| Expert,
Advanced:
The Pan Dome side, served by Chairs 1, 2,
3 and 6, is for the mogul bashers and chute shooters. Hot
skiers can play here endlessly, challenging the steep and deep.
Every time experts take one run, they are sure to find another
just as hairy.
Shuksan has more wide-open, powder bowl type
of terrain. Experts-only runs include Gabl's Run under chair
4.5 and The Chute. The Chute, a horrific, straight-down run
under Chair 1, is where a staff writer once ended up in a
tree well after a body slam with an unknown opposite-sex skier.
The folks on the lift were well entertained and it took some
creative maneuvers to extricate themselves. Make sure there's
enough snow before you try this one.
The out-of-bounds areas are extremely attractive
at Mt. Baker and many pass the signs and do the hikes at the
top of Chair 8. But avalanches are a problem out of bounds,
and sometimes people die. In recent years, quite a few people
have lost their lives when they left the ski area's boundaries
and got caught in snow slides. If you ride a chairlift to
go out of bounds, you must have an avalanche transceiver and
know how to use it. You also must have a partner, a shovel,
and knowledge of your route, the terrain, avalanche conditions
and predictions. Search and rescue may cost you a lot of money.
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Intermediate:
Nearly 70 percent of Mt. Baker's terrain is
labeled blue or green. On soft snow days, intermediates can
go just about anywhere on the mountain with confidence, minus
the chutes, of course. On icy days, however, definitely avoid
Razor Hone Canyon. It becomes a long series of shelves. North
Face and Honkers get unforgiving too, with their boulderish
bumps.
Probably the most fun for intermediates is the terrain off Chair 8, especially Oh Zone and Daytona. On the Pan Dome side, Austin is outstanding under most conditions. The terrain served by Chair 3 has a lot of alternatives for intermediates.
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Beginner,
First-timer:
Chairs 7 and 8 expand the Shuksan possibilities,
but beginners may want to avoid Chair 8 for the time beingits
terrain is mostly intermediate. The ride, however, rivals
Blackcomb's old Jersey Cream Express Chair for the majestic view
of the mountain ridges past the area boundary at Rumble Gully.
On the Pan Dome side, beginners can easily
get back to the lodge on the Austin and Blueberry runs. The
signs are good, but don't follow tracks or other skiers if
you don't know where they're going. You may end up on steep
Pan Face or unmapped places called Rattrap and Gunbarrel.
The ski patrol performs rescues on icy crags that are best
avoided.
The learning areas are near the Heather Meadows base lodge and the White Salmon Day Lodge, served by Chairs 2 and 8. The slopes are long and gentle, not sectioned off, but not used by more accomplished sliders. Snowboard novicessome of whom feel immortal rather than timiduse this slope. Timid novices probably are better off learning elsewhere.
Chair 2, especially
for beginners, has been upgraded for easier loading and unloading.
Baker also has designated three slow zones as "Beginner
and Kids Zones." No fast or unsafe skiing or snowboarding
allowed at the bottom of Chair 8, Chair 7 and rope tow 2,
the bottom of Chair 4.5, and White Salmon, Big Creek and Heather
runs.

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