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Boyne Highlands Resort Celebrates 50 Years – January 31 – February 2, 2014

The 1963/64 Season – Today

Since opening for the 1963/64 winter season Boyne Highlands Resort has maintained a rich tradition of providing guests with a timeless retreat, to which they are warmly welcomed to an uncomplicated and positive sporty experience.

Join us for a full season of special events and treats including our 50th Anniversary Celebration Weekend, January 31-February 2, 2014. The weekend begins on Friday with a special welcome, night skiing, classic movie, horse-drawn wagon rides, and musical entertainment.  Saturday evening highlights include a tribute dinner party, live music, fireworks, and much more.
A special lodging package with a commemorative gift will
be available.

The Story of Boyne Highlands Resort

With skiing on the upswing and Boyne Mountain doing well, Everett Kircher, founder of Boyne Resorts, figured it was time for another move.

The Harbor Highlands ski area in Harbor Spring was founded by 27 stockholders from Petoskey, Harbor Springs, and area resorters, and started in 1955 with an expansion in 1958/59. A total of five runs had been cut which extended less than halfway to the top of the ridge and uphill transportation consisted of a pomalift and four rope tows. A small day lodge with a bar and restaurant had been built at the base of the hill. But soon the owners ran out of money, amassed considerable debt and were forced to close down. After being closed for two seasons, the ski area went up for sale. When Kircher decided to buy the property, he insisted on paying off the creditors as well as making sure that all the shareholders recovered their full investments. He said at the time, “I’d like to go into the area with everybody feeling happy about the deal and about Boyne.”

Kircher committed the next year to planning and went on to purchase and additional 2,900 acres of land adjacent to the Harbor Highlands ski area in order to create his vision of a large year-round ski and summer resort. During planning, Kircher, his wife, and six-year-old son, John were squeezed together on a double-place chairlift at Boyne Mountain when Kircher thought, “Wouldn’t it be great to have a three-passanger chairlift instead of just a two? A triple?” And so the phone call was made to chairlift manufacture, Riblet, and they agreed it could be done. When Boyne Highlands opened in the winter season of 1963/64, guest were greeted to not one, but two, of the first triple chairlifts ever built.

Boyne Highlands was instantly praised. The New York Times said, “The new development underscores the fact that Northern Michigan, once known only as a summer resort area, now attracts sports enthusiasts and vacationists on a year-round basis. Winter sports, in fact, have grown phenomenally in this region.”

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Boyne Snowmaking: Making Winter When Mother Nature Fails

Boyne Snowmaking

Sure, Mother Nature can make beautiful stuff.

She’ll wow you when you wake up to a lovely few inches of glittering flakes as rare and precious as diamonds. But Mother Nature is an unpredictable and sometimes temperamental creature. She’ll tease you and taunt you with a mid-October four inches of surprise powder that will urge you to trade your shorts and t-shirts for snow scrapers and ice melt. And then she’ll follow up with a November that feels a little more like a June, leaving you sweating in your preemptively-donned snowsuit.

But, when Mother Nature fails to provide, it is mankind that steps in.

Man, coupled with machine, tames and harnesses Mother Nature’s processes to create winter. He utilizes the same raw ingredients as Mother Nature–water, air, and energy–to produce a winter that he can rely on. After years of growing frustration with Mother Nature’s untimeliness, a tool was invented to control what no man previously could.

Invented in 1950, the snow cannon could blast a mid-February sized supply of man-made snow. Soon after, Boyne Mountain began experimenting with the snowmaking process, even patenting their own Boyne Snowmaker which was six times more energy-efficient than most systems. While other snow guns could make snow at 28°F degrees, Boyne could make snow at 30°F.

Like mathematicians correcting a difficult equation, the Boyne Mountain Snowmaking Crew has perfected the process of snowmaking over many years to reach more complex, precise and efficient capacities. Boyne recently unveiled a new and improved snow gun called the Boyne Low-E Fan, which makes better snow, is easier and less expensive to use, and makes more snow faster with little water wasted in the process. The crew starts the process with a reservoir of water which is then forced through a pipeline up the mountain. The water is allotted to a series of valves and pipes to the areas where snow is needed.

Next, the Boyne Mountain crew adds air. In the old days, Boyne added air to their snow guns with a huge, military-grade compressor, affectionately known as “Big Bertha,” that could be heard all over Boyne City. However, today the Boyne Low-E Fan Guns take air from twin screw style compressors which save energy and completes the perfect formula at a much quieter level. Now that the process is complete, the Boyne Mountain Snowmaking Crew steps back to let the magic happen. Heavy duty snow flies through the air and falls to the ground, piling up on those dainty little flakes that Mother Nature left.

While Mother Nature can gift us with unique, magical flecks that float down from the sky, she does not always supply enough to feed the hunger for hefty loads of snow that winter-lovers require. It is then that the Boyne Mountain crew steps in heroically to rescue the season. Thank you, Boyne Mountain Snowmaking Crew!

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Snowmaking at Boyne Mountain – Photos – 2018

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Snowmaking at Boyne Highlands – Photos – 2018

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Boyne Mountain – Solace Spa’s Winter Nature Adventure – December 8, 2012

Solace Spa at Boyne Mountain

Experience the magical winter wonderland in northern Michigan with a guided winter rafting trip, snowshoeing, hot beverage, lunch and a visit to Solace Spa at Boyne Mountain.

Departing at 9am, this northwoods experience is great fun as you immerse yourself in the natural beauty of the Sturgeon River. View the trees and riverbanks blanketed in snow and sense the peacefulness as you travel down the river in a guided raft. This trip includes a stop along the river’s edge for a hot beverage, cookie and time to take in the scenery. A guided snowshoe hike (snowshoes provided) allows you to further explore the snow-covered forest. Lunch is provided. Return to Boyne Mountain to experience Michigan’s premiere destination spa with an afternoon of relaxation.

Our day package is $175 per person and includes a $100 spa credit, plus the Nature Adventure. Our overnight package starts at $221 per person (based on double occupancy) and includes one night’s lodging, breakfast for two, $200 spa credit to share, and the Nature Adventure. Package available on either Friday, December 7 or Saturday, December 8. Consider upgrading your package by adding an additional night’s stay and enjoy the entire weekend.

For day package reservations only, please call 231.549.7212.
Call 800.462.6963 to book the overnight package including the Winter Nature Adventure.

Spa appointments can be scheduled anytime Friday, Saturday after 3pm, or anytime Sunday.
Certain restrictions apply. Taxes and resort fees in addition to room rate.
Certain restrictions apply. Prices are per person based on double occupancy. Taxes and resort fees in addition to room rate. Upgrade fee for Deep Tissue.

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Boyne Mountain – Snowshoe Lacing Workshop – January 25 – 26, 2013

Boyne Outfitters has teamed up with Michigan’s own Iverson Snowshoe & Furniture Company to offer individuals a chance to lace their own pair of traditional wooden snowshoes.  During this two-day workshop, students learn the basics behind traditional snowshoes, as well as the pros and cons compared to their aluminum counterparts.  Unlike some classes that only teach you part of the process, following completion of the class on Saturday, you are able to take your new pair of snowshoes straight to the snow and enjoy the rest of the weekend hiking the north woods!

When:
Friday, January 25, 5-8pm
Saturday, January 26, 9am-1pm

Cost is $200 per student.  Reservation required.  This class is limited to 10 students.  Two-day participation is required.

For more information and reservations, contact Boyne Outfitters at 231.549.6064.

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