Current View
WOLF CREEK SKI AREA – BASE AREA WEB-CAM
This camera is located at the bottom of Treasure Stoke Chairlift looking Westward at the Wolf Creek Base Area. The main day lodge (Wolf Creek Lodge) can be seen in the foreground. The bottom terminals of Nova and Bonanza ski lifts are in the background.
WOLF CREEK SKI AREA – SUMMIT BUILDING VIEW TO THE EAST:
This Web-cam looks to Prospector Ridge and Alberta Peak.
WOLF CREEK SKI AREA – BOTTOM OF TREASURE STOKE
Foreground looks up the Treasure Stoke lift line; background is the beginner slope Nova Run.
Located in the San Juan and Rio Grande national forest between Pagosa Springs and South Fork, Colorado, Wolf Creek Ski Area is known to have “The Most Snow in Colorado”. Spanning across a high alpine ridge, Wolf Creek receives an annual snowfall of 430 inches of natural powder and is known for its incredible hike-to terrain. Bonanza Bowl, Exhibition Bowl and the North Woods are accessible daily offering moderately steep through steep and rocky glade terrain. Prospector Ridge, the Glory Hole, Boundary Bowl, Montezuma Bowl, the Peak Chutes, Alberta Peak, Step Bowl, Knife Ridge, and Horseshoe Bowl offer advanced intermediate and expert only terrain with limited gated access. 20% of Wolf Creeks’ slopes are beginner, 35% intermediate, 25% advanced and 20% expert.
WOLF CREEK SKI RESORT STATS INCLUDE.
BASE ELEVATION
10,300 feet/3,139 meters
SUMMIT ELEVATION
11,904 feet/3,628 meters
VERTICAL DROP
1,604 feet/489 meters
CHAIRLIFTS
10 total(3 High Speed Quad Chair lifts, 1 Quad Chair Lift, 2 Three Person Chair lifts, 2 Two Person Chair lifts and 3 Surface lifts)
LIFT CAPACITY
NA skiers per hour
SKIABLE ACRES
1,600 acres/647 hectares
MARKED TRAILS
133 marked trails (20% beginner, 35% intermediate, 25% advanced, 20% expert)
AVERAGE SNOWFALL (ANNUAL)
465 inches/1181 centimeters