- Found 1462 results
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Grouse Mountain Launches 2019/20 Season Y2Play Pass Offer
Grouse Mountain Launches 2019/20 Season Y2Play Pass Offer BC’s best value snow pass for 20 years (North Vancouver) While enjoying some of the best conditions of the season so far, Grouse Mountain is thrilled to announce that the 2019/20 Y2Play Pass is now available for purchase while quantities last.Celebrating its 20th year, Y2Play is widely recognized as BC’s best value snow pass. The 2019/20
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Y2Play is Now On Sale!
Y2Play is Now On Sale! BC’s best value snow pass for 20 years Great news skiers and riders - Grouse Mountain's Y2Play Snow Pass is now on sale while quantities last. Celebrating its 20th year, Y2Play is widely recognized as BC’s best value snow pass. With Y2Play you can ski and rider for the rest of this season and all of next season at a savings of up to 80% off regular snow pass pricing. But
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Holiday Gift Guide
Holiday Gift Guide Find the perfect gift for everyone on your list! We're all for holiday traditions at Grouse Mountain. From visits with Santa and his reindeer to festive dining and everyone's favourite Christmas movies. We also want to make sure that last minute holiday shopping isn't one of your annual traditions. Our retail team has put together a handy shopping guide to cover all your gift
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Saturday is Passholder Appreciation Day
Special Passholder Offer This Saturday Celebrate the final weekend of the 2018/19 winter season It's been another great winter season on the Mountain, full of groomers, glades, kickers and cruisers. We've had snow, we've had sun and lots in between. Our final day of skiing and riding this season will be Monday, April 22nd. Thank you for another memorable winter!In celebration of our final weekend
https://www.grousemountain.com/news/saturday-is-passholder-appreciation-day
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Spring Has Sprung: Snow School Tips
. Getting out on the Mountain is the best way to spend a day during the winter in our opinion. In the spring the days are longer, the temperature is higher, the snow is softer and everyone is just having a good time. Spring skiing has some great health benefits too. Warm temperatures and extra sunlight are great mood enhancers to help treat the winter blues. It can also relieve stress and improve sleep
https://www.grousemountain.com/posts/spring-has-sprung-snow-school-tips
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Winter Hummers
Wintering hummingbird care Each winter we receive quite a few notes or calls about people who are confused to still see hummingbirds coming to their backyard feeders. It might surprise you to know that one species, Anna's Hummingbird (Calypte anna), spend the winter here in the great Vancouver area. Traditionally it is thought that these birds were short distance migrators heading down into the
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Celebrate the Holidays at Grouse Mountain’s Peak of Christmas
Celebrate the Holidays at Grouse Mountain’s Peak of Christmas Making spirits bright at Vancouver’s North Pole (North Vancouver) Celebrate the festive season at Grouse Mountain’s annual Peak of Christmas, beginning this Friday and running through January 6th, 2019. The elves have been hard at work transforming the mountaintop, ready for the highly-anticipated arrival of Santa Claus at Vancouver’s
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How to Prepare for Winter Field Trips
for snow-filled field trips.Check the Weather ForecastMountain weather can vary greatly from conditions at lower elevations. Exploring the snow and leaving the rain in the City below is one of the many fun parts of a winter field trip.At Grouse Mountain, the snow season can begin in October and run until May or June. To prepare for the day, be sure to check the weather forecast and mountain webcam
https://www.grousemountain.com/posts/how-to-prepare-for-winter-field-trips
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Grinder and Coola enter their 18th Hibernation Period on Grouse Mountain
Grinder and Coola enter their 18th hibernation period on grouse mountain On December 1st, 2018, Grinder and Coola, our two resident Grizzly Bears, entered their 18th hibernation period on Grouse Mountain. The bears had been growing sluggish for the last couple weeks and their appetites had reduced to next to nothing. This was a sure sign that hibernation was close! Once we started to receive
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Bears Continue Their Winter Dormancy
through is not technically hibernation. They are in a period of extremely slow metabolism and lethargy to help them make it through the cold months when there are no food resources in their territories. While a true hibernator will have their body temperature lower to extremes and have their heart rate drop to just a few beats per minute Grizzlies do not go to this extreme. Their body temperature
https://www.grousemountain.com/posts/bears-continue-their-winter-dormancy