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Tag: Lake Tahoe

  • Report: Three of six Tahoe avalanche survivors buried in snow before rescue

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    Three of the survivors of last week’s deadly avalanche near Lake Tahoe were buried under the snow before being dug out by their fellow skiers in the moments after the disaster, according to an initial avalanche occurrence report from the Sierra Avalanche Center.

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    Caelyn Pender, Ethan Baron

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  • The 9,000-pound monster I don’t want to give back | TechCrunch

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    Before heading on a trip to Tahoe last weekend, GM offered me the use of the company’s 9,000-pound monument to excess – the new electric Escalade IQL (starting at $130,405) – for a week to test-drive. Before you continue, note that I’m not a professional car reviewer. TechCrunch has excellent transportation writers; I am not one of them. I’m just a car enthusiast, one with two electric cars in the family (this is not uncommon in the Bay Area).

    I was immediately game. I’d first glimpsed one last summer at a car show, where some regional car dealers had stationed themselves at the end of a long field of exquisite vintage automobiles. My immediate reaction was “Jesus, that’s enormous,” followed by a surprising admiration for its design, which, despite its enormous scale, shows restraint. For lack of a better word, I’m going to say it’s “strapping.” Its proportions just work.

    My excitement waned pretty quickly when the car was dropped off at my house a day before our departure time. This thing is a monstrosity — at 228.5 inches long and 94.1 inches wide, it made our own cars look like toys. My first apartment in San Francisco was smaller. Trying to drive it up my driveway was a little harrowing, too; it’s so big, and its hood is so high, that if you’re ascending a road at a certain slope – we live midway down a hill; our mailbox is at the top of it – you can’t see whatever is directly in front of the car.

    I thought about just leaving it in the driveway for the duration of the trip. The other alternative was doing what I could to grow more comfortable with the prospect of driving it 200 miles to Tahoe City, so I tooled around in it that night and the next day, picking up dinner, heading to an exercise class — just basic stuff around town. When I ran into a friend on the street, I volunteered as quickly as possible that this was not my new car, that I was going to possibly review it, and wasn’t its size ridiculous? It felt like a tank. I thought: other than hotels that use SUVs like the Escalade to ferry guests around, what kind of monster chooses a car like this?

    Five days later, it turns out that I am that kind of monster.

    Image Credits:Connie Loizos

    Look, I don’t know how or when I fell for this car. If I’d written this review after two days, it would read very differently. Even now, I’m not so blind that I don’t see its shortcomings.

    It was the Escalade’s performance in a terrible snowstorm that really won my heart, but let me walk you through the steps between “Ugh, this car is a tank” and “Yes! This car is a tank.”

    Techcrunch event

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    June 9, 2026

    Just getting into it requires a little more exertion than would seem to make sense. I’m fairly athletic and I still found myself wondering if this thing shouldn’t come with an automated step stool.

    Inside is where digital maximalism does its work. The dashboard opens with a 55-inch curved LED screen with 8K resolution that reads less like a car display and more like a situation room. Front passengers get their own screens. Second-row passengers also get 12.6-inch personal screens along with stowable tray tables, dual wireless chargers, and — with the most lavish version of the car — massage seats that will make them forget they’re in a vehicle at all. Google Maps handles navigation. And the polarized screen technology deserves its own praise: while one of my kids binge-watched Hulu in the front seat, not a frame of it leaked into my sightline from behind the wheel.

    The cabin itself is built around the premise that no one inside should feel crowded, and it delivers. Front legroom stretches to 45.2 inches; the second row offers 41.3; even the third row — historically the place where goodwill goes to die on a long drive — manages 32.3 inches. Seven adults could share this machine for a long while without fraying each other’s nerves. Heated and ventilated leather seats with 14-way power adjustment come standard in the first two rows, and the whole operation runs on 5G Wi-Fi. The car also comes standard with Super Cruise, GM’s hands-free driving system, which I’m not sure I quite figured out. Actual reviewers seem to love it; when I tried it, the car felt like it was drifting to an alarming degree between the outer boundaries of the highway lane, and when that happens, it unleashes an escalating sequence of warnings. First, a red steering wheel icon materializes on-screen. Then your seat pulses haptic warnings against your rump. Ignore those and a chime — both reminder and reproach — fills the cabin. GM calls this impolite series a “driver takeover request.”

    Did I mention the 38-speaker AKG Studio sound system? So good.

    As for the exterior — this is a handsome giant, but it takes some getting used to. At first, I found the grille, which is just for show, almost comically imposing. This is definitely a car for people who are the boss, or want to be the boss, or want to look like the boss while privately dealing with existential crises. Pulling up to a glass-lined restaurant one night, I’m pretty sure I blinded half the patrons as I swung into a parking spot perpendicular to the building, the Escalade’s headlights flooding through the windows.

    Then there is the light show the car launches whenever it detects you approaching via the key or the MyCadillac app. It as if it’s saying, “Hey, chief, where we headed?” before you’ve so much as touched a door handle. (In the vernacular of Cadillac, this is thanks to its “advanced, all-LED exterior lighting system,” highlighted by a “crystal shield” illuminated grille and crest, along with vertical LED headlamps and “choreography-capable tail lamps.”)

    It is, objectively, a bit much. I loved it immediately.

    Image Credits:Connie Loizos

    Despite its size, the Escalade IQL is unexpectedly nimble. Not “sports car darting through traffic” nimble, but “I can’t quite believe something this colossal doesn’t handle like a battleship” nimble.

    Now we arrive at the frustrations. The front trunk — or “frunk” in the lexicon of EV devotees — operates in mysterious and frustrating ways. Opening requires holding the button until completion. Release prematurely and it halts mid-ascent, frozen in automotive purgatory, forcing you to restart the entire sequence. Closing demands the same sustained pressure. The rear trunk, conversely, requires two distinct taps followed by immediate button abandonment. Hold too long and nothing happens.

    Relatedly, twice, the vehicle refused to power down after I’d finished driving. The car simply sat there, running, even when shifted to park and opened the door (which tells the car to turn off). Solution: open the frunk, close the frunk, shift into drive, then park, then exit entirely.

    As for the software, it’s absolutely fine unless you’ve owned a Tesla, in which case, prepare for disappointment. This seems to be true across the board — everyone I know who owns both a Tesla and another EV says the same thing. Once you’ve internalized how effortlessly Tesla’s software dissolves barriers between intention and execution, every other automaker’s software feels like a compromise.

    Which brings us to the nadir of the trip: charging in Tahoe during winter. For all its virtues, the Escalade IQL is, by any measure, a thirsty machine. The battery is a 205 kWh pack — enormous, and it needs to be, because the car burns through roughly 45 kWh per 100 miles, which is considerably more than comparable electric SUVs. Cadillac estimates 460 miles of range on a full charge, and in ideal conditions that holds up. Tahoe in winter, however, is not ideal conditions. We’d also arrived with less charge than we should have. A series of side trips on the way up, including an emergency detour to find shirts for a family member who had packed none, had eaten into the battery more than expected. By the time we needed to charge, we genuinely needed to charge.

    We approached a Tesla Supercharger in Tahoe City that appeared on the MyCadillac app, but when we plugged in, nothing happened. We tried two more stalls. A GM representative explained, not entirely helpfully, that Tesla throttles non-Tesla vehicles to 6 kilowatts per hour anyway, but it was a frustrating discovery. A nearby EVGo had shuttered a month prior. ChargePoint’s two units at the Tahoe City Public Utility lot were, respectively, broken and willing to connect but not to actually charge anything. We briefly contemplated a 35-mile drive to Incline Village, did the math on what stranded would actually look like, and decided against it. Then I discovered an Electrify America station 12 miles away. We drove through gathering snow, arrived shortly before 11 p.m., and it worked. I sat there for an hour fighting exhaustion before driving home.

    The following morning revealed another issue: tire pressure had dropped to 53 and 56 PSI in the front (recommended: 61) and 62 PSI in the rear (recommended: 68). I have no idea whether the car had been delivered that way or whether something else was going on — either way, it meant someone standing at a gas station filling tires while being pelted directly in the face with ice. That someone was my husband. The tires held steady after that, even as the week kept doing its worst. For a family trip, it was going great.

    At this point, in fact, I would have told you that the Escalade IQL is unquestionably luxurious and ideal for families of four or more who value space and technology. I would tell you it came burdened by real tradeoffs: forward visibility obstructed by its commanding hood, parking challenges inherent to its dimensions, limited charging infrastructure for a machine this ravenous, and tires tasked with supporting 9,000 pounds. It’s a beautiful car, I would have said, but it’s not for me.

    But the snow that had started to fall kept falling. Within two days, eight feet had accumulated, making it impossible to ski — the entire point of the trip — and terrifying to drive. Except I found that I wasn’t terrified because we had the Escalade, which, because of its weight, felt like driving a tank through the snow. What could have been harrowing felt serene.

    I also adjusted to the size. By the end of this past week I had stopped mouthing “I’m sorry” to whoever who was waiting for me to figure out where to park it. I had stopped caring what it said about me that I was driving a car whose entire design philosophy is: the owner of this vehicle is not waiting in line. Eight feet of snow had fallen, we needed groceries, and I was the one with the tank, suckers! I could sense my husband falling for the car, too.

    Image Credits:Connie Loizos

    Then the snow stopped and the sun came out, and the Escalade was just a very dirty car sitting in the driveway (sorry, GM!). I still like it, too, and I realize it’s not because of the emergency alone. I love riding high, with the speaker system flooding the car with a favorite soundtrack. That light show still gets me. The frunk is still unhinged. I won’t soon forget the panic of not being able to charge a 9,000-pound car where I thought I could. Parking this thing is truly a stressful endeavor. I have strong opinions about unnecessary consumption. None of that has changed.

    I just also, somehow, want this car, so when the GM middleman comes to collect it, I may hide it under a tarp — a very large tarp — and tell him he has the wrong address.

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    Connie Loizos

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  • All victims killed in avalanche near Lake Tahoe identified

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    All nine victims in the deadly avalanche near Lake Tahoe were identified after their bodies were recovered from the Castle Peak area on Saturday. 

    Nevada County Sheriff Shannan Moon said three of the victims were Blackbird Mountain Guides, identified as 34-year-old Andrew Alissandratos of Verdi, Nevada; 42-year-old Nicole Choo of South Lake Tahoe, California; and 30-year-old Michael Henry of Soda Springs, California. 

    Moon also confirmed the identities of the victims released by a spokesperson for the family earlier this week. Those victims were identified as Carrie Atkin of the Truckee-Tahoe region; Liz Clabaugh of Boise, Idaho; Danielle Keatley, Kate Morse, and Kate Vitt, each from Marin County; and Caroline Sekar of San Francisco.

    The bodies of five individuals were recovered on Friday evening when a helicopter flew into the snowy region. The remaining four were recovered Saturday morning, with authorities saying the victims were found relatively close to each other. 

    The incident commander, Nevada County Sheriff’s Lt. Dennis Hack, detailed the recovery efforts, saying an initial report of the avalanche came in at about 11:30 a.m. Tuesday. Authorities soon learned from survivors that they had recovered three victims.

    The first search teams were able to make contact with the survivors until about 5:30 p.m., providing first aid and preparing an evacuation plan. The search teams also located the additional five victims. 

    Over the next 12 to 24 hours, Hack said crews determined avalanche mitigation was needed in order to recover the bodies safely. 

    Thursday brought more heavy snow to the area, halting aircraft operations and once again pausing recovery operations. However, Hack said they were used to improve routes into the area. 

    On Friday, officials said they used water to break up the snow in the area. This released unstable snowpack and reduced the risk for rescue crews. This allowed the recovery efforts begin, which were completed by Saturday morning. 

    The avalanche became the deadliest in the U.S. since an avalanche at Mt. Rainer killed 11 people in 1981. 

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    Brandon Downs

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  • Some victims of California avalanche near Lake Tahoe identified by families

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    Some of the victims of the deadly California avalanche near Lake Tahoe were identified on Thursday by their families and friends.

    A spokesperson for the families of six of the avalanche victims identified them as Carrie Atkin of the Truckee-Tahoe region; Liz Clabaugh of Boise, Idaho; Danielle Keatley, Kate Morse, and Kate Vitt, each from Marin County; and Caroline Sekar of San Francisco.

    Caroline Sekar, with her husband Kiren Sekar

    Kiren Sekar


    Vitt, a former SiriusXM executive from the Bay Area, was also identified by a family friend to CBS News.

    “It’s a horrible tragedy,” said the friend who has known the family for 50 years. “She died up in the mountains off of I-80 up there near Sugar Bowl. She and her friends were on a guided overnight backcountry skiing trip.” 

    The friend asked not to be named out of respect for the family. Vitt is survived by her husband and two young children.

    some-california-avalanche-victims-photos-1.png

    From left: Danielle Keatley, Carrie Atkin and Kate Morse

    Courtesy of the victims’ families


    “We are devastated beyond words,” a statement from the six families’ spokesperson read. “Our focus right now is supporting our children through this incredible tragedy and honoring the lives of these extraordinary women. They were all mothers, wives and friends, all of whom connected through the love of the outdoors. They were passionate, skilled skiers who cherished time together in the mountains.”  

    A group of 15 skiers was hit by the avalanche on Tuesday near Castle Peak in Nevada County, north of Boreal Mountain Ski Resort, as a heavy snowstorm brought blizzard conditions to the higher elevations of the Sierra Nevada mountain range in Northern California. Eight of the nine skiers who were reported missing after the avalanche have been found dead, with the ninth missing skier also presumed deceased. Six were rescued.

    “We have many unanswered questions, but here is what we know at this time: Eight close friends planned a professionally guided, two-night backcountry hut trip to Frog Lake Huts outside Truckee, California,” the families’ statement continued. “The trip had been organized well in advance. They were experienced backcountry skiers who deeply respected the mountains. They were trained and prepared for backcountry travel and trusted their professional guides on this trip. They were fully equipped with avalanche safety equipment.” 

    The families thanked the Nevada County Search and Rescue, Tahoe Nordic Search and Rescue and all the authorities involved in the rescue efforts, and said they’re grateful “for the outpouring of support from the Tahoe community and beyond.”

    “We are heartbroken and are doing our best to care for one another and our families in the way we know these women would have wanted,” they said. “We are asking for privacy and space as our families grieve this sudden and profound loss.”

    On Wednesday, the Sugar Bowl Academy in Placer County said multiple members of the community and others with strong connections died in the avalanche. 

    Meanwhile, the mayor of Mill Valley, California, said women from his city were among the victims in the avalanche. Mayor Max Perrey told The Associated Press that skiers caught in the avalanche were mothers who lived in the city about 14 miles north of San Francisco in Marin County. 

    He did not provide additional details on their identities or whether the victims were among those killed or injured.

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom has since confirmed that he and his wife, first partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom, were connected to victims.

    “It turns out (we have) a lot of mutual friends,” Newsom said, without naming anyone directly. “Just learning some of my wife’s old family friends (were involved).”  

    The avalanche was the deadliest in California history and the fourth-deadliest in U.S. history

    The Placer County Sheriff’s Office said the bodies of the eight skiers found dead have not yet been removed because of weather conditions, and that crews have marked their locations with avalanche poles.

    California’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health told CBS News Sacramento that it was investigating Blackbird Mountain Guides, the company that led the skiers on a three-day backcountry excursion during conditions that had triggered an avalanche warning.  

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    Carlos E. Castañeda

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  • Missing skier found dead at resort near California’s Lake Tahoe

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    A 21-year-old skier who was reported missing at a Northern California ski resort was found dead Thursday morning, officials said.

    Deputies received a report of a possible missing person at Northstar California Resort around 11 p.m. Wednesday, the Placer County Sheriff’s Office said.

    Authorities quickly began investigating and located the man’s vehicle in the resort’s parking lot. Based on their investigation, the sheriff’s office said deputies determined the man had gone skiing earlier in the day and had not returned as expected.

    The Placer County Office of Emergency Management coordinated search efforts, activating the Tahoe Nordic Search and Rescue Team early Thursday morning. The search included 15 skiers, a snowcat and two snowmobilers. Northstar Ski Patrol members also assisted in the effort.

    At approximately 9 a.m., search crews located the man deceased in an area with trees, investigators said. He has been identified as Colin Kang of the San Francisco Bay Area city of Fremont.

    Additional details about the circumstances surrounding his death have not been released.

    This marked the third death at Northstar California Resort this month.

    On Sunday, A 53-year-old man from the San Francisco Bay Area died after crashing into another skier at the resort, and last Wednesday, a 26-year-old man from Los Angeles died on an advanced trail.

    Northstar California Resort, located north of Lake Tahoe, is just fewer than 29 miles southwest of the Castle Peak area of neighboring Nevada County, where an avalanche claimed the lives of several backcountry skiers this week. That avalanche has now been deemed the deadliest in California’s recorded history.

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    Richard Ramos

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  • 8 skiers dead after avalanche near California’s Lake Tahoe; 9th still missing

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    Authorities said eight of the nine skiers reported missing after an avalanche near California’s Lake Tahoe have been found dead, with the ninth skier still missing but also presumed deceased. 

    The avalanche was reported near Castle Peak in Nevada County, north of Boreal Mountain Ski Resort, around 11:30 a.m. Tuesday as a heavy snowstorm moved through Northern California, bringing blizzard conditions to higher elevations.

    A total of 15 backcountry skiers were involved in the avalanche, the Nevada County Sheriff’s Office reported, with six of those people surviving and being rescued from the site.

    Map of the area where the Feb. 17 avalanche took place. 

    Nine people were still missing as of Wednesday morning, officials said. Search efforts intensified on Wednesday as crews looked to take advantage of a break in the weather.

    The Nevada County Sheriff’s Office announced at a press conference later Wednesday morning that eight of the nine missing skiers had been found dead. Search efforts were still ongoing for the last missing skier, but sheriff’s officials said they are presuming that the missing person has also died due to the condition of the scene. 

    Blackbird Mountain Guides, which led the skiers into the backcountry, stated that the group was returning from a three-day trip at Frog Lake. The group included four ski guides and 11 clients, the company said. 

    Of the six people rescued, the sheriff’s office said two have been hospitalized for treatment. The sheriff’s office stated that the survivors were one man and five women, ranging in age from 30 to 55 years old, with one of the six people being a Blackbird Mountain Guide. One of the injured survivors was stabilized, authorities said, while the other was still receiving treatment. 

    Sheriff’s officials noted that none of the bodies of the eight people found dead have been removed at this time. Search crews have placed avalanche poles so that the bodies can be found again when conditions permit, officials said. 

    An Avalanche Warning, with the danger rated as “high,” was in effect at the time of Tuesday’s incident, according to the Sierra Avalanche Center. Even into Wednesday, search crews were dealing with elevated avalanche risks and treacherous conditions. 

    Officials underlined the danger of the backcountry where Tuesday’s avalanche took place, referencing the January avalanche that also killed a snowmobiler near Castle Peak

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    Cecilio Padilla

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  • Eight Backcountry Skiers Found Dead And 1 Still Missing After California Avalanche – KXL

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    NEVADA CITY, Calif. (AP) — Crews found the bodies of eight backcountry skiers and are searching for one more who remains missing after an avalanche in the mountains near Lake Tahoe, authorities said Wednesday, making it the deadliest U.S. avalanche in nearly half a century.

    Authorities have told the families the mission has moved from rescuing people to recovering bodies, Nevada County Sheriff Shannan Moon said during a news conference.

    Six others from the same group of skiers were rescued Tuesday. They were on a guided, three-day trek in Northern California’s Sierra Nevada as a monster winter storm pummeled the West Coast.

    “Someone saw the avalanche, yelled avalanche, and it overtook them rather quickly,” said Capt. Russell “Rusty” Greene, of the sheriff’s office.

    The bodies of the eight were fairly close together, Greene said. Three of those who died were guides on the trip. The crews have not yet been able to remove the victims from the mountain because of the extreme conditions, the sheriff said.

    The avalanche is the deadliest in the U.S. since 1981, when 11 climbers were killed on Mount Rainier, Washington. Each winter, 25 to 30 people die in avalanches in the U.S., according to the National Avalanche Center.

    An avalanche in the region killed a snowmobiler in January.

    Rescue party guided by beacons in dangerous conditions

    The skiers all had beacons that are able to send signals to rescuers, but it wasn’t clear if they were wearing avalanche bags, inflatable devices that can keep skiers near the surface, Greene said.

    While they waited to be rescued, the six survivors used equipment to shelter themselves and were trying to stay warm with temperatures dipping below freezing, Moon said. The survivors located three others who had died, Moon said.

    Rescuers used a snowcat to get within 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) of the survivors, then skied in carefully so they didn’t set off another avalanche, the sheriff said.

    One of those rescued remains in a hospital Wednesday, Moon said.

    The area near Donner Summit is one of the snowiest places in the Western Hemisphere and until just a few years ago was closed to the public. It sees an average of nearly 35 feet (10 meters) of snow a year, according to the Truckee Donner Land Trust, which owns a cluster of huts where the group was staying near Frog Lake.

    The Sierra Avalanche Center warned Wednesday that the risk of avalanche remains high and advised against travel in the area. Multiple feet of snowfall and gale force winds in recent days left the snowpack unstable and unpredictable, and more snow was predicted to fall, the center said.

    Skiers were heading for the trailhead when the avalanche struck

    Greene said authorities were notified about the avalanche by Blackbird Mountain Guides, which was leading the expedition, and the skiers’ emergency beacons. The sheriff’s office said Tuesday night that 15 backcountry skiers had been on the trip, not 16 as initially believed.

    The skiers were on the last day of a backcountry skiing trip and had spent two nights in the huts, said Steve Reynaud, an avalanche forecaster with the Sierra Avalanche Center. He said the area requires navigating rugged mountainous terrain. All food and supplies need to be carried to the huts.

    Reaching the huts in winter takes several hours and requires backcountry skills, avalanche training and safety equipment, the land trust says on its website. The area near Donner Summit was closed for nearly a century before it was reopened by the land trust and its partners in 2020.

    Donner Summit is named for the infamous Donner Party, a group of pioneers who resorted to cannibalism after getting trapped there in the winter of 1846-1847.

    Blackbird Mountain Guides said in a statement that the group, including four guides, was returning to the trailhead when the avalanche occurred.

    When asked what went through her mind as her staff and volunteers responded to the scene, Moon said she was hoping they would be able to make it there safely. Once they did, she said she was “immediately thinking of the folks that didn’t make it, and knowing our mission now is to get them home.”

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    Grant McHill

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  • Los Angeles man dies on advanced ski trail near Lake Tahoe

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    A Los Angeles man died in an accident outside a Northern California ski resort Friday morning, authorities confirmed Wednesday.

    Nicholas Kenworthy, 26, reportedly was traversing a difficult trail designed for experienced skiers when he died. Elise Soviar, Placer County sheriff’s communications manager, confirmed the 26-year-old was the victim of the accident.

    Kenworthy was skiing near the Northstar California Resort in Truckee, just outside Lake Tahoe.

    No information on the type of accident or injuries sustained by Kenworthy was available, according to Soviar.

    Northstar’s media contact number has been deactivated and an email to the resort was not immediately returned.

    The resort’s ski patrol initially responded to the injured skier, who was trekking through the rugged and advanced Martis Trail, according to the Sierra Sun, which covers the local community.

    The ski patrol handed over lifesaving duties to the Truckee Fire Department, according to the Sun. Kenworthy was pronounced dead, however, before reaching a local hospital.

    An email to the Truckee Fire Department was not immediately returned.

    The death happened four years after a previous tragedy near Northstar.

    Search teams located the body of 43-year-old Colorado native Rory Angelotta in an area north of the resort on Jan. 8, 2022. Angelotta was last seen Dec. 25, 2021, heading up a ski lift at the resort, according to the Placer County Sheriff’s Department.

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    Andrew J. Campa

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  • Multiple Tahoe athletes, including a 15-year-old, are named to US Olympic ski and snowboard team

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    2026 MILAN-CORTINA OLYMPICS. AND THIS MORNING, THE U.S. SKI AND SNOWBOARD TEAM HAS ANNOUNCED THE 97 ATHLETES WHO ARE GOING TO BE REPRESENTING THE U.S. IN NORTHERN ITALY. AND WE HAVE QUITE A FEW FROM THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AREA. SO WE’LL START WITH THE ALPINE TEAM. THREE WOMEN AND ONE MAN, ALL FROM TEAM PALISADES TAHOE. KEELY CASHMAN FROM STRAWBERRY HEADING BACK TO THE OLYMPICS. SO IS AJ HURT FROM CARNELIAN BAY AND NINA O’BRIEN OF SAN FRANCISCO. THOSE THREE GREW UP TOGETHER AND NOW WILL GO TO AN OLYMPICS TOGETHER. AS FOR THE MEN, BRYCE BENNETT OF TAHOE CITY ALSO GOING TO ANOTHER OLYMPICS IN CROSS COUNTRY. JAKE SCHOONMAKER OF TAHOE CITY IS AN OLYMPIAN ONCE AGAIN IN FREESKI WOMEN’S HALFPIPE. KATE GRAY OF CROWLEY LAKE AND THE MAMMOTH MOUNTAIN SKI TEAM, NOW AN OLYMPIAN AND SO IS 15 YEAR OLD ABBIE WINTERBERGER FROM TRUCKEE. SHE’S ON THE OLYMPIC FREESTYLE FREERIDE, AND SHE’S ALREADY BEING CALLED ONE OF THE RISING STARS OF THE SPORT. NOW LET’S GO TO THE SNOWBOARDERS. THREE MAMMOTH RIDERS ARE ON THE WOMEN’S HALFPIPE TEAM. THEY’RE LED BY TWO TIME OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST CHLOE KIM OF TORRANCE, ALONG WITH B KIM OUT OF PALOS VERDES AND OUR OWN MADDIE MASTRO OUT OF WRIGHTWOOD IN SLOPESTYLE. WELCOME TO THE OLYMPICS, HANNAH NORMAN OUT OF TRUCKEE JUST TURNED 2020, I THINK. AND IN SNOWBOARD CROSS. HANNAH PERCY OUT OF TRUCKEE AS WELL. SHE’S 18 AND THERE ARE A COUPLE OF VERY NOTABLE NAMES THAT ARE NOT ON THE LIST THIS MORNING. JAMIE ANDERSON, THE TWO TIME GOLD MEDALIST AT A SOUTH LAKE TAHOE TRYING TO COME BACK OUT OF AFTER A THREE YEAR BREAK, TRYING TO QUALIFY FOR A FOURTH OLYMPICS. HER NAME NOT ON THE LIST THIS MORNING. AND THEN ALSO DAVID WISE OF RENO, WHO HAD TWO GOLDS AND A SILVER AND WAS GOING FOR HIS FOURTH GAMES IN FREE SKI SLOPESTYLE. SO 97 ATHLETES, ROUGHLY 220 ATHLETES WILL GO. SO IT’S A HUGE NUMBER OF ATHLETES FROM SKI AND SNOWBOARD, AND FOUR OUT OF TEN TEAM USA ATHLETES TOTAL ARE SKIERS AND SNOWBOARDERS. SO THIS IS A HUGE LIST MAKING IT OFFICIAL TODAY. SO NOW IMAGINE BEING THE PARENTS OF THESE ATHLETES, THOSE WHO HAVE NOT TRIED TO BOOK ANYTHING YET, TRYING TO SCRAMBLE TO GO SEE THEIR KIDS. A LOT OF EMOTIONS FOR SURE. A LOT OF EMOTIONS. AND IF YOU GO BACK FOUR YEARS AGO, WE WERE STILL IN PANDEMIC RESTRICTIONS AND THOSE FAMILIES DIDN’T GET TO GO TO BEIJING. SO IT’S FOR THE FOR THESE ATHLETES, VERY JOYOUS, BUT ALSO

    Multiple Tahoe athletes, including a 15-year-old rising star, are named to US ski and snowboard team for the Milan Cortina Olympics

    Updated: 8:25 AM PST Jan 22, 2026

    Editorial Standards

    Northern California will be well-represented on the slopes for the Milan Cortina Olympics with multiple athletes from the Tahoe area competing. They include returning Olympians and rising stars. U.S. Ski & Snowboard on Thursday announced the full roster of 97 athletes who will represent Team USA in Northern Italy. Returning Olympians from the 2022 Beijing Olympics include Alpine skiers Keely Cashman from Strawberry, AJ Hurt from Carnelian Bay, and Bryce Bennett from Tahoe City. All are from the club Palisades Tahoe, along with Nina O’Brien, who is from San Francisco. The team also includes returning Olympic cross-county skier James “JC” Schoonmaker, who is from Lake Tahoe. For the women’s halfpipe in freeski, Kate Gray of Crowley Lake, representing the Mammoth Mountain Ski Team, and 15-year-old Abby Winterberger of Truckee, a member of the Olympic Valley Freestyle Free-Ride, have been named Olympians. Ahead of her Olympic debut, Winterberger is already being called one of the rising stars of the sport.Other first-time Olympians from Truckee are snowboarder Hahna Norman competing in slopestyle and Hanna Percy in snowboard cross. The women’s halfpipe snowboarding team includes three Mammoth riders: two-time gold medalist Chloe Kim from Torrance, Bea Kim from Palos Verdes, and Maddie Mastro from Wrightwood.Meanwhile, a decorated Olympian who grew up in Lake Tahoe, Jamie Anderson, did not make the cut. The snowboarder won two gold medals and a silver in previous Olympics and was aiming for a comeback after taking three years off from her sport to have two children.Another Olympian, David Wise of Reno, who has two gold medals and a silver, also failed to make the team. Outside of California competitors, this year’s Olympic team will feature skier Lindsay Vonn returning to racing at age 41 after a partial knee replacement, and Mikaela Shiffrin competing in her fourth Olympics. Shiffrin failed to win a medal in Beijing.Overall, the team has 50 women and 47 men who range in age from 15-year-old Winterberger to 44-year-old snowboardcross rider Nick Baumgartner. See the full list of athletes named to Team USA below, along with their hometowns, clubs, colleges, birthdates and past Olympic teams.2026 U.S. Olympic Alpine Team(Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)Women*Mary Bocock (Salt Lake City, UT; Rowmark Ski Academy; Dartmouth College; 10/7/2003)Keely Cashman (Strawberry, CA; Team Palisades Tahoe; Montana State University; 4/4/1999; 2022)Katie Hensien (Redmond, WA; Rowmark Ski Academy; University of Denver; 12/1/1999; 2022)AJ Hurt (Carnelian Bay, CA; Team Palisades Tahoe; Dartmouth College; 12/5/2000; 2022)Breezy Johnson (Victor, ID; Rowmark Ski Academy; 1/19/1996; 2018, 2022)Paula Moltzan (Prior Lake, MN; Buck Hill Ski Team/Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; University of Vermont; 4/7/1994; 2022)Nina O’Brien (Denver, CO; Burke Mountain Academy/Team Palisades Tahoe; Dartmouth College; 11/29/1997; 2022)Mikaela Shiffrin (Edwards, CO; Burke Mountain Academy/Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 3/13/1995; 2014, 2018, 2022)Lindsey Vonn (Vail, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail/Buck Hill Ski Team; 10/18/1984; 2002, 2006, 2010, 2018)Jacqueline Wiles (Aurora, OR; White Pass Ski Club; 7/13/1992; 2014, 2018, 2022)Isabella Wright (Salt Lake City, UT; Snowbird Sports Education Foundation; 2/10/1997; 2022)MenBryce Bennett (Tahoe City, CA; Team Palisades Tahoe; 7/14/1992; 2018, 2022)Ryan Cochran-Siegle (Starksboro, VT; Cochran’s/Mount Mansfield Ski & Snowboard Club; 3/27/1992; 2018, 2022) *Sam Morse (Carrabassett Valley, ME; Carrabassett Valley Academy; Dartmouth College; 5/27/1996) *Kyle Negomir (Littleton, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; Dartmouth College; 10/3/1998)River Radamus (Edwards, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 2/12/1998; 2022)*Ryder Sarchett (Sun Valley, ID; Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation; University of Colorado Boulder; 7/28/2003)2026 U.S. Olympic Cross Country Team(Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)WomenRosie Brennan (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Pacific University; Dartmouth College; 12/2/1988; 2018, 2022)Jessie Diggins (Afton, MN; Stratton Mountain School; 8/26/1991; 2014, 2018, 2022)*Lauren Jortberg (Boulder, CO; Mansfield Nordic Pro Team; Centre National d’entraînement Pierre-Harvey Team; Dartmouth College; 4/12/1997)*Kendall Kramer (Fairbanks, AK; Alaska Pacific University; University of Alaska Fairbanks; 6/26/2002)Julia Kern (Waltham, MA; Stratton Mountain School; Dartmouth College; 9/12/1997; 2022)Novie McCabe (Winthrop, WA; Alaska Pacific University; University of Utah; 12/15/2001; 2022)*Samantha “Sammy” Smith (Boise, ID; Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation; Stanford University; 9/22/2005)Hailey Swirbul (El Jebel, CO; Alaska Pacific University; University of Alaska Anchorage; 7/10/1998; 2022)Men*John Steel Hagenbuch (Ketchum, ID; Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation; Dartmouth College; 10/1/2001)*Zak Ketterson (Minneapolis, MN; Team Birkie; Northern Michigan University; 4/2/1997)*Zanden McMullen (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Pacific University; 5/31/2001)Ben Ogden (Burlington, VT; Stratton Mountain School; University of Vermont; 2/13/2000; 2022)James “JC” Schoonmaker (Lake Tahoe, CA; Alaska Pacific University; University of Alaska Anchorage; 8/12/2000; 2022)Gus Schumacher (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Pacific University; University of Alaska Anchorage; 7/25/2000; 2022)*Hunter Wonders (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Pacific University; 8/7/1998)*Jack Young (Jay, VT; Green Racing Project; Colby College; 12/17/2002)2026 U.S. Olympic Freeski Team(Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)HalfpipeWomen*Kate Gray (Crowley Lake, CA; Mammoth Mountain Freeski Team; 6/29/2006)*Svea Irving (Winter Park, CO; Winter Park Freeski Team; University of Colorado Boulder; 2/27/2002)*Riley Jacobs (Oak Creek, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; University of Colorado Denver; 8/14/2003) *Abby Winterberger (Truckee, CA; Olympic Valley Freestyle Freeride Team; 5/1/2010)MenAlex Ferreira (Aspen, CO; Aspen Valley Ski & Snowboard Club; 8/14/1994; 2018, 2022)Nick Goepper (Lawrenceburg, IN; Cork Tech Freeski; 3/14/1994; 2014, 2018, 2022)*Hunter Hess (Bend, OR; Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation; Salt Lake Community College; 10/1/1998)Birk Irving (Winter Park, CO; Winter Park Freeski Team; 7/26/1999; 2022)Slopestyle & Big AirWomenMarin Hamill (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah; 4/5/2001; 2022)*Rell Harwood (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah; 6/1/2001)*Grace Henderson (Madbury, NH; Waterville Valley BBTS; University of Utah; 4/28/2001)*Avery Krumme (Squamish, British Columbia; BC Freestyle Team; 8/23/2008)MenMac Forehand (Winhall, VT; Stratton Mountain School; 8/4/2001; 2022)Alex Hall (Salt Lake City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah; 9/21/1998; 2018, 2022)*Troy Podmilsak (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; 8/23/2004)*Konnor Ralph (Helena, MT; Wy’East Mountain Academy; Salt Lake Community College; 1/27/2003)2026 U.S. Olympic Freestyle Ski Team, Moguls & Aerials(Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)AerialsWomen*Kyra Dossa (Cleveland, OH; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah; 1/24/2004)Kaila Kuhn (Boyne City, MI; University of Utah; 4/8/2003; 2022)*Tasia Tanner (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard/Fly Freestyle; University of Utah; 7/26/2002)Winter Vinecki (Gaylord, MI; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah/St. Mary’s University School of Law; 12/18/1998; 2022)Men*Connor Curran (Cincinnati, OH; Park City Ski & Snowboard/Elite Aerial Development Program; Utah Valley University; 9/23/2004)*Quinn Dehlinger (Cincinnati, OH; Elite Aerial Development Program; Salt Lake Community College; 6/8/2002)*Derek Krueger (Cleveland, OH; Elite Aerial Development Program; University of Utah; 6/2/2003)Chris Lillis (Rochester, NY; Bristol Mountain Freestyle Team; University of Utah; 10/4/1998; 2018, 2022)MogulsWomenOlivia Giaccio (Redding, CT; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; Columbia University; 8/15/2000; 2022)Tess Johnson (Vail, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; Harvard Extension School; 6/19/2000; 2018)Jaelin Kauf (Alta, WY; Grand Targhee Ski & Snowboard Foundation/Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; University of Utah; 9/26/1996; Olympic Teams: 2018, 2022)*Elizabeth “Liz” Lemley (Vail, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; Oberlin College; 1/22/2006) Men*Charlie Mickel (Durango, CO; Wasatch Freestyle/Durango Winter Sports Club; University of Utah; 7/6/2004)Nick Page (Park City, UT; Wasatch Freestyle; 8/1/2002; 2022)Dylan Walczyk (Rochester, NY; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 6/25/1993; 2022)*Landon Wendler (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; Los Angeles Film School; 10/12/2000)2026 U.S. Olympic Nordic Combined Team(Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)MenBen Loomis (Eau Claire, WI; Flying Eagles Ski Club; DeVry University; 6/9/1998; 2018, 2022)*Niklas Malacinski (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; Colorado Mountain College; 12/7/2003)2026 U.S. Olympic Ski Jumping Team(Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)Women*Annika Belshaw (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; University of Utah; 6/13/2002)*Josie Johnson (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; 10/3/2006)*Paige Jones (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of North Dakota; 8/30/2002)MenKevin Bickner (Wauconda, IL; Norge Ski Club; 9/23/1996; 2018, 2022)*Jason Colby (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 3/30/2006)*Tate Frantz (Lake Placid, NY; New York Ski Education Foundation; 3/28/2005)2026 U.S. Olympic Snowboard Team(Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)HalfpipeWomen*Bea Kim (Palos Verdes, CA; Mammoth Snowboard Team; 1/25/2007)Chloe Kim (Torrance, CA; Mammoth Snowboard Team; 4/23/2000; 2018, 2022)Maddie Mastro (Wrightwood, CA; Mammoth Snowboard Team; 2/22/2000; 2018, 2022)*Maddy Schaffrick (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 4/29/1994)Men*Alessandro Barbieri (Portland, OR; Tahoe Select Snowboard Team; 10/5/2008)*Chase Blackwell (Longmont, CO; Summer Action Sports Club; 2/27/1999)Chase Josey (Hailey, ID; Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation; 3/31/1995; 2018, 2022)Jake Pates (Eagle, CO; Aspen Valley Ski & Snowboard Club; 7/30/1998; 2018)Parallel Giant SlalomWomen*Iris Pflum (Minneapolis, MN; G Team; 7/13/2003)MenCody Winters (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 4/20/2000; 2022)SlopestyleWomen*Lily Dhawornvej (Frisco, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 8/14/2009)*Hahna Norman (Truckee, CA; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 10/26/2004)*Jess Perlmutter (Millburn, NJ; Killington Mountain School; 12/2/2009)Men*Jake Canter (Evergreen, CO; Aspen Valley Ski & Snowboard Club; 7/19/2003)Sean FitzSimons (Hood River, OR; Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation; 9/22/2000; 2022)Red Gerard (Silverthorne, CO; 6/29/2000; 2018, 2022)*Ollie Martin (Wolcott, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 6/15/2008)Snowboard CrossWomenStacy Gaskill (Golden, CO; International Snowboard Training Center; University of Colorado Boulder; 5/21/2000; 2022)*Hanna Percy (Truckee, CA; Gould Academy Competition Program; 7/7/2007)*Brianna Schnorrbusch (Monroe Township, NJ; Gould Academy; University of Utah; 1/30/2006)Faye Thelen (Salt Lake City, UT; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; Westminster College; 3/24/1992; 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)MenNick Baumgartner (Iron River, MI; 12/17/1981; 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)*Nathan Pare (Bethel, ME; Gould Academy; 2/1/2005)Jake Vedder (Pinckney, MI; International Snowboard Training Center; 4/16/1998; 2022)Cody Winters (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 4/20/2000; 2022)*Denotes first-time Olympian See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    Northern California will be well-represented on the slopes for the Milan Cortina Olympics with multiple athletes from the Tahoe area competing. They include returning Olympians and rising stars.

    U.S. Ski & Snowboard on Thursday announced the full roster of 97 athletes who will represent Team USA in Northern Italy.

    Returning Olympians from the 2022 Beijing Olympics include Alpine skiers Keely Cashman from Strawberry, AJ Hurt from Carnelian Bay, and Bryce Bennett from Tahoe City. All are from the club Palisades Tahoe, along with Nina O’Brien, who is from San Francisco.

    The team also includes returning Olympic cross-county skier James “JC” Schoonmaker, who is from Lake Tahoe.

    For the women’s halfpipe in freeski, Kate Gray of Crowley Lake, representing the Mammoth Mountain Ski Team, and 15-year-old Abby Winterberger of Truckee, a member of the Olympic Valley Freestyle Free-Ride, have been named Olympians. Ahead of her Olympic debut, Winterberger is already being called one of the rising stars of the sport.

    Other first-time Olympians from Truckee are snowboarder Hahna Norman competing in slopestyle and Hanna Percy in snowboard cross.

    The women’s halfpipe snowboarding team includes three Mammoth riders: two-time gold medalist Chloe Kim from Torrance, Bea Kim from Palos Verdes, and Maddie Mastro from Wrightwood.

    Meanwhile, a decorated Olympian who grew up in Lake Tahoe, Jamie Anderson, did not make the cut. The snowboarder won two gold medals and a silver in previous Olympics and was aiming for a comeback after taking three years off from her sport to have two children.

    Another Olympian, David Wise of Reno, who has two gold medals and a silver, also failed to make the team.

    Outside of California competitors, this year’s Olympic team will feature skier Lindsay Vonn returning to racing at age 41 after a partial knee replacement, and Mikaela Shiffrin competing in her fourth Olympics. Shiffrin failed to win a medal in Beijing.

    Overall, the team has 50 women and 47 men who range in age from 15-year-old Winterberger to 44-year-old snowboardcross rider Nick Baumgartner.

    See the full list of athletes named to Team USA below, along with their hometowns, clubs, colleges, birthdates and past Olympic teams.


    2026 U.S. Olympic Alpine Team
    (Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)

    Women

    • *Mary Bocock (Salt Lake City, UT; Rowmark Ski Academy; Dartmouth College; 10/7/2003)
    • Keely Cashman (Strawberry, CA; Team Palisades Tahoe; Montana State University; 4/4/1999; 2022)
    • Katie Hensien (Redmond, WA; Rowmark Ski Academy; University of Denver; 12/1/1999; 2022)
    • AJ Hurt (Carnelian Bay, CA; Team Palisades Tahoe; Dartmouth College; 12/5/2000; 2022)
    • Breezy Johnson (Victor, ID; Rowmark Ski Academy; 1/19/1996; 2018, 2022)
    • Paula Moltzan (Prior Lake, MN; Buck Hill Ski Team/Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; University of Vermont; 4/7/1994; 2022)
    • Nina O’Brien (Denver, CO; Burke Mountain Academy/Team Palisades Tahoe; Dartmouth College; 11/29/1997; 2022)
    • Mikaela Shiffrin (Edwards, CO; Burke Mountain Academy/Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 3/13/1995; 2014, 2018, 2022)
    • Lindsey Vonn (Vail, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail/Buck Hill Ski Team; 10/18/1984; 2002, 2006, 2010, 2018)
    • Jacqueline Wiles (Aurora, OR; White Pass Ski Club; 7/13/1992; 2014, 2018, 2022)
    • Isabella Wright (Salt Lake City, UT; Snowbird Sports Education Foundation; 2/10/1997; 2022)

    Men

    • Bryce Bennett (Tahoe City, CA; Team Palisades Tahoe; 7/14/1992; 2018, 2022)
    • Ryan Cochran-Siegle (Starksboro, VT; Cochran’s/Mount Mansfield Ski & Snowboard Club; 3/27/1992; 2018, 2022)
    • *Sam Morse (Carrabassett Valley, ME; Carrabassett Valley Academy; Dartmouth College; 5/27/1996)
    • *Kyle Negomir (Littleton, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; Dartmouth College; 10/3/1998)
    • River Radamus (Edwards, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 2/12/1998; 2022)
    • *Ryder Sarchett (Sun Valley, ID; Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation; University of Colorado Boulder; 7/28/2003)

    2026 U.S. Olympic Cross Country Team
    (Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)
    Women

    • Rosie Brennan (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Pacific University; Dartmouth College; 12/2/1988; 2018, 2022)
    • Jessie Diggins (Afton, MN; Stratton Mountain School; 8/26/1991; 2014, 2018, 2022)
    • *Lauren Jortberg (Boulder, CO; Mansfield Nordic Pro Team; Centre National d’entraînement Pierre-Harvey Team; Dartmouth College; 4/12/1997)
    • *Kendall Kramer (Fairbanks, AK; Alaska Pacific University; University of Alaska Fairbanks; 6/26/2002)
    • Julia Kern (Waltham, MA; Stratton Mountain School; Dartmouth College; 9/12/1997; 2022)
    • Novie McCabe (Winthrop, WA; Alaska Pacific University; University of Utah; 12/15/2001; 2022)
    • *Samantha “Sammy” Smith (Boise, ID; Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation; Stanford University; 9/22/2005)
    • Hailey Swirbul (El Jebel, CO; Alaska Pacific University; University of Alaska Anchorage; 7/10/1998; 2022)

    Men

    • *John Steel Hagenbuch (Ketchum, ID; Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation; Dartmouth College; 10/1/2001)
    • *Zak Ketterson (Minneapolis, MN; Team Birkie; Northern Michigan University; 4/2/1997)
    • *Zanden McMullen (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Pacific University; 5/31/2001)
    • Ben Ogden (Burlington, VT; Stratton Mountain School; University of Vermont; 2/13/2000; 2022)
    • James “JC” Schoonmaker (Lake Tahoe, CA; Alaska Pacific University; University of Alaska Anchorage; 8/12/2000; 2022)
    • Gus Schumacher (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Pacific University; University of Alaska Anchorage; 7/25/2000; 2022)
    • *Hunter Wonders (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Pacific University; 8/7/1998)
    • *Jack Young (Jay, VT; Green Racing Project; Colby College; 12/17/2002)

    2026 U.S. Olympic Freeski Team
    (Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)

    Halfpipe
    Women

    • *Kate Gray (Crowley Lake, CA; Mammoth Mountain Freeski Team; 6/29/2006)
    • *Svea Irving (Winter Park, CO; Winter Park Freeski Team; University of Colorado Boulder; 2/27/2002)
    • *Riley Jacobs (Oak Creek, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; University of Colorado Denver; 8/14/2003)
    • *Abby Winterberger (Truckee, CA; Olympic Valley Freestyle Freeride Team; 5/1/2010)

    Men

    • Alex Ferreira (Aspen, CO; Aspen Valley Ski & Snowboard Club; 8/14/1994; 2018, 2022)
    • Nick Goepper (Lawrenceburg, IN; Cork Tech Freeski; 3/14/1994; 2014, 2018, 2022)
    • *Hunter Hess (Bend, OR; Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation; Salt Lake Community College; 10/1/1998)
    • Birk Irving (Winter Park, CO; Winter Park Freeski Team; 7/26/1999; 2022)

    Slopestyle & Big Air
    Women

    • Marin Hamill (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah; 4/5/2001; 2022)
    • *Rell Harwood (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah; 6/1/2001)
    • *Grace Henderson (Madbury, NH; Waterville Valley BBTS; University of Utah; 4/28/2001)
    • *Avery Krumme (Squamish, British Columbia; BC Freestyle Team; 8/23/2008)

    Men

    • Mac Forehand (Winhall, VT; Stratton Mountain School; 8/4/2001; 2022)
    • Alex Hall (Salt Lake City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah; 9/21/1998; 2018, 2022)
    • *Troy Podmilsak (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; 8/23/2004)
    • *Konnor Ralph (Helena, MT; Wy’East Mountain Academy; Salt Lake Community College; 1/27/2003)

    2026 U.S. Olympic Freestyle Ski Team, Moguls & Aerials

    (Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)

    Aerials
    Women

    • *Kyra Dossa (Cleveland, OH; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah; 1/24/2004)
    • Kaila Kuhn (Boyne City, MI; University of Utah; 4/8/2003; 2022)
    • *Tasia Tanner (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard/Fly Freestyle; University of Utah; 7/26/2002)
    • Winter Vinecki (Gaylord, MI; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of Utah/St. Mary’s University School of Law; 12/18/1998; 2022)

    Men

    • *Connor Curran (Cincinnati, OH; Park City Ski & Snowboard/Elite Aerial Development Program; Utah Valley University; 9/23/2004)
    • *Quinn Dehlinger (Cincinnati, OH; Elite Aerial Development Program; Salt Lake Community College; 6/8/2002)
    • *Derek Krueger (Cleveland, OH; Elite Aerial Development Program; University of Utah; 6/2/2003)
    • Chris Lillis (Rochester, NY; Bristol Mountain Freestyle Team; University of Utah; 10/4/1998; 2018, 2022)

    Moguls
    Women

    • Olivia Giaccio (Redding, CT; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; Columbia University; 8/15/2000; 2022)
    • Tess Johnson (Vail, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; Harvard Extension School; 6/19/2000; 2018)
    • Jaelin Kauf (Alta, WY; Grand Targhee Ski & Snowboard Foundation/Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; University of Utah; 9/26/1996; Olympic Teams: 2018, 2022)
    • *Elizabeth “Liz” Lemley (Vail, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; Oberlin College; 1/22/2006)

    Men

    • *Charlie Mickel (Durango, CO; Wasatch Freestyle/Durango Winter Sports Club; University of Utah; 7/6/2004)
    • Nick Page (Park City, UT; Wasatch Freestyle; 8/1/2002; 2022)
    • Dylan Walczyk (Rochester, NY; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 6/25/1993; 2022)
    • *Landon Wendler (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; Los Angeles Film School; 10/12/2000)

    2026 U.S. Olympic Nordic Combined Team
    (Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)

    Men

    • Ben Loomis (Eau Claire, WI; Flying Eagles Ski Club; DeVry University; 6/9/1998; 2018, 2022)
    • *Niklas Malacinski (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; Colorado Mountain College; 12/7/2003)

    2026 U.S. Olympic Ski Jumping Team

    (Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)

    Women

    • *Annika Belshaw (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; University of Utah; 6/13/2002)
    • *Josie Johnson (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; 10/3/2006)
    • *Paige Jones (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; University of North Dakota; 8/30/2002)

    Men

    • Kevin Bickner (Wauconda, IL; Norge Ski Club; 9/23/1996; 2018, 2022)
    • *Jason Colby (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 3/30/2006)
    • *Tate Frantz (Lake Placid, NY; New York Ski Education Foundation; 3/28/2005)

    2026 U.S. Olympic Snowboard Team
    (Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate; Past Olympic Teams)

    Halfpipe
    Women

    • *Bea Kim (Palos Verdes, CA; Mammoth Snowboard Team; 1/25/2007)
    • Chloe Kim (Torrance, CA; Mammoth Snowboard Team; 4/23/2000; 2018, 2022)
    • Maddie Mastro (Wrightwood, CA; Mammoth Snowboard Team; 2/22/2000; 2018, 2022)
    • *Maddy Schaffrick (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 4/29/1994)

    Men

    • *Alessandro Barbieri (Portland, OR; Tahoe Select Snowboard Team; 10/5/2008)
    • *Chase Blackwell (Longmont, CO; Summer Action Sports Club; 2/27/1999)
    • Chase Josey (Hailey, ID; Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation; 3/31/1995; 2018, 2022)
    • Jake Pates (Eagle, CO; Aspen Valley Ski & Snowboard Club; 7/30/1998; 2018)

    Parallel Giant Slalom
    Women

    • *Iris Pflum (Minneapolis, MN; G Team; 7/13/2003)

    Men

    • Cody Winters (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 4/20/2000; 2022)

    Slopestyle
    Women

    • *Lily Dhawornvej (Frisco, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 8/14/2009)
    • *Hahna Norman (Truckee, CA; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 10/26/2004)
    • *Jess Perlmutter (Millburn, NJ; Killington Mountain School; 12/2/2009)

    Men

    • *Jake Canter (Evergreen, CO; Aspen Valley Ski & Snowboard Club; 7/19/2003)
    • Sean FitzSimons (Hood River, OR; Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation; 9/22/2000; 2022)
    • Red Gerard (Silverthorne, CO; 6/29/2000; 2018, 2022)
    • *Ollie Martin (Wolcott, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 6/15/2008)

    Snowboard Cross
    Women

    • Stacy Gaskill (Golden, CO; International Snowboard Training Center; University of Colorado Boulder; 5/21/2000; 2022)
    • *Hanna Percy (Truckee, CA; Gould Academy Competition Program; 7/7/2007)
    • *Brianna Schnorrbusch (Monroe Township, NJ; Gould Academy; University of Utah; 1/30/2006)
    • Faye Thelen (Salt Lake City, UT; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; Westminster College; 3/24/1992; 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)

    Men

    • Nick Baumgartner (Iron River, MI; 12/17/1981; 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)
    • *Nathan Pare (Bethel, ME; Gould Academy; 2/1/2005)
    • Jake Vedder (Pinckney, MI; International Snowboard Training Center; 4/16/1998; 2022)
    • Cody Winters (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 4/20/2000; 2022)

    *Denotes first-time Olympian

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  • The best time to see Lake Tahoe isn’t summer. It’s fall

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    I’ve got a secret. Lake Tahoe doesn’t evaporate after Labor Day. It’s still there, in all its turquoise glory. But something else disappears – the crowds. In Autumn, the scenery is spectacular, the beaches are peaceful, and prices are lower. This is why locals like myself will tell you it’s the best time to visit. Here’s just a taste of what you’ll experience in Lake Tahoe during fall.

    Fewer crowds

    Sunset at Sand Harbor State Park

    Lake Tahoe gets crowded in summer. So crowded that traffic often slows to a crawl, if it even moves at all. This is rarely a problem in the fall, especially if you time your visit for a weekday instead of the weekend.

    In addition to fewer cars on the road, you’ll see fewer faces on the beaches and trails. It’s also easier to book campsites, hotel rooms, and find tables at local restaurants. Perhaps the best part is that there aren’t as many boats in the water, so you can kayak peacefully across and revel in the reflection of the mountains on the lake.

    Emerald Bay overlook reveals Fannette Island, South Lake Tahoe, California

    Emerald Bay State Park at sunset

    Fall is an ideal time to visit iconic spots like Sand Harbor State Park and Emerald Bay State Park without fighting for a parking spot.

    Fantastic weather

    Lake Tahoe, Nevada - September 24, 2023:  People bike and exercise on the Tahoe Rim trail hiking loop around the basin of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada mountains

    The temperatures are perfect for outdoor recreation

    Autumn is the ideal time to take advantage of outdoor recreation in Lake Tahoe, with temperatures warm enough to enjoy a day at the beach, but cool enough for activities like hiking, biking, and rock climbing.

    Fall temperatures are usually in the mid-70s in September, in the mid-60s in October, and drop to the low 50s in November. It’s the perfect weather for a day of hiking followed by a cold beer with views of the lake at Gar Woods Grill & Pier.

    Glorious scenery

    Female Hiker on Steel Bridge Crossing Burton Creek, Lake Forest Beach, Tahoe City, California, USA

    Lake Tahoe in fall

    Lake Tahoe’s clear waters are gorgeous year-round, but they are especially stunning when they reflect the yellows and golds of the aspens and cottonwoods in fall. The views are particularly rewarding on the Pope-Baldwin Bike Path or the trails around Spooner Lake.

    In early fall, ride the Heavenly Gondola to an observation deck with panoramic views of the lake. After Labor Day, the gondola is open Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays in September, and the first Friday, Saturday, and Sunday of October.

    Better prices

    Kayakers swish across clear blue water with snow capped mountains in the background

    The lake is peaceful in fall

    Lake Tahoe is at its most expensive during summer and peak ski season. In the fall, you can take advantage of discounts and specials at local hotels and resorts, so you’ll have more money to spend on meals and activities. Or, you can put that money aside for a return trip. Lake Tahoe is hard to resist.

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  • Discover North Lake Tahoe’s Secret Season

    Discover North Lake Tahoe’s Secret Season

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    </div></div>”],”filter”:{“nextExceptions”:”img, blockquote, div”,”nextContainsExceptions”:”img, blockquote, a.btn, a.o-button”},”renderIntial”:true,”wordCount”:350}”>

    Whether you’re looking for beautiful fall colors, a change of scenery for your remote office, or both, North Lake Tahoe is the perfect destination for any getaway. From its scenic hiking trails to the breathtaking lakeshore, the area’s vibrant fall colors just make everything better. To learn more about this awe-inspiring escape in the Sierra Nevada, we have some fall adventure tips from the North Lake Tahoe team. Here’s what they said.

    North Lake Tahoe’s vibrant fall colors just make everything better. (Photo: North Lake Tahoe, Chris Segal)

    Why Fall Is Special

    If you like vivid autumn colors, fun events, and open space, you’ll love North Lake Tahoe in the fall. During this secret season, the community celebrates with the Made in Tahoe Festival, two Oktoberfests (one in Tahoe City and one at Palisades Tahoe), a collection of food and wine festivals, and more. It’s also a perfect time to leaf-peep while exploring hiking or biking trails, taking a swing on a golf course, zipping down treetop ropes courses, walking along the beach, strolling around the destination’s 12 unique towns, hopping in the water to kayak or stand-up paddle—the opportunities are endless. Come for a weekend getaway or midweek escape to breathe it all in and experience Lake Tahoe in the secret season.

    Experience North Lake Tahoe in the fall.
    Experience North Lake Tahoe in the fall. (Photo: North Lake Tahoe, Granlibakken, Wade Snider)

    Take a Trail

    While there are hundreds of trails to explore, we collected the top 12 for hiking and biking in North Lake Tahoe to help narrow the selection. These are some of the trails that made the list:

    • Tahoe Rim Trail North Shore Segment: A well-known 165-mile point-to-point trail, the Tahoe Rim encircles the entirety of the Tahoe Basin. Hiking a short segment of the trail along the North Shore is a great way to experience fall color along Lake Tahoe.
    • Tunnel Creek Trail: The view at the top overlooks one of the best panoramic views in Lake Tahoe. This 4.7-mile out-and-back trail is also home to Monkey Rock.
    • Eagle Rock Trail: This short 0.7-mile trail only takes about a half hour but carries a huge payoff. From the top of Eagle Rock, you get an incredible view of Lake Tahoe and the surrounding mountains.
    • Vikingsholm Trail: Take this 1.7- mile trail down to the Emerald Bay beaches and the historic Vikingsholm Castle (open for tours May 25–September 30). Keep in mind that it’s a steep hike back to the parking area from the shore.
    Vikingsholm Trail
    Hike the Vikingsholm Trail down to the Emerald Bay beaches. (Photo: North Lake Tahoe, Myles McGuinness)

    Hiking and mountain biking are some of the most popular activities in the region, and it’s important to leave no trace by staying on the trail, packing out what you packed in, and giving wildlife space. Learn more and help Make a Clear Difference in the region.

    Get on the Water

    The crystal-blue waters of Lake Tahoe create a one-of-a-kind fall backdrop. From an early morning walk on the beach to a sunset dinner cruise, time spent on and near the lake creates truly unforgettable experiences. Kayaking and paddleboarding are favorites, and you can use the Lake Tahoe Water Trail to guide your journey along 72 miles of fun. The route connects designated launch and landing sites that feature restrooms and interpretive displays.

    For a truly unique experience, rent a clear-bottom kayak during the day, or paddle an LED-lighted kayak on a guided stargazing tour. And if you plan to bring your own watercraft, please wash, clean, and dry it before putting it into the lake to help prevent the spread of invasive species.

    North Lake Tahoe
    Get on the water in a clear bottom kayak. (Photo: North Lake Tahoe)

    Fishing along the lakeshore or on the river is a great activity for any age. You can also cast a line from a boat or kayak. Trout and salmon are common catches along the West Shore, in Sawmill Lake (reservations required), and at Martis Reservoir. Be sure you understand safe fish handling and catch-and-release practices.

    Try the Bites and Brews

    North Lake Tahoe is home to some of the most enticing dining options in Northern California and Nevada. And the beer scene isn’t too shabby either! Take your pick of more than 150 restaurants and breweries. Some spots will also welcome your four-legged companions.

    The ultimate resource for finding a frosty brew after an outdoor adventure? The Ale Trail. From most trailheads, there’s a world-class brewery, bar, or restaurant nearby. This means you can start your day working up a sweat and end it with regionally crafted refreshments. If rum is more to your liking, check out the Rum Trail—a collection of five restaurants and bars located around the North Lake Tahoe shoreline offering specialty rum cocktails.

    Ale Trail
    Drink tasty brews on the Ale Trail. (Photo: North Lake Tahoe, Ryan Salm Photography)

    Looking for the best bites around Lake Tahoe? Download this interactive map. Dine in or take your meal to enjoy at one of the many picnic tables along the beaches—just be sure to dispose of your trash in the designated receptacles.

    Adventure Deeper

    Midweek adventures offer more open space. With 12 unique towns, it can be hard to choose a base camp, but we’ve created a quiz and itineraries to help guide you to the best town for you. By extending your stay, you have time to explore more of North Lake Tahoe. If you need a hand in planning, we have your Tahoe Trifecta. Just spin the compass and uncover your ideal itinerary in the mountains, on the lake, and around town. Ultimately, an extended trip allows you to more freely explore the region, escape into nature, and feel rejuvenated.

    North Lake Tahoe
    Adventure with more open space. (Photo: North Lake Tahoe)

    North Lake Tahoe spans two states—California and Nevada—and boasts two dozen beaches, 11 downhill ski resorts, ten cross-country ski areas, hundreds of miles of biking and hiking trails, and communities filled with local artisans and shopping experiences. North Lake Tahoe is a 45-minute drive from Reno-Tahoe International Airport, two hours from Sacramento International Airport, and just over three hours from San Francisco International Airport. Visitor information centers are located at 100 North Lake Boulevard in Tahoe City, 8611 North Lake Boulevard in Kings Beach, and 969 Tahoe Boulevard in Incline Village. For more information, visit gotahoenorth.com.

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  • Man fatally shoots bear cub near Lake Tahoe, angering residents

    Man fatally shoots bear cub near Lake Tahoe, angering residents

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    The recent killing of a young black bear by a homeowner near Lake Tahoe has infuriated residents, including neighbors who dispute the man’s story.

    The fatal shooting happened around 1:30 p.m. on Memorial Day in an unincorporated neighborhood of El Dorado County, about 2 miles south of Lake Tahoe Airport.

    Steve Gonzalez, a spokesman for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, said the man told investigators he was in his living room with his dog when a bear entered the home.

    “He tried getting up and scaring off the bear by yelling at it and waving his arm, but the bear was acting in a menacing fashion,” Gonzalez said. “So, he retrieved his rifle that was nearby and shot the bear twice.”

    A California Fish and Wildlife warden investigated the shooting of the young bear, and no charges were filed.

    (Bogdan Yamkovenko)

    He said the wounded bear ran off and climbed up a tree — but fell to the ground because of its injuries.

    “The man approached the bear, saw that it was suffering and humanely euthanized it,” Gonzalez said. The man was not injured.

    Gonzalez said a Fish and Wildlife warden investigated the shooting, and no charges were filed.

    But the killing of the young bear has angered some residents, including Ann Bryant, director of the Bear League, a nonprofit based in the Lake Tahoe Basin.

    She said two members of the league were sent to the neighborhood to document what had occurred after receiving a call from a distraught neighbor who had witnessed the shooting.

    Bryant said the team members learned from the neighbors that the bear was never completely inside the house and that the homeowner had previously shot another bear.

    She said team members attempted to speak to the warden but were mostly ignored. The shooting happened, she noted, at a time of year when young bears are parting from their mothers and learning to live on their own.

    When she learned that the warden concluded that the shooting was self-defense and sought no criminal charges, she was livid.

    “They believe him rather than all the neighbors who saw it and who know him and who have heard his discussions about how he feels about bears and know about the other killing,” she said. “It’s disappointing the department of wildlife would just turn a blind eye.”

    Gonzalez said he did not know whether the homeowner had been involved in other bear shootings.

    A neighbor who witnessed the shooting, Bogdan Yamkovenko, 43, said the small bear had spent most of the day in the neighborhood. He said it was about 1:30 p.m. when he noticed the bear come down from a tree he was napping on.

    At the time, Yamkovenko was standing in the rear upstairs deck of his home when he noticed the little bear standing by his neighbor’s back door. He said he tried to make noises using his barbecue grill but the bear did not react.

    Shortly after, he saw the bear poke his head inside the neighbor’s home, suggesting that the door was left halfway open or opened all the way.

    “He inched his way in, getting further and further inside, but he never went all the way in,” he said. “You always saw a part of the bear.”

    He then saw the bear step back, turn around, run off and climb up the tree he had been napping on earlier.

    “That’s when I heard the first shot,” he said.

    Yamkovenko ran down to his neighbor’s house, hoping to get him to stop shooting. As he made his way around his neighbor’s house, he heard a second shot.

    When Yamkovenko reached his neighbor, he told him to stop shooting and that the Fish and Wildlife Department would take care of the bear.

    “He said: ‘Nah, I need to put it out of its misery.’”

    Yamkovenko said all three gunshots he heard happened outside, but when the warden came to speak to him, he was told that the neighbor said he had fired four times.

    The warden “told us something didn’t add up about the neighbor’s story because the neighbor kept saying there were four shots and that he shot the bear inside the house,” Yamkovenko said.

    When he learned that the case was closed, Yamkovenko called the warden, furious. He said the warden has not returned his call.

    Gonzalez said he had heard claims about the bear not being inside the house but defended the warden’s findings.

    “He’s a trained officer, a state police officer and has taken an oath to uphold his duties,” Gonzalez said of the warden. “And you know, people who work for Fish and Wildlife are dedicated to preserving wildlife for future generations.

    “I trust him. We trust him, we have a lot of confidence in him,” he added. “He went out there to personally investigate it and found what the homeowner was saying was true and decided there was no need to go further than this.”

    Bryant said she will continue to look into the matter until there is justice for the bear.

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    Ruben Vives

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  • California’s first Black land trust fights climate change, makes the outdoors more inclusive

    California’s first Black land trust fights climate change, makes the outdoors more inclusive

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    Jade Stevens stands at the edge of a snowy cliff and takes in the jaw-dropping panorama of the Sierra.

    Peaks reaching more than a mile high form the backdrop to Bear Valley, a kaleidoscope of green pastures mixed with ponderosa pines, firs, cedars and oak trees.

    Stevens, 34, is well aware that some of her fellow Black Americans can’t picture themselves in places like this. Camping, hiking, mountain biking, snow sports, venturing to locales with wild animals in their names — those are things white people do.

    As co-founder of the 40 Acre Conservation League, California’s first Black-led land conservancy, she’s determined to change that perception.

    Darryl Lucien snowshoes near Lake Putt.

    The nonprofit recently secured $3 million in funding from the state Wildlife Conservation Board and the nonprofit Sierra Nevada Conservancy to purchase 650 acres of a former logging forest north of Lake Tahoe. It will be a haven for experienced Black outdoor lovers and novices alike.

    The land trust, almost by necessity, has both an environmental and a social mission, Stevens says as she leads a tour of the parcels straddling Interstate 80.

    The most obvious goal for the property is to help the state reach a target of protecting 30% of its open space by 2030 — as part of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s overall climate and conservation initiative.

    Given that Black Americans historically have not enjoyed equal access to national parks and wilderness recreation areas — and have often been deprived of the chance to steward large open spaces because of discriminatory land policies — the purchase carries immense cultural importance too.

    The group’s name derives from Union Gen. William T. Sherman’s unfulfilled promise to grant some emancipated slaves “40 acres and a mule” to help them start over after the Civil War.

    An avid cyclist, Stevens is part of a growing movement among environmentalists, outdoor enthusiasts and naturalists who believe that safeguarding the ecosystem, promoting wellness and confronting historical injustices go hand-in-hand.

    Although surveys show that Black people care as much about climate change and protecting the environment as other Americans, these issues aren’t necessarily top of mind in a era when racial strife, police violence and economic inequities command more attention.

    Clouds hover over a bright blue lake surrounded by evergreens. Snowy mountains rise in the background.

    Lake Putt is the main attraction among the the 40 Acre League’s recently purchased parcels.

    How can you heed the call of the wild when life in your own backyard presents so many challenges? Stevens, a marketing professor at Cal State Dominguez Hills who lives in a historically Black neighborhood in Los Angeles — 385 miles to the south — can appreciate why some might feel this way.

    The 70-mile drive from Sacramento, the state capital, feels like a journey to another dimension, one where Black people make up only about 1% of the population.

    A Trump 2024 sign greets you upon leaving Sacramento’s suburbs and entering Placer County. Winding past Gold Rush-era towns, forests and rocky outcroppings, the elevation soon rises to 3,000 feet, 4,000 feet and finally 5,000 feet.

    At Emigrant Gap, Stevens sits at the edge of Lake Putt and smiles like a woman on top of the world. The lake is the main attraction among the conservancy’s parcels and it’s the body of water motorists see on the right as they head toward Nevada.

    The water is so still you can see a perfect reflection of the snow-capped ridges.

    A woman walks over a bridge on a forested path.

    Jade Stevens walks over a bridge in Emigrant Gap.

    This is also an ideal spot for Stevens to envision all that the 40 Acre group wants to do on this land, from helping to protect species such as southern long-toed salamanders and foothill yellow-legged frogs to helping humans who don’t see themselves as nature or wildlife lovers develop a new appreciation for California’s fragile ecosystem.

    “These plants, everything here, they all rely on each other,” she says. “I haven’t brought my family out here yet, but just from them seeing what I’m doing, it’s already sparking conversation.”

    Trudging in snowshoes alongside Stevens is Darryl Lucien, an attorney for the 40 Acre group who has acted as a liaison between the nonprofit and officials in local and state government.

    The land trust isn’t as disconnected from Black Californians as some might think, Lucien says.

    Next to the lake, a spillway flows into a stream that the Department of Water Resources refers to as Blue Canyon Creek.

    Creek waters churn over a fallen tree.

    Blue Canyon Creek runs through land recently purchased by the 40 Acre Conservation League, California’s first Black-led land conservancy.

    Waters from Blue Canyon Creek eventually flow into the North Fork of the American River, then the Sacramento River, and then the California delta, where some flows will be channeled into the State Water Project, “which eventually finds its way down to Los Angeles,” Lucien says.

    A look of racial pride washes over Lucien, 38, when he contemplates the possibility that these waters might reach the homes of Black Angelenos.

    “Little do they know their water starts on Black land,” he says. “You’re standing at the source, baby.”

    It has been less than a year since state Assemblymember Mike Gipson, a Democrat from South L.A. County and an early champion of the nonprofit, presented the group with a check to purchase the land. The planned habitat restoration will take time, but Stevens already has other big ideas.

    Gazing across the lake to the southern shore, Stevens sees a location for a nature center that can hold environmental education classes and double as a rentable lodge for gatherings.

    She daydreams about installing a pier for fishing, lookout points along the shore and adult treehouses for glamping among conifers so tall they don’t fit in a camera’s viewfinder.

    Just beyond the southern shore there are old timber-company clearings which could someday be converted into trails that hikers can use to reach the adjacent Tahoe National Forest.

    “This is an area where a lot of community building will take place,” Stevens says. “We’re hoping that everyone finds at least one thing that makes them feel welcome on this property.”

    A hilltop view of a clearing in a forest.

    The 40 Acre Conservation League has secured $3 million in funding from the state Wildlife Conservation Board and the nonprofit Sierra Nevada Conservancy to purchase 650 acres of a former logging area north of Lake Tahoe.

    “Welcome” is not a word that has historically greeted Black people in the nation’s rural spaces and wilderness parks, says KangJae “Jerry” Lee, a social and environmental justice researcher and assistant professor in the University of Utah’s Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism.

    Lee notes the irony that most Black Americans descend from enslaved Africans who were stolen from their homelands specifically for their expertise in land stewardship and farming. Engaging with the outdoors was anything but a foreign concept.

    “Some of them had better skill sets than the European colonists,” Lee says.

    Black people built whole towns in the Great Plains and the West — including Allensworth, in Tulare County — though many were overrun by white mobs, seized or suffered decline due to a lack of equal access to resources such as water.

    Some of the first rangers stationed at Yosemite and Sequoia national parks were Black, yet the reality is that the national park system was originally designed as way for white visitors to enjoy nature’s splendor, Lee says.

    In response, Black-owned resorts catering to an African American clientele sprang up in the early 20th century — including in Val Verde, a “black Palm Springs” an hour’s drive north of Los Angeles; at Lake Elsinore near Riverside; and at Manhattan Beach.

    The parks ostensibly welcome all today, but studies show that Black Americans are among the least likely of any racial group to visit them.

    “Black people inherently had a deep, deep connection to the land,” Lee says.”That relationship has been severed over centuries.”

    Stevens reflects on this painful history as she talks about the group’s plan to acquire other lands throughout California, including open spaces closer to L.A.

    Recreation and conservation aren’t the only imperatives at Emigrant Gap.

    Stevens pulls out a copy of a handwritten letter she received from a Black man from L.A. who is an inmate at San Quentin. He saw a TV report about the land purchase and felt inspired by its mission. He writes about how exposure to nature and recreation can help steer Black and brown teens away from gangs and violence, and out of the criminal justice system. Stevens agrees.

    The property will be a small-business incubator too. The nonprofit intends to help Black and brown entrepreneurs develop sustainable, outdoor-oriented ventures such as hiking excursions — fostering generational wealth in the process.

    “How we get back to this truth of appreciating nature, being connected to the outdoors, is our story to tell,” Stevens says.

    One local ally wants to help the group shift the narrative around Black people and nature — Cindy Gustafson, who sits on the Placer County Board of Supervisors.

    Gustafson also serves on the Sierra Nevada Conservancy, which awarded the league $750,000 to help purchase the land.

    A man and woman walk along a snow-covered earthen dam.

    The 40 Acre League’s Jade Stevens, left, and Darryl Lucien walk along an earthen dam at Lake Putt.

    Gustafson, who is white, appreciates the league’s desire to help Northern Californians manage forested lands, which have been devastated in recent years by deadly and costly wildfires. Fires have grown more and more severe due to rising global temperatures, posing a greater risk to flora, fauna and residents in cities and rural areas alike.

    “Many of us haven’t had the experiences or the background to understand the nature of these forests and how important they are to our climate, our environment,” Gustafson says. “Having new stewards is really important, as is diversity. It’s a sign of hope for me in these divisive times. … Taking care of this land takes us all.”

    Stevens seems undaunted by the challenge of persuading reluctant Black Californians to view Emigrant Gap as a setting where they can celebrate their culture while learning about the ecosystem.

    Her pitch is a simple one:

    “Here,” Stevens says, “you’re safe.”

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    Tyrone Beason

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  • Berkeley man run over while pushing truck on snowy Tahoe street

    Berkeley man run over while pushing truck on snowy Tahoe street

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    A 60-year-old Berkeley man suffered major injuries when a pickup truck he was helping to push on a snowy Tahoe street rolled over him, the California Highway Patrol said.

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  • Blizzard hits California and Nevada, shutting interstate and leaving thousands without power

    Blizzard hits California and Nevada, shutting interstate and leaving thousands without power

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    A powerful blizzard raged overnight into Saturday in the Sierra Nevada as the biggest storm of the season shut down a long stretch of Interstate-80 in California and gusty winds and heavy rain hit lower elevations, leaving tens of thousands of customers without power.

    Up to 10 feet of snow is expected in some areas. The National Weather Service in Reno said late Friday it expects the heaviest snow to arrive after midnight, continuing with blizzard conditions and blowing snow through Saturday that could reduce visibility to one-quarter mile or less.

    “High to extreme avalanche danger” is expected in the backcountry through Sunday evening throughout the central Sierra, including the greater Lake Tahoe area, the weather service said.

    California authorities on Friday shut down 100 miles of I-80 due to “spin outs, high winds, and low visibility.” They had no estimate when the freeway would reopen from the California-Nevada border just west of Reno to near Emigrant Gap, California.

    APTOPIX California Blizzard
    A lone camper truck moves north bound on the I-80 at the Donner Pass Exit on Friday, March 1, 2024, in Truckee, California. 

    Andy Barron / AP


    Pacific Gas & Electric reported around 10 p.m. Friday that 24,000 households and businesses were without power. More than 25 million people are under winter weather alerts as the storm wallops the area. 

    A tornado touched down Friday afternoon in Madera County and caused some damage to an elementary school, said Andy Bollenbacher, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service Hanford.

    Some of the ski resorts that shut down Friday said they planned to remain closed on Saturday to dig out with an eye on reopening Sunday, but most said they would wait to provide updates Saturday morning.

    Palisades Tahoe, the largest resort on the north end of Tahoe and site of the 1960 Winter Olympics, said it hoped to reopen some of the Palisades slopes at the lowest elevation on Saturday but would close all chairlifts for the second day at neighboring Alpine Meadows due to forecasts of “heavy snow and winds over 100 mph.” 

    “We have had essential personnel on-hill all day, performing control work, maintaining access roads, and digging out chairlifts, but based on current conditions, if we are able to open at all, there will be significant delays,” Palisades Tahoe said Friday on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    The storm began barreling into the region on Thursday. A blizzard warning through Sunday morning covers a 300-mile stretch of the mountains.

    California Blizzard
    Workers clear sidewalks with snow blowers during a snowstorm, Friday, March 1, 2024, in Truckee, Calif.

    Brooke Hess-Homeier / AP


    Some ski lovers raced up to the mountains ahead of the storm.

    Daniel Lavely, an avid skier who works at a Reno-area home/construction supply store, was not one of them. He said Friday that he wouldn’t have considered making the hour-drive to ski on his season pass at a Tahoe resort because of the gale-force winds.

    But most of his customers Friday seemed to think the storm wouldn’t be as bad as predicted, he said.

    “I had one person ask me for a shovel,” Lavely said. “Nobody asked me about a snowblower, which we sold out the last storm about two weeks ago.”

    Meteorologists predict as much as 10 feet of snow is possible in the mountains around Lake Tahoe by the weekend, with 3 to 6 feet in the communities on the lake’s shores and more than a foot possible in the valleys on the Sierra’s eastern front, including Reno.

    Yosemite National Park closed Friday and officials said it would remain closed through at least noon Sunday.

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  • 7-year-old boy from the Tahoe area becomes a snowboarding sensation

    7-year-old boy from the Tahoe area becomes a snowboarding sensation

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    A few years ago, an Instagram video of a 4-year-old boy snowboarding like an expert at Palisades Tahoe aired on news outlets nationwide.

    That boy, now seven years old, continues to impress. He’s entering and winning snowboard competitions in his age group and shows no sign of stopping.

    His name is Leland Vogt. As a snowboarder, he goes by the nickname “Leland the Falcon,” and he has a growing following on an Instagram account managed by his dad, Chuck. 

    FOX40.com recently spent a day with the father and son on the slopes of Palisades Tahoe.

    “I drove into this Valley with a beat-up Subaru, a stack of snowboards and a box of power bars, and I had five hundred bucks in my wallet,” Chuck said of his early days at Lake Tahoe. “And I was the happiest guy ever. And the same with my wife. She was born and raised here.”

    Chuck and his wife, Bella, are both longtime snowboarders. Chuck is the founder of a local skateboard company, Tahoe Longboards.

    So it was only natural the couple would want to share their love of boarding with their boy, but they never imagined how early and naturally he would follow in their boot steps.

    Before he even turned two, Leland was riding a skateboard in the summer, then happily and confidently snowboarding with his mom and dad in the winter.

    “He was completely balanced and just went straight down the hill,” Chuck recalled. “I was like, ‘No way!’ Literally, we were so excited.”

    Leland keeps up with his studies through home school, but his passion is on the powder.

    “I want to be a pro snowboarder when I grow up,” he told FOX40.com.

    For this energetic seven-year-old, any night of the winter is like the night before a trip to Disneyland. 

    “Like, I couldn’t go to sleep because I just wanted to snowboard,” Leland explained. 

    Leland already has several big-name sponsors that supply his equipment: Akova Gear, Bern Helmets, Pit Viper Sunglasses, and Wigwam Socks. Truckee Boardhouse covers the cost of his season pass to Palisades. Kon Tiki Chips is also a sponsor.

    But nobody is pressuring Leland to compete. The decision is his.

    “Being a dad in any sport, and a coach, you don’t want to push your kid so hard that they hate the sport,” Chuck said. “I’ve seen it happen with other parents. Any competition he doesn’t want to do, I’m going to be proud of him either way. But once he commits, then I’m the coach. I’m like, ‘Alright, you want to do this, this is what you got to do.’”

    For safety on the slopes, Leland wears a helmet and a bright orange outfit. You can easily see him, but good luck keeping up with Leland the Falcon. This reporter followed Leland and Chuck down the mountain on a snowboard. Despite my best efforts, I lagged behind.

    “How can I get better?” I asked Leland at the end of the day.

    “By maybe just having confidence,” the boy advised. He is observant and wise beyond his years.

    Experts on the mountain are taking notice of Leland’s talent. Those include Chris “Uncle E” Ernst who has experience as a professional skier and a snow sports announcer for the X Games and Olympics.

    “I’ve seen it in Shaun White,” Ernst told FOX40.com. “I saw it in the way that Chloe Kim was brought up.”

    Ernst described Leland’s level of talent and focus at such a young age as something rare.

    “I’ve watched hundreds if not thousands of people come up through the ranks,” Ernst said. “And I have announced a lot of them, and this is something special that we’re seeing.”

    There’s something else very special going on here. This is not just the story of a talented kid. This is also about the connection between a father and son, and their priceless time together on the mountain. You see it in the natural and loving way they interact.

    “Life is so short,” Chuck reflected. “If you can just share a few years with your child and be in that same rhythm with them, it’s so awesome. I’m going to try to keep snowboarding into my 70s, hopefully. And if he keeps at it, maybe he’ll be on the podium on something bigger and give me a shoutout and give Mom a shoutout. That would be cool.”



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    Dennis Shanahan

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  • California ski resorts look to the latest storm for snow to help kick off the season

    California ski resorts look to the latest storm for snow to help kick off the season

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    As skiers and snowboarders flock to the Lake Tahoe and the Eastern Sierra slopes this holiday weekend, National Weather Service meteorologists say the latest storm is expected to drop only a limited amount of snow in Southern California.

    The only area that could record even as much as 1 to 2 inches of snow over the weekend is the high mountain peaks of the Eastern San Gabriel Mountains, said John Dumas, meteorologist with the National Weather Service.

    In a post on X, formerly Twitter, operators of the Mt. Baldy Resort in the San Gabriel Mountains, said they expect to open their snow play area Saturday and Sunday as well as a chair lift “through the holidays.”

    “We expect more snow after Christmas through the New Year,” according to the post.

    Big Bear Mountain Resort in the San Bernardino Mountains is expected to see rain and snow flurries Friday evening but should have little to no snow accumulation over the weekend.

    Looking out of his office window and seeing blue skies, Justin Kanton, Big Bear’s public relations director, said the limited trails open for skiing should remain open over the weekend, and the amount of snow in the area has been great so far for visitors, especially students on winter vacation.

    As the Big Bear resort waits what the storm might bring, Katon cautioned visitors to prepare ahead of traveling to the area by checking the weather report, looking for road closures and identifying whether snow chains are necessary for travel.

    “What [you] don’t want is to get halfway up the hill and CHP turns [you] around because [you] don’t have the right kind of traction,” he said.

    Other parts of the state have already received enough snow to kick off the ski season.

    Over the next three days Mammoth Mountain in the Eastern Sierra is predicting about three inches of snowfall. The National Weather Service forecast for the Lake Tahoe area is partly cloudy with a slight chance of snow Friday, Saturday and Monday. Lake Tahoe’s resorts are reporting between six and 48 inches of base, with higher-elevation resorts operating up to third to a half of all trails.

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    Karen Garcia

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  • Ex-MLB pitcher arrested in killing of father-in-law, shooting of mother-in-law in Lake Tahoe

    Ex-MLB pitcher arrested in killing of father-in-law, shooting of mother-in-law in Lake Tahoe

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    A former Major League Baseball pitcher has been arrested in connection with the killing of his wife’s father and the shooting of her mother two years ago in Lake Tahoe, according to authorities.

    Danny Serafini, 49, who last played for the Colorado Rockies in 2007, was arrested Friday in Nevada along with Samantha Scott, 33, on suspicion of killing 70-year-old Robert Spohr and attempting to murder 68-year-old Wendy Wood, according to the Placer County Sheriff’s Office.

    Spohr and Wood were the parents of Serafini’s wife, Erin, according to his sister-in-law, Adrienne Spohr.

    “I am beyond grateful for the hard work and dedication of the Placer County Sheriff’s Department and District Attorney’s office,” Spohr wrote in a statement to the San Francisco Chronicle. “They worked tirelessly for over two years to ensure that this case was solved. They never gave up, and that has meant the world to me and my family.”

    Wood was hospitalized and survived the shooting, but died by suicide a year later, Spohr told the Chronicle.

    Serafini was arrested in Winnemucca, Nev., while Scott was arrested in Las Vegas. The Placer County Sheriff’s Office is awaiting the duo’s extradition.

    The killing occurred June 5, 2021, when deputies responded to a 911 call from a residence in Homewood, a neighborhood in North Lake Tahoe. They found Robert Spohr dead from a single gunshot wound and Wood, who had also been shot, but was still alive.

    Video surveillance from nearby showed a man wearing a hooded sweatshirt, a face covering and a backpack while he was walking to the house hours before the killing, the Sheriff’s Office said.

    The Sheriff’s Office and the Placer County district attorney’s office investigated the case for the next two years.

    “The information and evidence detectives gathered led them to identify Serafini and Scott as the suspects; both suspects are known to each other and to the victims,” the Sheriff’s Office said in a news release.

    Serafini’s major league career spanned more than a decade — 1996 to 2007 — but he bounced frequently between the majors and minors. He also pitched for the Minnesota Twins, Chicago Cubs, San Diego Padres, Pittsburgh Pirates and Cincinnati Reds.

    He had a 15-16 record with a 6.04 earned-run average.

    Serafini also ran a bar called the Bullpen Bar in Sparks, Nev., which was featured in the reality TV show “Bar Rescue” in 2015. In the episode, host Jon Taffer says that Serafini was in debt and had lost his “$14 million fortune through a series of bad investments and a bitter divorce settlement.”

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    Noah Goldberg

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  • ‘Camp’ Contemporary At Private Lake Tahoe Enclave Delivers The Best Of Everything Outdoors

    ‘Camp’ Contemporary At Private Lake Tahoe Enclave Delivers The Best Of Everything Outdoors

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    A home for sale in a sought-after private ski and golf community near Lake Tahoe hits all the right notes: the right lot, the right design and the right setting. It reflects a contemporary style that has been widely adopted in the community.

    The property at 9507 Wawona Court is located in Martis Camp, a luxury private enclave of around 650 homes built on wooded slopes just south of Truckee, California. A decade ago, a story in Forbes magazine declared it “possibly the best four-season private community in the U.S.” in part because of the lavish lifestyle amenities (golf course, private access to Northstar California ski resort and Lake Tahoe beach club to name a few).

    Architect Keith Kelly of Kelly & Stone Architects, which has offices in the Lake Tahoe area, says his firm created a design for Martis Camp homes that buyers respond to – and one that has created an enduring look in the community.

    Just don’t call it “mountain modern.”

    “That ‘modern’ term gets thrown around a lot,” Kelly says. He prefers the term “mountain contemporary,” pointing out that “modern” is all about form and minimalist architecture. “Our houses are rich in detail and have a lot of the same materials you would use on homes here, whether contemporary or traditional.”

    Kelly’s firm built one of the first homes in Martis Camp in 2007 and since has completed more than 40 others. He was the project architect on the Wawona Court home in 2017 that sold as a lot with ready-made plans, an enticement for buyers who maybe couldn’t see the potential of what a home in the woods could look like.

    “We worked with the developer and created a design that showcased what could be done on four or five lots,” he says. “They sold almost instantly.”

    The exterior of the Wawona Court house features shed roofs pitched at angles that tilt in different directions, giving the sight lines a fluid feel. Floor-to-ceiling glass walls inside put nature front and center. With roomy lots a hallmark at Martis Camp, the home has the feel of being away from everything and surrounded by forest. (Kelly notes that the houses his firm designs involve very little landscaping because they work with the natural setting.)

    The house has five bedrooms with en-suite bathrooms in 4,339 square feet. The primary bedroom and one other bedroom are on the main floor while three other bedrooms, a den and large balcony are located upstairs. The open-plan living room and dining room open out to the outdoors where a wide porch capitalizes on the surrounding forest and views. The ample kitchen has a granite island with seating for casual meals.

    There’s also plenty of space inside and out for entertaining with an outdoor kitchen and fire pit on a patio as well as an outdoor hot tub.

    Martis Camp is a retreat with natural privacy and a laid-back vibe. It’s mostly a second-home community for the ultrawealthy as average home sales in the first quarter of 2023 was $8.6 million.

    The lifestyle amenities underscore the heart of what makes “camp” life so appealing, starting with a Tom Fazio golf course and a “lost library” that requires a hike into the woods (coffee and cookies are always waiting). A massive Family Barn was added In 2009 and brought a movie theater, bowling alley, basketball court, swimming complex and outdoor amphitheater, which hosts a summer concert series and seasonal events.

    The camp opened Lookout Lodge in 2012 to provide residents with private access to Northstar California ski resort and, a year later, a Lake Tahoe Beach Shack on the shores of the landmark lake about 12 miles away.

    Listing agent Steve Kegel of Tahoe Mountain Realty says imagination, attention to detail, lifestyle amenities and the architectural components of Martis Camp give it a fairy tale feel. “It’s an anomaly,” he says. “Owners become ambassadors, recruiting their own [potential] neighbors.”

    The house is listed for $7.7 million.

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    Mary Forgione, Contributor

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  • A Mountain Home For All Seasons In A Lake Tahoe Area Resort Community

    A Mountain Home For All Seasons In A Lake Tahoe Area Resort Community

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    Golf course communities usually bring to mind places like Palm Springs, California, or Scottsdale, Arizona, where the desert plays a starring role. Gray’s Crossing in California’s Lake Tahoe area trades the desert for the Sierra Nevada mountain range, adding more than just golf to the lifestyle mix.

    The neighborhood is made up of mountain homes in private, woodsy settings with easy access to the outdoors and a downtown area. For example, the home at 11478 Hennessy Road in Truckee, offers views of pine trees and slopes as well as the 10th and 11th greens of the 18-hole golf course designed by Peter Jacobsen and Jim Hardy.

    The 4,009-square-foot home with a natural wood facade sits on almost one acre, the largest lot size in Gray’s Crossing. “It’s as secluded as it looks,” listing agent Fancy Rutherford says. It was built in 2016 and has four bedrooms, five bathrooms and an open-plan design.

    The vaulted ceiling and stone fireplace in the living room create a spacious yet intimate place to gather and check out the mountain scenery. The room is adjacent to the dining area and kitchen, designed with custom cabinets, Monogram appliances and a center island with seating for casual dining.

    Two bedrooms on the main level and two bedrooms on the upper floor feature vaulted ceilings that bring in natural light. Other rooms include a media room, office space, bar and walk-in wine closet.

    The home’s outdoor spaces capitalize on the mountain setting, with patios and a backyard designed for indoor/outdoor entertaining. There’s an outdoor kitchen, TV, gas fireplace, firepit and eight-person hot tub sunken into the patio level. “The patio spans the entire back side of the house,” Rutherford says.

    In addition to the golf course, Gray’s Crossing residents have access to a fitness center, swimming pool and the local hangout, PJ’s, an outdoor restaurant known for great sunset views. The house also is close to downtown Truckee, a town of less than 20,000 residents and known as the “gateway to the Sierra Nevadas.”

    Rutherford, an accomplished snowboarder who leads boarding trips around the world, points to popular winter and summer activities available nearby. In winter, residents can ski and snowboard at Northstar and Palisades Tahoe resorts, about 15 minutes away. In summer, there’s hiking and mountain biking on local trails as well as nearby Donner Memorial State Park and kayaking at Prosser Creek Reservoir and Lake Tahoe.

    Who would this home suit? “I personally think the house is designed for full-time family residency,” Rutherford says, noting the home is located in the Tahoe Truckee Unified School District. There’s also a private academy nearby.

    The home is on the market for $3.595 million. The listing agent is Fancy Rutherford of Tahoe Mountain Realty.

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    Mary Forgione, Contributor

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