Mountain Preparation
Cardrona's Trail Progression
Curious about which Cardrona trails and runs will take your skiing or snowboarding skills to the next level?
Russ Kauff
Curious about which Cardrona ski trails will take your skiing or snowboarding to the next level? Instructor Russ Kauff has the ultimate inside scoop on where to go and when!
As passionate Cardrona skiers and riders, we have a deep love for the maunga (the mountain). Our instructors know every trail and feature of Cardrona, giving us a unique advantage: we can guide our guests to the perfect spots at just the right time and pace. What makes Cardrona truly special is how it allows us to help skiers and snowboarders of all levels achieve their goals progressively, comfortably, and with a ton of fun along the way!
For guests navigating the mountain, a little bit of know-how can go a long way in unlocking the best experiences and making your day even better.
Pro tip: Check out our trail map online, grab a free copy from the Ticket Office, or keep an eye out for the big trail map signs around the mountain to see exactly which trails Russ is talking about!
Get it Started Right: The McDougall’s Chondola
Once you've conquered the Beginners' Area (turning and stopping comfortably, controlling your speed), it's time to try out the McDougall's Chondola! We recommend starting with a gondola cabin as your first mode of transportation, then moving across to the chair once you're comfortable.
Queenstown Return and Skyline
Immediately after exiting the gondola cabin or taking a left after unloading your chair, keep your eyes open on the right for a big gap in the fence. Through that gap, the gentle, sweeping switchback is called Bridget’s Way, and it’s the least intimidating place to start your day of sliding. The biggest risk of starting on Bridget’s Way is that the view of the Southern Alps as you round the corner will knock you out of your boots! Ease your way along after having your breath taken away by the view, and you’ll enter Weston’s Trail briefly with more confidence. Stay straight onto Skyline (Weston’s turns left, Skyline continues straight down the ridgeline), a broad, long, and gentle run with unobstructed views of Lake Wakatipu and Queenstown in the distance on the right. As Skyline slowly winds left, you’ll get a falcon’s eye view of the Crown Range before coming into sight of the Main Basin just to put it all in perspective. Once you’re comfortable on Skyline with its priceless perspective, it’s time to get some vertical on Weston’s Trail.
Weston’s Trail/ Footrot Flats
Now that you’ve got your legs under you a bit, head straight down Weston’s Trail from the McDougall’s top station for a little bit more pitch. It’s plenty wide enough to practise controlling your speed with the shape of your turns. The run turns left ninety degrees at the junction with Skyline, just before the McDougall’s Chondola comes into view ahead. Just before the Chondola lift line, there’s a bit of a flat spot before Weston’s turns right and gets steeper as it becomes Footrot Flats to head back towards the Cardrona Base area. This spot, at the corner and just before the run steepens, is a terrific place to get a sense of how your skills will hold up in other parts of the mountain – it’s a terrific place to grow your confidence. Stay far left, next to the entrance to the Lil’ Bucks terrain park, so the transition onto Footrot Flats is gentler and an unintimidating place to incrementally move along to the next level of terrain. Stay to the right side for more challenge – the further right you get, the more abrupt the transition and the steeper the fallaway.
Once you can keep your cool, comfortably control your speed by turning, and have a blast on that far right side, it’s time to take Shaun’s Way to the Captain’s Basin and the trail called A Real Journey.
The Road to Better Pizza
Shaun’s Way
Captain’s is all about pizza, and by that we mean a slice of Neapolitan-style, mouth-wateringly delicious, cheesy goodness, not the wedge we use as beginning skiers. Once you’re in Captain’s Basin, my ski instructor mantra is “pizza is for eating!”. From the McDougall’s top station, loop around as though you’re heading towards to top station of the Whitestar Express, and continue past it on the uphill side. As you slide past Whitestar, Shaun’s Way comes into view; it’s the long road of a run that hugs the mountainside until it winds out of view. As you head along Shaun’s Way, don’t miss the amazing views on your right down the mountain and across the Cardrona Valley. As Shaun’s Way turns left, the whole of the Captain’s Basin comes into view and the expansiveness of the terrain there becomes clear. You can also see the Captain’s Café, home of our famous pizza! And yes, I think it’s okay to drink hot chocolate with polenta fries, so long as you earned it!
A Real Journey
The end of Shaun’s Way places you squarely in the middle of the Captain’s Basin but keep heading across, underneath and past the Captain’s Express to the top of A Real Journey. A Real Journey is a short slice of a run, and one look at it and you’ll know why that transition from Weston’s to Footrot Flats was so perfect; A Real Journey is nearly exactly the same pitch, only shorter. A few turns down the slightly steeper section and you can ease your way right onto the bottom part of a run called Paradise, and then merge onto the bottom part of Highway 89 and on to the café or the lift below.
Paradise
If you still aren’t so sure about whether polenta fries and hot chocolate are a good pairing, ride the Captain’s Express, take a right off the top of it, keep heading left, past Highway 89 and onto Paradise. When the winds up here blow our snow around, it piles up and comes to rest in Paradise before it’s groomed to perfection. After rolling gently after it splits left from Highway 89, Paradise bowls up on its sides like a giant, gentle halfpipe filled with powdery goodness. It’s just plain fun to ski in there, for intermediates and experts alike. Once A Real Journey comes into view on the right, you’ll be on familiar ground and ready for the café, if not a bit more exploration!
But Wait, There’s More!
Much more. Cardrona is big enough and has enough variety that the decision of where to go and what to do next can be different for every skier and rider. It is true that time spent with one of our instructors is the best way to get to know our mountain, but because our entire resort staff loves skiing and riding every chance they get, any one of us will enthusiastically give you our take on where to go next. To know our maunga is to love her, and we’re all happy to help!
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