Albuquerque Journal

Lack of snow dries up Enchanted Forest’s revenue

Cross country ski and snowshoe area seeks financial help to make it through the season

- BY KARL MOFFATT

The Enchanted Forest cross-country ski and snowshoe area in northern New Mexico remains closed due to a lack of snow and the operator is seeking financial donations to help stay afloat until next year. “This is unpreceden­ted, there’s just no snow and we weren’t prepared for this,” says Ellen Miller-Goins of Red River, owner of the outdoor resort.

The 600-acre cross country ski and snowshoein­g area is in the Carson National Forest near Bobcat Pass between Red River and Eagle Nest.

Snow pack across New Mexico and southern Colorado is way down this year due to drought this fall and early winter.

While many ski areas can make snow to stay open for business, Miller-Goins can’t and remains closed.

To offset the loss of business income and help cover expenses Miller-Goins is appealing to the public for help.

Those interested in donating can go online to her fundraisin­g campaign page on Indiegogo’s website at indiegogo.com/projects/save-enchanted-forest#/.

The campaign has raised almost $8,000 from more than 80 people so far while the goal is to reach $27,500.

Country music star, Michael Martin Murphy, who spends many of his summers in Red River helped out with a benefit concert last weekend at the Motherlode Saloon.

“We had a good turnout and great time,” Miller-Goins. “It was very intimate and wonderful concert.” She said she has yet to determine how much the event produced.

Miller-Goins says if enough snows falls in the coming months she may be able to open but she isn’t counting on that happening.

Kerry Jones, meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service, in Albuquerqu­e says the outlook for snow in the coming months is well below average.

“I don’t think anyone had any idea it was going to be this brutal,” Jones says of the lack of statewide precipitat­ion this fall and early winter. “This time last year they had four to five feet of snow at Bobcat Pass, there’s isn’t really anything on the ground up there right now.” The agency regularly measures snowpack at a site near Bobcat Pass.

The area’s so dry that Colfax County Fire Marshal Larry Osborn has just imposed a fire ban in some areas of the county.

The Enchanted Forest cross country ski area was created by Miller-Goins’ parents in the mid-1980s and she has been running it since 2010.

When there’s snow on the ground the recreation area features many miles of groomed trails, equipment rentals, lessons and heated yurts where cross-country skiers and snowshoers can spend nights in the backcountr­y.

“I love this place and other people do too,” says MillerGoin­s. “And New Mexico needs places like this for our tourism economy to thrive so I hope people can help out.”

Miller-Goins also operates the Sangre de Cristo Chronicle, an online newspaper at www.sangrechro­nicle.com that covers the Angel Fire, Eagle Nest, Red River, Cimarron and Taos area.

 ?? COURTESY OF ENCHANTED FOREST ?? In better years, a skier traverses trails at the Enchanted Forest cross-country ski and snowshoe area.
COURTESY OF ENCHANTED FOREST In better years, a skier traverses trails at the Enchanted Forest cross-country ski and snowshoe area.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States