June Mountain | |
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Location | June Mountain Inyo National Forest |
Nearest major city | June Lake,California |
Coordinates | 37°46′06″N119°05′26″W / 37.7683°N 119.0906°W /37.7683; -119.0906 |
Status | Operating |
Owner | Alterra Mountain Company |
Vertical | 2,545 ft (776 m) |
Top elevation | 10,090 ft (3,080 m) |
Base elevation | 7,545 ft (2,300 m) |
Skiable area | 1,500 acres (610 ha) |
Trails | 41 total![]() ![]() ![]() |
Longest run | 2 mi (3.2 km) |
Lift system | 7: (2 high speed quads, 4 Doubles, 1 carpet lift) |
Lift capacity | 10,000 passengers/hr |
Terrain parks | Mambo Upper Sunrise Jib Sunrise Super Pipe |
Snowfall | 250 in (640 cm) |
Snowmaking | Yes |
Night skiing | No |
Website | www.JuneMountain.com |
June Mountain ski area is awinter resort in the easternSierra Nevada ofCalifornia, located nearJune Lake, southeast ofYosemite National Park.
June Mountain ski area consists of two mountains, Rainbow Mountain, with an elevation of 10,040 feet (3,060 m), and June Mountain, with a peak of 10,090 feet (3,075 m). The total vertical rise from the lower ticket office to the summit of June Mountain is 2,545 feet. June Mountain averages 250 inches of snowfall a year. The ski area covers 1,500 acres with 7 ski lifts.[1]
Many opportunities exist, however, for riders to explore the trees that cover much of the ski areas total acreage and access fresh snow off piste. June Mountain has also established itself as a favorite spot among locals due to its small crowds and easy access to powder following a storm.[2]
June Mountain hosted the 2006 Ski Mountaineering Race Series and theski andsnowboard portions of the 2006California Winter Games in March 2006.
On June 21, 2012, Mammoth Mountain and theStarwood Capital Group announced that they would close June Mountain for the summer and winter 2012–2013 season, after 50 years of continuous operation.[3] An active citizen movement arose in response, raising concerns about the prospects for sustaining the local community if the mountain closed.[4] With a new strategy to finally invest in snowmaking, a chairlift, and marketing,[3] June Mountain re-opened for the 2013–2014 season.[5] In 2017, Mammoth Resorts announced its sale by Starwood to a partnership ofAspen Skiing Company and KSL Capital Partners, later namedAlterra Mountain Company.[6]