It depends on your skiing skill level...
We're planning our 4th year skiing somewhere. Thinking of going someplace completely different from Colorado and looking at Alyeska Resort outside of Anchorage, AK. Has anyone skied Alaska? How does it compare to Colorado?
I like the elevation difference. Colorado= 10,000' Alaska= 2,500' That first day in Colorado always gets me.
Here are some of the GREAT areas outside Colorado: I have skied them all.
1. Park City/Deer Valley/Alta... Utah, you can't beat the powder in Utah. I've skied most of the ski areas in the United States when I was CEO of a non-profit dependent on the ski industry, and the snow in Utah is the best.
2. Sun Valley, Idaho....a great place, both skiing and the apres ski in Warm Springs and Ketchum. The Sun Valley Resort Lodge is the creme dela creme. Sun Valley has great snow, on par with Utah.
3. Squaw Valley, Lake Tahoe, CA...there are about 6 areas around Lake Tahoe and there is casino's and lots of things to do apres ski in South Lake Tahoe and Reno (not that far away.)
4. Jackson Hole....some of the steepest terrain in the country is here. There is a lot of expert terrain, but only about 25% beginner.
5. Big Sky, Montana...lots and lots of terrain of both beginner and expert. You might run into Tom Brokaw, one of my former Board members.
East Coast:
1. Waterville Valley New Hampshire....lots of 5 diamond shopping in the valley. Lots of medium level and some expert terrain.
2. Stowe, Vermont....this is a ski town, and lots of excellent skiers here. Really nice mountain, but like most eastern ski areas it can get icy.
3. Sugarbush, Vermont...much like Stowe, but lots of area. Quaint local villages.
4. Killington, VT...probably the best ski area in area in the East.
5. Mt. Snow, VT...an excellent area for a good skier.
Canada:
1. Whistler/Blackcombe: Over 4000 feet of vertical. Can be either great or icy as Hell, depending on weather or spring conditions. Nancy Greene, the Silver Medalist, has a lodge at Blackcombe. This is a world class ski resort, the best in Canada.
2. Banff: It is smaller than Whistler/Blackcombe, about 1/3 the area, but the views from the top when you get off the gondola is magnificent, and the Banff/Lake Louise area is great!
3. Mt. Tremblant, Quebec: About 90 miles north of Montreal, is on par with the Vermont resorts, just not as much vertical. I had a great time there, back when I was a beginner.
I would not go to Alyeska...it can be bitter cold or very icy.