009.

Kimberley Alpine Resort picked “favourite overall” resort in the Pacific Northwest!

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

What a great reason to think back to the awesome winter we had this year skiing and snowboarding in Kimberley Alpine Resort…

OnTheSnow.com has over 1 million unique annual visitors to their website and their visitors picked Kimberley as their overall favourite resort in the Pacific Northwest. Number one… That’s better than Fernie, Whistler, Sunshine, Lake Louise, Panorama, Big White… need I go on!

Click here to visit the site and read about the award!

OnTheSnow.com is the Web’s most visited snow skiing site with a Nielsen-audited 1.6 million unique monthly visitors. The site offers the ski reports, ski resort reviews, web cams and skiing deals for virtually every ski resort in the world. Please click for the complete list of the 2009 OnTheSnow Visitors Choice Awards. There are 13 International Editions of OnTheSnow in seven languages.

The Spectacular Waterfall at Meachen Creek

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Another beautifully sunny day in June, the spirit decided to venture to view the Meachen Creek falls, having heard so much about them. So the adventure commenced with a short drive out of Kimberley to St. Mary’s Lake, one of the spirit’s favourite canoeing lakes. To get to the falls, you take the Meachen Creek Road rather than turning into the lakefront.

The trip to the falls is pretty easy, as long as you remember WHICH kilometre marker to pull in beside on the Meachen Creek FS Road. That would be the 8km marker for your reference. British Columbia is so beautiful and “super natural” that there are no signs to the falls. Having said that, it’s only a couple of minutes walk on a well worn trail to reach the falls from the road… you can’t really miss them, especially due to the roaring and crashing of huge volumes of water, audible from the second you switch off your car engine.

Now, if you have a bad case of vertigo I wouldn’t recommend venturing too close to the falls but they are absolutely spectacular – and I thought the Marysville Falls were pretty cool…

As Meachen Creek Falls, the cascades of water are amazingly powerful! The waterfall is so long (85 feet it turns out), it was hard to even get the full length of the falls into the photo!

It was only after seeing these amazing falls in person that the spirit discovered a great website with details on Meachen Creek Falls and many more. Click here to visit the website dedicated to the Waterfalls of British Columbia… I feel more outings to check out the falls will be on the cards soon!

Where is your favourite place to visit around Kimberley?

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