Blue Hills has eight trails covering a vertical drop of 309 feet (94 m). The summit is served by a double chairlift, while the beginner area has three magic carpet lifts.
The hill is popular with high school ski teams and often hosts races on Big Blue.
History
The ski area was founded in 1949 after the Metropolitan District Commission received US$65,000 to develop a ski area on Great Blue Hill.[2] It officially opened in 1950.[2]
In the early 1960s, the Metropolitan District Commission (MDC, now the DCR) operated the ski area. There were only two lifts – both rope tows – one on the main slope and one on the "bunny" slope. During that time, the lift tickets cost fifty cents a day. In approximately 1965, the area was leased to an outside company called Larchmont Engineering, which constructed a double chair lift and installed snow-making equipment on the main slope and the bunny slope. Larchmont was an early innovator in the snow-making business and experimented with various hose and gun/nozzle designs at Blue Hills.
In February 1969, the area was hit with three 2+ foot snow storms, each a week apart. The snow was so deep that skiing down the "face" of Big Blue (the side facing Massachusetts Route 128) was possible.
Currently, there is one double chairlift leading up the main slope and three beginner magic carpets
Terrain Park
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (September 2024)
Operations
There are 12 trails: 6 green, 5 blue and 4 black.[3]
Despite the high trail count, there are four top to bottom lines, with the rest being connectors.
While the lift line ("Beer's Bluff", which is named after two brothers, Stuart and Stanley Beers, who managed the ski area from the late 1960s through the mid-1980s) is listed on the trail map, it is currently not maintained for skiing.