White Wolf Mountain
White Wolf Mountain is a 460-acre (190 ha) private ski area located in the Lake Tahoe area of California. The property is named after a large white dog rescued from a cliff on the property.[1]
Location
White Wolf Mountain is located between
The property runs from the parking lot at Alpine Meadows to Palisades Tahoe and includes KT-22, which Palisades Tahoe leases from White Wolf Mountain.[citation needed]
Current Use
Currently the land is used as a private ski area with 1123 vertical feet, and ski areas are accessed via Snowcat.
History
In 1970, Troy Caldwell started working selling lift tickets at Alpine Meadows. He was an avid freestyle skier and later joined the US Freestyle team. He met his wife Susan who also worked at Alpine Meadows. Caldwell had studied architecture in college and also built houses in the summer months, building one to live in and another as a rental unit.[4]
Caldwell and his wife dreamed of opening a mountain ski lodge, and the land that he was interested in he found out was owned by
According to Troy Caldwell:
"The section of land that I own borders Alpine Meadows and butts right up to their parking lot...and rolls over onto KT-22. It is my mountain. I own about 70 acres (28 ha) of Squaw. I bought it from Southern Pacific Land Co. in 1989."[2]
The land purchase angered Alexander Cushing, the then-owner of Palisades:
“It was extraordinary that Southern Pacific sold the land directly out from under us, it doesn’t make any sense.”[6]
After buying the land the Caldwells built a road in to the land and lived on it. Cushing of Squaw Valley was unhappy that Caldwell had bought the land and eventually sued Caldwell in 1996 for breach of contract (as Caldwell was now leaseholder of land leased to Squaw Valley). Caldwell and Cushing later agreed to trade 70 acres (28 ha) of land for ski lift equipment, and Caldwell later filed suit against Cushing for breach of contract, as Caldwell argued that Cushing had failed to deliver the ski lift towers as promised.[4]
Caldwell after beginning construction of his first chairlift was sued by the Bear Creek Homeowners Association. Caldwell eventually settled the suit and stopped construction of his ski lifts in 2007, and agreed that the land would only be utilized as a private ski area with up to 25 guests on the mountain at any given time.[4]
As of 2014, Andy Wirth of KSL Capital Partners and Troy Caldwell have been working on using the land to interconnect Palisades Tahoe and Alpine Meadows.[4]
Caldwell stated in 2019 he has spent $1.4 million "on paperwork" and lives a modest life driving a 1987 Toyota pickup.[7] In 2019 Caldwell received a response from Placer County regarding his plans to build 38 single-family homes, 14 guest units, housing for employees, a lodge, and only two ski lifts.[7]
As of 2019, Alterra Mountain Company (the owner of Squaw and Alpine) continued to desire to cross the property with a base-to-base gondola to connect Squaw and Alpine.[7]
In 2022, Palisades and Alpine Meadows opened the base-to-base gondola, with about half of the towers on White Wolf Mountain land.[8]
Early development plans
It is the stated goal of Troy Caldwell to use the land to interconnect Palisades Tahoe and Alpine Meadows ski areas.[2] There is also significant community interest in connecting the two resorts.[9][10]
In September 2011, Alpine Meadows and
Caldwell's 2011 proposed vision[12] for White Wolf Mountain includes:
- A small high-end ski resort
- Gondola & 3 ski lifts
- Mid mountain hotel
- Small village complete with ice skating rink
In 2015, Squaw Valley Ski Holdings LLC announced a proposal to build a gondola through the property to connect the resorts.[13]
Litigation
Troy Caldwell is currently in litigation with Palisades Tahoe over his installation of chairlift towers that would interconnect the two resorts.[2] There have been many rounds of litigation, with the California Supreme Court ruling in 2000 that Caldwell was allowed to open his proposed chairlift, subject to limitations.[citation needed]
Some indication exists that Palisades Tahoe's new ownership, KSL Partners, is seeking to work with Caldwell, and put aside their differences. In December 2011, KSL paid for Caldwell to study ski resort development in the American West. He visited Jackson, Vail, Aspen, Snowmass, Buttermilk, Aspen Highlands, Beaver Creek, Steamboat, Grand Targhee, & Big Sky. KSL footed the bill for that on-site research and Caldwell said of the trip, “(KSL) treated us like kings and queens.”[12]
White Wolf Subdivision
In 2019, White Wolf Subdivision was proposed to Placer County planning department, and proposed 38 single family homes, 2 ski lifts and other amenities.[14] The current concept is a private ski area with its own lifts, lodges, etc.[14]
References
- ^ a b Lightcap, Seth (2011-10-18). ""Whitewolf: New Details Emerge - Most Read Story of 2010"". Unofficial Network.
- ^ a b c d e f g Troy Caldwell's dream of an Alpine-to-Squaw route lives on at his White Wolf Mountain, March 09, 2008, San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ a b Reynolds, Christopher (2011-09-28). ""At Lake Tahoe's North Shore, Squaw Valley and Alpine Meadows come together"". Los Angeles Times staff writer.
- ^ a b c d e A WHITE WOLF’S TALE
- ^ Renda, Matthew (27 December 2016). "THE LEGEND OF WHITE WOLF". Tahoe Quarterly. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
- ^ The Dream Comes True For Troy Caldwell
- ^ a b c Thomas, Gregory (27 December 2019). "Could Tahoe's next ski resort be private?". SF Chronicle. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
- ^ Pridgen, Andrew (4 November 2022). "'A zombie we've killed before': Palisades Tahoe gondola sparks development fears". SF Chronicle. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
- ^ Troy Caldwell Talks Squaw-Alpine Merger.Moonshine Ink, September 28, 2011
- ^ DiPietro, Matthew (2011-09-26). "Squaw Valley Purchases Alpine Meadows". Sierra Journal. Archived from the original on 2011-10-11. Retrieved 2011-11-05.
- ^ Shueh, Jason; Renda, Matthew (2011-11-03). "State of the Lake Tahoe ski industry: 'This is our time'". North Lake Tahoe Bonanza.
- ^ a b "Squaw & Alpine WILL Connect | Exclusive Interview with White Wolf’s Troy Caldwell", By Miles Clark, UnofficialSquaw, December 13, 2011
- ^ "Gondola Construction Updates". 13 October 2021.
- ^ a b Thomas, Gregory (27 December 2019). "Could Tahoe's next ski resort be private?". SF Chronicle. Retrieved 18 June 2020.