Hitting the slopes has become COVID-safe escape for college students
Courtesy of Greek Peak Mountain Resort
Students from nearby universities and colleges have visited Greek Peak Mountain Resort often this season to ski, snowboard and tube.
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When Maria Tkacz went skiing at Greek Peak Mountain Resort before school started in January, the Syracuse University junior swiftly moved through the lift line and skied down the relatively uncrowded mountain slopes.
“I mean, skiing is also kind of a sport that you’re not really close to people that you didn’t come with anyway, ” Tkacz said.
WATERTOWN â The Dry Hill Ski Area is enjoying a stretch of excellent conditions and the slopes are busy with skiers, snowboarders and tubers in this, its 60th year.
The facility has had its ups and downs with issues like the weather and ownership in the six decades since skiers first took to its slopes, but it has maintained a determination to survive and to remain a local treasure, if only because of it being a novelty â a ski center in the back yard, a brief leap, from a metropolitan area.
âI donât think people realize that there arenât too many communities that have skiing 15, 20, 30 minutes away,â said Dry Hill Ski Area owner Timothy L. McAtee. âAnd you can go there for three hours and spend $20. Most peopleâs skiing experience is, you wake up at 4 in the morning, you drive for two or three hours, you ski all day, and youâre tired and get back in the car and drive two or three hours. Thatâs what a lot of people put up with to be