Tales from the Mountain
The History of the Polar Peak Ski Bowl
by: Thomas A. Herishko


     I suppose it all started one brisk December day, about a year after I first received my first pair of skis. I, then nine, my brother Mark then eleven looked at a vast mountainous pasture on our family farm and began to speculate the possibilities of skiing the snow covered Peak. By the end of that day I remember my cousin Scott, Mark and myself skiing from the upper reaches of the hill. Though a touch rocky we simultaneously agreed this hill had great potential, about a year thereafter the epic began.


The Beginning (1990-1992)

We first started clearing the slopes on the southern flank in the fall of 1990. It was also at this time the idea of constructing a ski lift first occurred to us. Our first official day of skiing occurred on Saturday, January 12 1991 thanks to a mediocre storm which graced the peak with 7" of snow. That season was short lived, we closed down on Saint Patrick’s day when the rest of the snow which was left melted due to a heavy rain storm. It was from the affect of that season that we knew we would need to some how discover a way to make snow. It was also during this season that we experimented with our first lift, a ropetow.

We first started construction on the ropetow March 7, I remember the day clearly. We had already dug small holes and placed a bunch of dilapidated 4x4’s with small pulleys attached to them. After feverously working on our technological advancement consisting of 600 feet of 3/4"rope, six pulleys, 6- 4x4’s and an orange 1976 Ford pickup truck, we decided to try it out. I with skis in hand, volunteered to be the first test rider. As I grabbed hold of the rope (which was probably doing 15mph) I could feel a tingling feeling, I later discovered the rope had eaten my glove up in a matter of a couple of minutes. I must of made two runs when I hear Mark yelling something at me, on my way back up the lift. All of a sudden I looked back and the base terminal, tower 1 and tower 2 were all coming up the hill behind me, so I made a quick dash for the side while mark slammed the old 76 ford to a screeching halt. We had bittersweet feelings about the day, Mark was disappointed to miss out on perhaps one of the last good days of skiing for the year, however we were both glad to see a ropetow was a do able deal. The lift was later dubbed "The Summit Express" for its speedy 15 mph deliverance during the first year.

During the winter of 90-91 we used ice which had accumulated along the stream and crushed it and added it on to the trail. This provided us with a narrow ski path for us to slide down for President’s week. It was just an experiment, it was a lot of work and the resulting surface was very rough. It was during the summer that we decided somehow some way we needed snowmaking to provide a long and viable ski season.

We didn’t know the first thing about snowmaking. We just knew that places we went skiing could spray a great mist in the air and it would form snow. So to gain information on snowmaking we selected five ski areas and told them about how we were interested in how snowmaking worked. We received responses from three of the five areas. One of which included a personal response from Mr. Israel Slutzky from Hunter Mountain, a ski area which is just about 45 minutes away from us. He invited us up to tour the snowmaking plant. We took him up on the offer he gave us a great tour and showed us around the everyday ski area operations. He gave us a tremendous amount of valuable information on snowmaking.

On October 27, 1991 equipped with 250 feet of garden hose and two 2 horsepower air compressors we set out to test our first snow gun. It was a high pressure nozzle used to wash off vehicles, we plugged in our air to the socket and it made a gentle mist. While we didn’t make snow (we actually made ice) we were impressed with our system. We repeated this procedure numerous times before the water actually crystallized on one chilly December 1 morning.

It was on December 30 we were starting to draw interest. It was that day when a crew of ambitious snowboarders pulled off the road and came and checked out our operation. They tried the lift out, built a jump, and snowboarded down Lower Glade after Mark and I had hauled close to 50 loads of snow from snow drifts with our 10 cubic foot carts behind our quads. The crew came again for some snowboarding one last time before the new year. They were locals, and loved the place. When they asked the name of our establishment, Mark proudly responded "Polar Peak". The name Polar Peak was fabricated one day at our grandmother’s dinner table. I remember drinking a bottle of Polar soda, while Mark was thinking of a name for our newly formed area. We knew we liked the end name Peak, because from a distance the hill looks like a peak, not to mention Peak sounds better than hill, or mountain. So Mark put the two together and the name Polar Peak was born. It was that season which we operated the lift successfully.

The First Construction Era (1992- 1993)

We first started major construction on the mountain during the summer of 1992. Among the items to be rebuilt were, the ropetow, the office, and the snowmaking system. We decided on building a ski lodge. Lights were installed to the summit to provide night skiing. We worked feverously that summer and fall constructing the articles on the mountain.

It was fun, but a lot of work. We cleared the slopes, rebuilt the ropetow, bought a new pump for snowmaking, rebuilt the office, and built the main base lodge. By the end of the fall we were totally prepared for winter. On November 2 thanks to a cold snap, we produced some real snow. The new pump for snowmaking seemed to work well. We somehow convinced dad a pump for snowmaking would be a worthwhile investment. In the early days we used to run a garden hose from the shop which was supplied by our well. One morning Mark and I were making snow and Mark decided to go in and make a cup of coffee. So he went in the house turned on the faucet and all of a sudden a gush of air came out, needless to say it wasn’t long before we got a pump. The winter went very well we had an abundance of natural snow and when mother nature wasn’t willing to cooperate we now had the ability to make it. We also experimented with glacier making (spraying 120 gpm of water into the air and waiting for it to freeze on the ground eventually forming a glacier). The season lasted long thanks to yearlong snowmaking commitments and "The Blizzard of 93" which dumped 26" of snow on March 13-14. We ended up skiing for 89 days from early November until Early April. We finally closed off the ski season successfully on April 9.

The Second Construction Era (1993-1994)

We worked extensively once again that summer to improve on the mountain. We rebuilt the summit express, expanded the office, expanded the baselodge and added to the snowmaking system. The lodge and office expansions were necessary, afterall the office resembled that of a Salvation Army store with all the snowmakers equipment lying on the benches in the morning after a hard night of making snow. (Yes, even as young people we used to stay up with a crew of four and run the guns all night.)

We opened for some skiing on October 18 that year. Our crew of snowmakers had expanded from four the year before to twelve. The lodge was getting good use. Each morning crumbs of pastries and dozens of Entemens boxes had infiltrated the quarters. Once again the lodge had been turned into a mess resembling that of the salvation army, there were beat up coats, boots which had been duct taped numerous times, shirts and pants. While one crew was tending to the guns the other crew would either be devouring what little food was left. In the hungriest of time people would eat bread which they toasted off the kerosene heater. Others liked hot chocolate minus the water. There were two types of snowmakers at Polar Peak: those who wanted to make snow and those who like to come out and would do anything for the free food and soda. By anywhich means everyone worked hard, and got the job done while having a fun time. It wasn’t uncommon to see the snowmakers out in front of the lodge sitting on lawn chairs enjoying a nice zero degree night of snowmaking.

That fall we went up to see Mr. Slutzky. There must have been around six people in the station wagon, driving was Mark who had just recently received his permit at the time. We arrived at the mountain and it was snowing up there. So we went up to the lodge and talked to Izzy, he once again gave us a tour and at the end he told us that we could search the junk pile for stuff which we wanted. So we did, and took some old ropetow rope which we graciously thanked him for. We all set out like a pack of vultures on the junk pile, afterall one man’s junk is another man’s treasure. We went back down the mountain with our station wagon sagging way down with the new goodies we had received, which was good because it contributed to the increased to the traction we needed to make our way down the twisted mountain road.

That season turned out exceptionally well with close to 125" of natural snow and 300 hours of snowmaking, base depths during peak season ranged anywhere from three to nine feet. We were featured in numerous media articles that year including the local newspapers the Independent and The Register Star. We were also featured on TV-10’s Streeter’s lane and channel. 62 news. We held numerous special events including the "Rock the Park" snowboard series, The King of the mountain series, Polar Drop Inferno race, the spring bash, the snow tire slalom and the April 1 fun day. We called it quits on April 5 after 111 days of skiing operation, none stop since December 21.

That summer we once again did major reconstruction on the mountain. We retrofitted the Summit Express ropetow, refabricated the interior of the lodge, and most importantly retrofitted the snowmaking system for air with the arrival of our first air compressor on September 27.

The Third Construction Era (1994-1995)

The winter of 1994-1995 showed from the beginning that the season was going to be unusually mild. The season didn’t start until November 17 due to a very mild November. Even on opening day the temperature rose to a balmy sixty degrees depleting the snow which we had made. Since we had the first snow in the county Mark called the newspaper, they came out to take the picture and we made first page.

That season was extremely mild with the temperature rising to sixty eight during a couple days in mid January. We had lost all of our base, however we bounced back fairly quickly with the return of colder weather on January 28. Despite the warm weather, thanks to imperior snowmaking we were able to cover the mountain, from summit to base with 6-36" which lasted until April fifth. That year we skied 101days. We were extremely proud with our snowmaking efforts and our snowmaking crew. We received much attention from motorists driving by, and it seemed that the speed limit had been lowered down to 25 with people driving slowly to watch us either making snow or ski. We were also proud of our crew for giving it their all at least once a week to make snow. On January 10 a picture was taken from the midstation of us making snow. It was an AP picture and was seen world wide.

The Major Construction Era (1995-1996)

After a year of unthinkable mild weather we decided to better equip our snowmaking system by beginning installing underground snowmaking pipelines with hydrants which emerge above the ground. We decided to first install snowmaking on Beginner Novice since it is the best place to preserve snow and would be an easy spot to work out our flaws. In August we started the major Beginner Novice renovation. In a period of two years we planned to make the Beginner Novice learning area more skier and rider friendly by installing snowmaking, a ropetow, and making the gradient more gradual. We also dug a new pond for the farm which was custom designed to fit our snowmaking needs during the winter months. More than 50 tons of fill were transported to the trail to redevelop its contour. A preliminary lift was installed but it wasn't going to be online for the season.

The season started off great from the start. We started making snow on November 6 on Beginner Novice. It was the earliest we had ever made white snow. We continued making snow on weekends and the skiing was fine. Heavy snows started to fall in December and each week we had at least a foot of new snow. By January natural snow bases up on the main mountain were close to five feet, and on Beginner Novice snow depths reached an all time deepness of 10 feet, about eight feet was manmade. The Blizzard of 96 struck the region hard on January 6&7 dumping 26" on the peak. It was an interesting storm because down in the valley snow depths only reached one foot and in Albany there was less than three inches. We really made out on that storm. That whole season seemed to favor us, we receive copious amounts of snow, finally adding up to 137" an all time record.

We enjoyed the longest ski season ever during that year 121 days of fine skiing finally ending on April 10. However things started to slow down. With Mark in college there was less people to help, we were fortunate to receive a lot of natural snow. We didn't offer any summer activities like in the past due to lack of interest. Everybody was busy and no one had anytime left.

The Sixth Season(1996-1997)

We finished up our ski season with major changes to revamp the area will redistinguish the Polar Peak experience. While the weather had been poor, we had numerous attempts to make snow, and of course we had taken advantage of them. We opened that year on October 5, an all time record. Once again we planned to ski until May or atleast make snow one day in May to say we had skiing in May but we just never got around with it since we were so busy. The year provided above average spring snowfall and a lot of mid winter rain which made it very hard to keep snow on the mountain, not to mention very expensive. We had some great skiing and it was tons of fun. We finally closed for the season on Sunday, April 20 1997 after two massive April storms and 114 days of skiing and riding. It also turned out to be the longest season ever.

A Whole New Era(1997-1998)

On July 26, 1997 at 2am fire broke out on our farm, a fire that would last 6 hours claiming our entire barn complex, bringing more than 63 years of hard work of the Herishko family to nothing more than ashes. The combination of wiring from the 1930's and a burned out compressor motor created the fire. At first we had decided that we would re-enter the dairy business, but after evaluating the significant financial capital required to get started again, the amount of hard hours and the condition of the dairy industry we (and others) decided it was in our best emotional and financial interests to abstain from farming, this would have a great impact on the way we would operate Polar Peak. The main reason we could operate Polar Peak was that we had an abundance of resources that was made available from the farm such as building material, fuel, and many other resources. The season was getting off to a bad start, things were changing quickly, our lives were changing in a flash. The season was one of the mildest ones we had ever seen here at the peak bringing very little snowfall and a lot of ice. We started off the season very late with our second latest opening ever on November 14. We had a fairly strong opening in November with skiing from the summit to the base on each weekend with a couple of inches of snow but the season went down hill from there. December through March turned out to be 3 to as much as 8 degrees above normal and the natural snow total only reached 36"! This season was also another landmark in Polar Peak history as it was the first time that both Mark and I could only operate the ski area on selected weekends since he was studying at Cobleskill and I was pounding the books at RPI. So the season had a great deal less charisma than previous ones with only 25 days of skiing and the earliest closing ever on March 22. A week later the temperature reached 89! And without having the resources of the farm we made snow only once!

Making Way and Preparing for the new Millenium(1998-1999)

One of the greatest projects ever undertaken at Polar Peak initiated on August 1st 1998. We officially started on Phase 2 of our new millenium project so that we could operate for skiing under our new circumstances, these circumstances being we can only operate on weekends and the fact that we don't have the abundant resources available to us anymore. Our goal is to make the peak self sufficient, a "push button" operation requiring little winter maintenance but allowing for tons of skiing and winter fun. The first stage was upgrading the base facilities which occured in the fall of 1997. The next step was to move on and replace the Summit Express. After nearly 5 years of service and multiple upgrades, it was finally time to retire the old lift and move on to a more reliable model. The lift towers had seen their days, the drive was shot and the base terminal wasn't in the best of shape. On top of that the mid-station needed to be replaced and expanded and upgraded, so that was exactly what we did. Mark worked feverously everyday after work while I chipped in on weekends. It was like old times, and with a new coat of paint things were looking good. We put in new towers for the Summit Express, which are 20'ft long and pressure treated so that they last for at least 2 decades. The mid-station was rebuilt with pressure treated timber and locust wood so that it would last. Making facilities that could stand up to the elements is the main idea behind all construction now at Polar Peak to bring it in to the new millenium. Unfortunately we weren't able to finish construction on the mountain.

The season started off very late, after having the warmest November on record we were finally able to start up the system on a narrow 2 hour window of opportunity. The season would once again be mild as the past two and with little resources to make snow we have decided to save up for improvements. In October Mark accepted a full-time position as a night snowmaking foreman up at Hunter Mountain, I would also join him up at the mountain as a Marketing Intern, we both learned the tricks of the trade from the experts, the pioneers of eastern skiing, the Slutzky brothers. The experience was very rewarding, and as a result we brought a great wealth of ideas back to Polar Peak to implement in the future.

The New Millenium(1999 - 2000)

While we never completed construction on the mountain during the summer we were able to kick off the ski season bright and early on Monday November 8th. Mark along with long time resident and mountain operations assistant Marc Riegel started up the system on Lower Glade. The morning snowmaking proved successful, providing a nice blanket of snow to get in some early runs. However some flaws were discovered in the system that needed attention. A significant investment would be required to operate snowmaking throughout the rest of the season.

In October we decided to remove the old Valley Express Ropetow and Beginner Novice learning area. We planned to focus on the main mountain all season long, making Lower Glade our capstone trail once again since it has the best contour on the mountain, we felt it was only fair to focus all efforts there with winters becoming what they are.

The new millenium brought tons of cold weather and snow. We re-opened for skiing in mid January after a November 8th opening. The snow piled up fast, the skiing was good and each day we continued to wish that we had the Summit express operational. The unusually warm March weather melted off the mountain's cover, however we were able to open back up for some skiing after an April storm dropped 8" of snow. We finally called it a season on a snowy April 8th, one of our latest closings.

The 10th Anniversary Season(2000 - 2001)

Its hard to believe that it has been ten years since we first ventured on to the side hill and started our ventures into running the ski area. November brought pleasant weather up until the 20th, when we discovered that winter had begun, and wouldn't relent until well into the following April. Due to delays we didn't get the Summit Express turning until February 2, 2001. However, when we did the reward was sweet with snow conditions that were unsurpassed. The mountain's base depth held up extraordinary well despite a number of sunny days, and temperatures that were fair to moderate. The lift towers were painted, the lodge sported a clean new shiny look, the new bullwheel was installed, displaying a new icon of the times, and the workers continued well into the winter for the 10th season.

The snowpack begun to accumulate on the peak on December 15th, and would remain well into March with the final patches finally melting in mid April. This made final preparations on the Summit Express difficult, in fact the tractor was used in the final stages to get to the summit to finalizing work on the drive. The snowpack on average was 15" with areas as deep as 40" at times. We decided to stay away from making snow for another season in order to make some additional improvements.

The season finally came to an end on March 25 after many weekends of continuous skiing. It was nice that the peak was back in action, now that things were back on track, it was time to continue renovating and making Polar Peak once again ready for the extremes.

The New Century - Major Improvement Era (2001 - 2002)

The autumn started out with the continued work on the Summit Express Ropetow. Mark and I continued on with the contiued construction on the all new ropetow. The season saw the installation of the the all new flagship base terminal. The base terminal we call the flag ship for it is a sign of the lift, that along with the bullwheel adds character to the ski area as a whole. We also decided to go through, and start stage 1 of a long planned major snowmaking overhaul. The snowmaking overhaul incorporates laying underground snowmaking piping to the summit of the peak. This along with a new and improved pumping station will allow us to cover approximately 40% of the ski area, with future plans on beefing up the coverage to approximately 75% of skiable terrain. We also have plans in the next five years on increasing firepower approximately 150%. We opened for the season on December 9th, after a 4 inch snowfall. After grooming out the ski area we were able to provide top to bottom skiing off of the new Summit Express (after scurring on the 8th to get it up and running for the season).

The Last Run

Operating Polar Peak has been the best experience one person could possibly have. The skiing is free, there are never no liftlines, conditions are the way you like them and the lodge has all your favorite snacks. I have learned a lot from the experience. Despite quarrels Mark and I have always made one great team. We both worked hard, and have been rewarded by the experience. In the upcoming years we plan to operate Polar Peak a little differently, perhaps cutting down on days of operation, because we too have to make money. However we plan to operate for a longer season and continue to enhance the Peak at every opportunity. Our future plan incorporates making Polar Peak more of a "push button" ski area open to friends and family on weekends and holidays.

I would personally like to thank Mr. Israel Slutzky, Mr. Orville Slutzky and all the staff at Hunter Mountain for helping us along and taking the time to show us around. I would also like thank all of my friends and neighbors who showed support to Polar Peak during all of these years. Polar Peak will never die, it will always be there providing the best skiing experience. As time goes on we will both be out of college and doing something, however there will always be time to operate Polar Peak atleast for a couple of times each month during the winter. I'm Tom Herishko and I'll see you out on the slopes for another day of skiing.



Copyright © 2001 Polar Peak Ski Bowl

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