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Sunday, December 12th, 2010
I’d heard more snow was in the forecast but didn’t expect 15cm of fresh snow on our back step this morning. We rushed up to the hill by about 9:15am and thankfully the car park was only one third full. As usual, up the quad and over to the Easter chair was the priority. First thing we noticed was more runs were open. Anton’s was a must. As a snowboarder (aka slowboarder) I am not a fan of moguls. Being able to ride down Anton’s before the moguls are formed for the season was a pleasure… spotted with a few head-over-heels tumbles. All’s good – it’s fresh powder!
 Anton's: people were laughing aloud, shouting "wahoo" between tumbles into the powder!
Rumours were rumbling in the small crowd of locals gathered at the top of the Easter – the Black Forest area might be opened. By the next circuit of the Easter, it was! Patroller Gord Towers had the pleasure of taking down the ropes by Dean Left and opening up all the runs across to Vortex. I’m thinking they’re saving more fun on the far runs for next weekend! We hit Magma first. It was powdertastic. Taking long sweeping turns floating above the snow I managed to stay on my board for most of the run. Next run, Twist. Awesome! It was rapidly becoming an epic powder day, the like of which I’ve never experienced this early in the season. It was so good, we did another loop round and hit it again. I say “we” today as I managed not to be ditched by my husband off the first chair, and he showed his true gentlemanly soul by both waiting for me AND pulling me along the couple of slow spots on the Ridgeway (he skis and I board, you see?).
 Anton's Run, Sunday 12th December 2010 (Preview Weekend at Kimberley Alpine Resort)
I check my watch as I’m feeling exhausted. It’s 10:35am. Time to head around to the front via a secret new favourite run I’m not even going to mention. You have to come and discover the best runs for yourselves. It had me hooting an a-hollering yet again – what an amazing season preview weekend. If this is the preview, this season is indeed going to be epic at Kimberley Alpine Resort!
Tags: accommodation Kimberley, BC ski condo, City of Kimberley, condos Kimberley, Fernie, fractional condo ownership, fractional ownership, golf kimberley, Kimberley, Kimberley accommodation, kimberley BC, Mountain Spirit Resort, ski kimberley, ski-in condo Kimberley, ski-in ski-out condos BC Posted in Winter | No Comments »
Sunday, December 12th, 2010
It’s official. The grand opening of the Kimberley Conference Centre & Athlete Training Centre took place on November 25th, 2010.
The spirit was off in Regina, SK, on a spirited mission and so didn’t attend the grand event. Instead I managed to get a private tour the week before. The centre is definitely impressive. The conference facilities are the best I have seen anywhere on my travels. The whole main building is accessible and the use of gently inclining ramps in the design makes for a great spot for couples to tie the knot (in what’s called the pre-function area) as well as a great opportunity to people watch as you enjoy cocktails prior to entering the grand hall. The main function room can be split into two, each with the opportunity for professional AV with large screens mounted on the walls. There are many break-out rooms with more AV equipment. The catering area looks very sophisticated and well equipped to handle the large events (there is up to 500 person capacity in this conference facility).
Upstairs is home to the Athlete Training Centre. Due to copyright on the word paralympic, that word isn’t used in the name but I’m going to chance typing it on my blog quite happily. This is definitely an word class training facility for paralympic athletes. Having seen the paralympic athletes training here every year I’ve lived here, I can understand how much this facility is going to improve their training experience. Gone are the days when artificial limbs have to be left in the Slopeside Cafe! The ski-in main floor area features a totally accessible sharpening and waxing area, including very large locker spaces which can fit wheel chairs or artificial limbs. There are large changing and showering areas and the icing on the cake is a very generous training room with state of the art accessible fitness and weights machines.

Here’s what the City of Kimberley has to say about the opening:
“The City of Kimberley is pleased to announce that the Conference and Athlete Training Centre is now open for business. This project is a great example of what can be accomplished through the development of meaningful partnerships with a common goal and vision. Our partners include: the Federal Government, the Provincial Government, Resorts of the Canadian Rockies, Columbia Basin Trust, New Dawn Developments and their many sub-trades and BCMP Architects. We also recognize and commend the volunteer advisory committee members, who have championed this project from conception. The Conference Centre itself is the largest of its kind in the Kootenay Region. It accommodates 350 person banquet style or 500 person theatre style events, provides a large pre-function area and 4 breakout rooms. This facility enables organizations and businesses to host major conferences and seminars, where individuals can come together to learn, exchange ideas and share knowledge.
For more information or to book the facility, please contact Tim Greiner, General Manager at 250-427-6272 or via email manager@meetkimberley.ca or click on the Conference Centre’s website link: Kimberley Conference and Athlete Training Centre. If you would like to add your business to the Conference Planner’s Database of local accomodations, products and services available, please complete and submit the Product Inventory Data Sheet form to City Hall by mail, email, fax or in person.
Tags: BC real estate, City of Kimberley, Kimberley, Kimberley Alpine Resort, kimberley BC, Kimberley condo, Kimberley condos, kimberley conference, kimberley conference centre, Kimberley Conference Centre & Athlete Training Centre, kimberley convention, Mountain Spirit Resort Posted in News | No Comments »
Sunday, August 15th, 2010
I found this article and thought it was spot on in terms of describing the benefits of fractional ownership at Mountain Spirit Resort in Kimberley. This chap is called Bob Wood and is a regular contributor to Regular Forever Young. Bob found it easy to write on the pros and cons of fractional ownership of a recreation property – he’s an owner himself. Here’s his article:
I’m sitting on the side deck of our comfortable, modern two-bedroom, Muskoka-style cottage ready to attack a mystery novel, sipping a glass of chardonnay. My only worry on this day is whether I’ve applied a suitable amount of sun block. While April 13 may seem a little early to be soaking up cottage-country rays, the warmth of the afternoon sun is trapped on the porch, making a liar of the thermometer and tricking me into thinking that we’ve skipped spring and jumped straight into summer.
And as I look around, it’s all mine – sort of. We get to enjoy spring, the other three seasons and a bonus summer week with the five-week fractional-ownership package we purchased a few years back at the Bayview Wildwood Resort’s Cottages at Port Stanton development.
Started in 2003, the Cottages at Port Stanton bills itself as the closest fractional ownership project to Toronto – a 90-minute drive. With “unbeatable views” of Sparrow Lake and the surrounding rugged Canadian Shield countryside, we have been able to appreciate “the joys of lakeside living” pretty much as advertised since April 2004.
Is fractional ownership for you? Before we bought into Port Stanton, my wife and I, now both in our 50s, hadn’t really given the idea much thought. I suppose fractional ownership seemed like something intended for other people – with lots of money.
Up until about six years ago our vacation experience was split between “car camping” at various provincial parks and booking inexpensive hotel accommodation. Then, the need to escape the day-to-day grind of work and, additionally, take a break from caring for aging parents began to get to us and so we decided to spoil ourselves with a three-day/two-night package at a family resort north of Orillia known as the Wild Echo Bay Lodge.
Looking across Sparrow Lake on a snowy Friday night, we detected some building activity and decided to check into it. We were thinking at the time it was a timeshare and we expected the stereotypical hard sell associated with those places – but instead got the soft sell. And we were sold. The Cottages at Port Stanton rose on the site where Wild Echo Bay Lodge used to be.
We soon learned the difference between timeshares and fractional ownership. These units were the latter.
It turns out, the idea of sharing resources to purchase a vacation property has been around for years. As far as formalizing such arrangements in a commercial form, timesharing preceded fractional ownership. The first timeshares were apparently offered at a ski resort based in the French Alps in the sixties.
The fractional-property industry in North American didn’t really get going until the early 1990s, beginning at ski resorts in Colorado and other Rocky Mountains states.
So what’s the difference?
A timeshare is a right to the use of a property. Timeshares can be resold to another party as time, not as traditional real estate. On the other hand, fractional ownership (generally defined as a percentage share of an asset) can be resold, as fractional ownership conveys title of land.
As far as usage of the property, there are different schemes – fixed periods, floating dates and blends of both. A fractional share gives the owners certain privileges, such as a number of days or weeks when they can use the property.
For me, fractional ownership works just great. Here’s how:
- Disciplined me to take holidays
According to a Decima Harris research poll done last year, nearly one-quarter of employed Canadians report not taking all of their vacation days. This translates into 34-million unused days in Canada overall, representing about $6.03-billion in labour donated to employers. I am not inclined to work for free.
- Gets me away from the phone
We jump when the phone rings, which is probably a good thing.
- A break with no maintenance
Unlike traditional cottage owners, we’ve got no chores to do when we get there.
Everything in our luxury, furnished cottage is always where it is supposed to be – not something that can be said about my permanent residence.
It seems cheaper than other types of vacationing. I leave it to financial gurus to prove me wrong but our maintenance fees for a week run in the $500 range for a two-bedroom. We originally paid about $44,000 for 50 years’ use of the property.
- Love that natural living. We can get closer to nature than our regular suburban existence.
I haven’t found any negatives yet and as I sip my wine and contemplate the good life, I don’t think I will find any.
Fractionals: a growth industry
Not so long ago, if you wanted a weekend or summer getaway, you bought a cottage and with it the costs of upkeep, or rented at a resort – hoping you could get a decent slot in the season you wanted. The idea of buying “part” of a cottage – one where someone else shouldered the responsibility of maintenance – was unheard of.
Today, however, fractional ownership is a rapidly growing industry, says Sue Nickason, a marketing consultant working with three such communities, including the new Cottages at Windermere House.
Fractional-ownership developments are springing up throughout Muskoka as well as other “cottage country” regions, like Haliburton, the Kawarthas, the lake region north of Kingston, and Georgian Bay. Nickason says the priorities for most are lakes, golf and ski opportunities. Most also like to be within three hours of their home base, although she sees buyers coming from as far away as Alberta and even England.
Read the article here: http://www.foreveryoungnews.com/leisureandlifestyle/article/16069
Tags: BC real estate, canada real estate, fractional ownership, golf condo, golf resort, Kimberley, kimberley BC, Kimberley real estate, Kootenays real estate, mountain condo, real estate news, recreational property, ski condo, timeshare, vacation home, vacation ownership Posted in News | No Comments »
Saturday, June 26th, 2010
Chad Jenson of New Dawn Developments was recently recognised as the top business person in Cranbrook this year by the Kootenay Business Magazine. Chad and his team have received numerous awards and accolades for their professional work, which includes the construction of Mountain Spirit Resort. Click here to read the full article.
One of New Dawn Development’s current projects is the construction of the City of Kimberley’s Conference Centre and Athlete Training Centre which is just 200m from Mountain Spirit Resort. Construction will be completing for opening in October this year and many bookings have been confirmed ranging from company conferences to weddings.
Tags: City of Kimberley, golf condo, golf kimberley, Kimberley, Kootenay Business Magazine, New Dawn Developments, ski condo Posted in News | No Comments »
Saturday, December 5th, 2009
Here’s another great place to hike and to cross country ski (for free) if you’re in Kimberley. It’s just a short drive to Bootleg Gap Golf. You can explore this area from Bootleg Gap itself or from a little further outside Marysville. If you keep going past Bootleg Gap’s entrance you’ll see a pull-in on your right. These trails are accessible from this pull in. You’ll cross the rails to trails paved path. Keep going and walk through the meadow to reach the top of the hoodoos, with views of the St Mary’s River, Bootleg Gap, and of course, the hoodoos themselves.

If you have vertigo don’t get too close!
Tags: accommodation Kimberley, Bootleg Gap Golf, condos Kimberley, hoodoos, Kimberley, Kimberley real estate, Marysville, Mountain Spirit Resort, St. Mary's River Posted in Fall | No Comments »
Tuesday, December 1st, 2009
This article appears on the RealEstateChannel.com
http://www.realestatechannel.com/featured-columnists/real-estate-news-grupo-del-sol-isla-saboga-gva-associates-mountain-spirit-resort-spa-kimberley-alpine-resort-1657.php
New Kimberley Conference Centre Buoys Owners’
Mountain Spirit Resort Condo Investments
(KIMBERLEY, BRITISH
COLUMBIA) — The recent ground-breaking ceremony for the new $6-million
Conference Centre and Paralympic Training Centre being built here at Kimberley
Alpine Resort is proof that thorough market research is critical prior to
investing in resort properties.
At least that’s how owners at Mountain
Spirit Resort and Spa, a resort development located next to the Conference
Centre site, are feeling right now. Now that the Conference Centre officially
opened Oct. 30, Mountain Spirit condo owners are optimistic that the influx of
sports and corporate travel to the Conference Centre will increase the
popularity of the resort’s optional rental pool.
Mountain Spirit <http://www.realestatechannel.com/news-assets/Mountain-Spirit.jpg>
“The owners who participate in the rental pool are very excited about the
progress being made on the centre,” said Allyson Blake, Mountain Spirit’s
director of real estate marketing. “They did their research before deciding to
buy in a four-season destination that had plans for a centre of this
caliber.”
The year-round, $6-million dollar facility is designed with
both disabled and able-bodied athletes in mind. It will include meeting rooms,
an audio-visual department and a conference space to hold 500
people.
Funding for the centre is coming from the City of Kimberley,
federal and provincial infrastructure grants, a $300,000 grant from the Columbia
Basin Trust and $150,000 from the Southern Interior Development Trust. The
center is being built by New Dawn Developments (same builders of Mountain Spirit
Resort and Spa) and is expected to be completed by October 2010.
The
conference and training center is expected to become a key economic driver for
Kimberley. Leisure travelers and tourists have long contributed to the local
economy, but business travelers have not. Conference delegates often fill hotel
rooms during the shoulder season and mid-week travel when leisure travel is
traditionally low. Conferences are also booked in advance, providing a secure
source of income regardless of economic fluctuations.
Research compiled
by Vann Struth Consulting for the City of Kimberly pegs the daily spending of
conference delegates at approximately $125 per day on top of the accommodation
costs. The same research expects the conference center to boost spending in
Kimberley by more than $5 million per year – more than double the current
level.
“The development of the Paralympic Training and Conference Centre
opens up new options to increase our shoulder season business by targeting a
growing meetings market that that would not otherwise be attracted to
Kimberley,” said Cathy Robinson, operations manager for Bellstar Hotels and
Resorts , the rental manager for Mountain Spirit Resort & Spa. “The
combination of Mountain Spirit’s ski-in, ski-out location, along with the
upcoming 6,000 square foot spa and slope-side restaurant – all right across the
street from the new centre – should ensure we are a top choice for conference
delegates.”
Mountain Spirit Resort and Spa features a true ski-in,
ski-out location in the serene Purcell Mountains at the base of Kimberley Alpine
Resort. In addition to the planned spa, the resort features fine dining,
year-round outdoor heated pool and hot tub and fully furnished suites.
Membership in the exclusive Resort to Resort vacation exchange program is
included with every purchase.
Activity is ramping up at Kimberley Alpine
Resort in preparation for another outstanding ski season. Last season KAR
received the Visitor’s Choice Award being voted the Overall Favorite Resort in
the Pacific North West from onthesnow.com and the 2009 Best of Business Award
for Ski Area in the East Kootenay Region. The mountain is set to open on
December 19 with a preview weekend set for December 12.
Special prices
are available on selected suites until December 19, according to the developer’s
representative. For example, one studio, two 1-bedroom and eight 2-bedroom
suites are included in this offering with pre-season savings of up to $94,000
for whole ownership and up to $16,000 on quarter ownership purchases. Until Dec.
19, 1-bedroom suites start at $398,900, 2-bedroom units at $458,900 and quarter
ownerships on a 1-bedroom suite go for $98,900.
“These incentives are a
great opportunity for those who know what a fantastic ski destination Kimberley
is,” Blake says. “With our ski-in, ski-out location, ski season is our peak
sales season. But if buyers wait until the lifts start up, they’ll be too late
for these special prices.”
Tags: BC real estate, BC ski condo, canada real estate, Kimberley, Kimberley Alpine Resort, Kimberley condo, kimberley conference centre, Kimberley real estate, Kootenays real estate, mountain spirit, Mountain Spirit Resort, mountain spirit resort and spa, real estate, real estate news, recreational property, ski-in ski-out condo, ski-in ski-out condos BC Posted in News | No Comments »
Friday, November 6th, 2009
Tags: accommodation Kimberley, Kimberley, Kimberley Alpine Resort, mountain spirit resort and spa, ski, ski condo BC, ski-in ski-out condos BC, snow, snowboard Posted in Mountain Spirit Photo Gallery | No Comments »
Sunday, October 11th, 2009
The Smoothest of Highways… The summer long $11m project to resurface the highway 93/95A through Kimberley and replace and beautify sidewalks is completing, much to the pleasure of visitors and locals alike. The project also included replacement of underground drainage pipe networks and should complete this month.
Other local initiatives are progressing nicely including the Peak to Platzl trail project, providing a paved biking and walking trail from just outside Mountain Spirit Resort right down to the city centre.
The Rails to Trails project is also approaching completion, which will mean walkers, bikers and even roller bladers will soon be able to enjoy a paved trail along the previous railway line, all the way from Kimberley to Cranbrook.
Tags: BC recreational property, BC resort municipalities, City of Kimberley, investment, Kimberley, kimberley BC, Mountain Spirit Resort, peak to platzl project, rails to trails project Posted in News | No Comments »
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
Tags: Canada, conference centre, Kimberley, kimberley BC, Olympics, paralympic, ski, ski-in ski-out condos BC, Vancouver Sun Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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.
Tags: canoeing, fishing, floating, fun in Kimberley, hoodoos, kayaking, Kimberley, Raft Kimberley, river float, river rafting, smokies, St. Mary's Lake, St. Mary's River, swimming, white water rafting Posted in Summer | No Comments »
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