Fernie Adventures – Play Here, Live Here
At 8:15 AM I opened the flap on my tent, gazed up at a gilded peak shimmering with heaven-sent light, and saw my buddy, Drew – a little black blob on the massive mountain – nearing the unnamed summit. Not gonna lie, it was a little unsettling. He wasn’t exactly a seasoned mountaineer with goat-footed skills. But he was determined. And the night before – as we nursed a dram, or two, by the crackling fire – he confidently announced his intentions for the following morning: “I WILL climb that thar mountain before anyone is out of bed.” Hat’s off. He did it.
Fernie. It certainly has a knack of bringing out the adventurer in all of us.
Surrounded by jagged peaks and nestled along rushing rivers in the Elk Valley – and just 2.5 hours from Calgary! – Fernie is a dreamy destination for outdoor enthusiasts and mountain culture lovers. Hikers, mountain bikers, fishermen, painters, climbers, musicians, photographers, nordic skiers, alpine skiers, and everyone else in between, can find their happy place in Fernie!
In addition to all of those trails, rivers, and scintillating summits (more on my epic Heiko’s Trail expedition later), Fernie’s historic downtown, which boasts some spectacular turn-of-the-century buildings and architecture, is always a highlight when you visit. The majestic Fernie Courthouse, which was built in 1911, is a chateau-style structure and one of my favourite buildings in the Kootenay Rockies. The Holy Family Catholic Church, City Hall, and the old CP railway station are a few other examples.
Personally, I’d highly recommend downloading the “Iconic Fernie” app on your phone (the app was developed by Tourism Fernie), which will guide you through a cool downtown heritage walking tour, best photography locations, top places to sample local food and drinks, and artistic explorations in and around town. (Thanks, in part, to the Arts Station, a number of galleries, the downtown murals, ongoing performing arts, and so on, Fernie is a haven for artists.)
Due to its close proximity to Calgary, I typically visit Fernie a handful of times each year. Sometimes I’m just passing through (I can never resist pulling into the downtown area to explore, stretch my legs, and grab a coffee and a sandwich!), but most of the time it’s for a weekend of adventure.
While the mountain biking (Fernie boasts eight distinct riding areas and hundreds of trails) is legendary, the two main reasons why I love hanging out in Fernie are the incredible alpine skiing at the Fernie Alpine Resort and the epic hiking.
Although the sight-seeing and lift-accessed mountain biking at the Fernie Alpine Resort are exceptional, in my opinion, the alpine bowl skiing – there are five fabulous bowls at the resort – is some of the best on the planet. Indeed, from the snorkel-deep dumps to the family-friendly cruisers, the skiing at Fernie is tough to beat.
And, for that matter, so are the hiking opportunities. Numerous trails – from leg-burning ascents to family-friendly riverside strolls – are there for the taking.
For me, one of my all-time favourite hiking experiences took place a number of years ago when my posse of pals took on the tough-as-nails Heiko’s Trail in the Fernie backcountry. (It’s not for the faint of heart! Be prepared. Do your homework!) A 34-km wilderness route complete with caves, thundering waterfalls, and wildflower-filled valleys, it serves up an amazing assortment of “wow” moments. On our two-day adventure, which ended at the iconic Island Lake Lodge, we were all pushed to the limit of our abilities.
Fittingly, we celebrated our achievement with a burger and a beer at Island Lake Lodge. In many ways, we all – especially the guy who tacked on an additional summit! – felt like accomplished adventurers. Fernie will do that to you!
New lots are available at our Timber Landing development. Visit our website for more information or get in touch with our realtor Carol Cohen.
Carol Cohen
Developer’s Representative for Timber Landing Sales
[email protected]
250-278-0678
- Published in Blog, Fernie, Real Estate, Summer, Winter
The Sweet Spot; when it comes to density, Fernie Alpine Resort does it just right—in more ways than one
In scientific terms, snow density is measured by water volume. Heavy snow tends to have about 15 to 20 percent water content, and really light snow is less than 10 percent. That’s the stuff we like as skiers—the cold smoke that lets us feel like we’re dancing on air. Because any skier worth their salt knows that not all powder is created equal, and there’s a tradeoff wherever you go searching for it. To get a lot of it, you usually have to go places like the Coast Mountains, where it’s thick and punishing. To get the lightest snow, you usually have to go to locales like the Okanagan or the eastern slope of the Rockies, where average annual snowfalls tend to be less forthcoming, and you wrestle with deep freezes. But there’s one place in British Columbia where that tradeoff doesn’t exist. Where up to 37 feet of snow falls some years in a temperate micro-climate draped across the dramatic fetch of the Rocky Mountains. This is not just where you’ll find the most snow, but also the lightest version of it—along with the exact right density of people.
The visionary founders of Fernie Snow Valley knew this in 1962, when they took a chance on building lifts in a little mining town wedged against the Southeast border of B.C. and Alberta. And in 1997, when Resorts of the Canadian Rockies bought the quiet little ski hill that was the biggest secret in the province, they also knew what they were doing. Since then, Fernie Alpine Resort has been far from a secret, but it has stayed true to its roots. Only three hours from Calgary, Alberta, it’s close enough to an international airport to have exploded into Vail or Aspen. Instead, it has settled into a confident sweet spot as the ski industry’s biggest “locals” mountain, primarily servicing the extended Fernie community from Calgary to Lethbridge to Cranbrook, and even Montana.
It’s the only destination-class resort in Western Canada that’s not concerned with being a destination—it remains first and foremost a playground for those who know it best. Whether you’re hammering powder runs on the Timber Chair, or pounding DH laps in the bike park all summer, you’ll be doing it with familiar faces. That’s what defines this resort: community.
Homeownership at Fernie Alpine Resort doesn’t just tap into world-class biking, hiking, sight-seeing, and skiing along the proud peaks of the Lizard Range, but an extended family of like-minded, part-time small-towners looking for the exact right mix of amenities and energy, without going overboard. It’s an investment in lifestyle that pays dividends, with a slow steady growth in value that’s not subject to the boom-and-bust cycles of crazy new promises or massive overnight changes.
Becoming a homeowner at Fernie Alpine Resort means buying into a community that’s been what it is for generations, where fishing and folk festivals, and kids camps and bar bands, take precedence over planet-shaking events and lineups full of strangers. Where Italianate architecture still hosts restaurants filled with friends that always have a seat for you. Where there’s an intimate flow to life that just feels right. Because the best density isn’t always the most saturated one; it’s the one that lets you move unimpeded in a shared rhythm that still feels all your own.
New lots are available at our Timber Landing development. Visit our website for more information or get in touch with our realtor Carol Cohen.
Carol Cohen
Developer’s Representative for Timber Landing Sales
[email protected]
250-278-0678
- Published in Blog, Fernie, Real Estate, Summer, Winter
Imagine Full Time in Fernie
Do you dream of mountain life? Like, most minutes of every day? If your screen saver features favorite shreds down ski runs and bike trails, outdoor gear outnumbers your work wear exponentially, and car racks migrate seasonally like the birds, what are you waiting for? It’s time to reset your priorities in Fernie, B.C.
Located on unceded territory of the Ktunaxa Nation in the northeast corner of British Columbia, Fernie to Calgary and the Kalispell, Montana airport takes three and two hours, respectively. The former mining town of just over 5,000 residents is considered one of western North America’s premier four-season outdoor recreation destinations.
Adventure and Fernie have remained synonymous for well over 150 years, owing to the immense amounts of annual powder in the Lizard Range, vast wilderness, and the indefatigable spirit of The Griz. Whether your version of paradise includes pristine angling fisheries, day hikes among alpine wildflower meadows, or first chair-to-last run forays, Fernie has you covered.
Fernie Alpine Resort celebrated 60 years of lift-accessed slopes in 2022. Today, Fernie’s signature five bowls fill with adventure potential for twelve months a year. In winter (and often well into spring) 10 lifts service 2,500 skiable acres. Several Nordic trails course through the forest.
Summer welcomes hikers of all abilities across the resort’s 16-trail system. The 36-trail, lift-accessed mountain bike park opens in late spring, tossing out an equal distribution of freeride and technical trails.
The Fernie region is also home to hundreds of kilometers of hiking and biking trails, whether cycling the gravel trails in Mount Fernie Provincial Park or trekking on the 20km Mount Proctor Trail. Known as “Trout Town,” Fernie’s Elk River lures anglers from around the globe.
The town of Fernie is as dynamic as the surrounding wilderness. Scores of independent shops and restaurants flourish in the glow of the Griz, whether you crave over 200 types of cheese, sushi, or an evening of live entertainment at a local brewery. The boutiques are equally diverse.
With so much to do, big city food options, and a great nighttime vibe, what would it be like to call Fernie home? Get started with Fernie Alpine Resort real estate here.
- Published in Fernie, Real Estate, Summer, Winter
Timber Landing: Fernie Alpine Resort’s Next Best Address
For this edition of That Thing About Fernie, we’re talking with Carol Cohen; a long-time Fernie resident (who also happens to be married to Fernie Alpine Resort General Manager Andy Cohen). Carol is a highly experienced Realtor who has recently stepped into the role of Developer’s Representative for Timber Landing, a luxurious new neighbourhood of single-family homes that will become the standard for design excellence at Fernie Alpine Resort.
How did you find your way to Fernie, and when did you get involved in real estate development?
I was friends with Matt Mosteller (RCR, Senior VP of Marketing & Resort Development) when we were both ski coaching back at Whistler in the mid-1980s. Matt moved beyond coaching to launch his career in ski marketing and we kept in touch over the years. In 1997, he asked my husband Andy to come out and invest in Kimberley and Fernie’s on mountain development. Andy then went on to become the Kimberley Resort’s general manager. We lived in Kimberley for 8 years, during which time I helped launch the Tall Pines second home development on land that we had purchased when we first arrived. Kimberley and Fernie were both previously locally-owned resorts with very little in the way of on-slope accommodation. We raised our three kids in Kimberley, and then Murray Edwards, RCR’s owner, transferred Andy to Fernie once the kids graduated from high school. We currently live in one of the Timber Landing properties, so if you buy up here, we’ll probably be neighbours!
What’s the lay of the land like around Fernie; I know we have the ski resort and the lure of ski in and out properties, but what else are people looking at these days?
When we came here 30 years ago, that was the last big wave of development on the hill really until about 2018. As the resort matured, it started to offer a range of fabulous on-slope accommodations. Initially, owners of these units – they were mostly condos/townhomes – were granted use of their property for limited stays and the rest of the time, the units were put into a rental pool. However, over time, the strata owners decided to drop the annual restriction. These are wealthier homeowners who don’t want to share their units with others during peak season. That’s where Timber Landing comes in, the lots are large enough that you could build a rental suite either as part of the house or as a carriage house and put it on Air BNB to help defray the cost of your project.
Thinking of the Resort as its separate community, how did it develop? Are their old-time A-frames inter-mixed with 10,000-square-foot cabins?
Not really, Fernie’s history is a bit different than other resorts. The ski hill was patronized largely by the local miners and townspeople. Very few skiers came from away; there was very little marketing done until Charlie bought the place. Charlie developed Fernie as a four-season destination resort, but that came at a tough time. Condo units were built in the village, and the owners who got in early have done very well in terms of investment. There were none of the A-frames and typical ski cabins that you’d find at other ski hills because the town is very close to the mountain.
Where, traditionally, have people come from – are there locals who purchase for revenue income and seasonal visitors looking for a second home – is there much of a retirement community? What amenities might people be most attracted to?
Well, these are certainly legacy-style properties that are right out of a real estate marketing brochure. A family member will buy a lot and build a second home that can accommodate plenty of family members and friends. These are people from all over: the USA, Toronto, Vancouver, and Calgary. Of course, they might use the place during holidays and weekends but then either rent it out to other friends or family members.
Then, we have younger families, most of them from Calgary, who want ski-in and ski-out convenience. Most of their kids are in the winter-long ski programs. The keener parents can be first on the hill, and they can look after the kids and take them home for lunch after ski programs are over. No one has to be killing time in a cafeteria waiting for a spouse to be done skiing; your home is there for you to enjoy at any time.
How do these specific SFH lots fit into the current Fernie mix-up on the hill? Are there other ski-in/ski-out options? What are Timber Landing’s features/advantages/ benefits?
This is the third phase of Timber Landing, built on land that Charlie Locke purchased decades ago. The first phase happened in 2018, and the second phase was in 2020. I was asked to sell out to the first 50 lots. Currently, I work for RCR as the developer’s representative for Phase 3. Right now, we’re selling lots in Phase 3A. It’s been a slower uptake due to rising interest rates and economic uncertainty.
How does the process work regarding permitting, architectural guidelines, density, building size, etc.?
Before breaking ground on a new home, owners and their builders will have to go through a design review process with the developer to ensure that all of the architectural and building footprints remain in character with the Timber Landing esthetic. I can provide a personal introduction and then work with a highly reputable contracting firm for the building process. We have a minimum sq footprint of 1250n sq feet. Most homes in the earlier stages were in the 3,000- 5.000 square-foot range, and some even 12,000 sqft.
Can you provide a bit of a visual description of where the lots are located and what views/sightlines they might provide?
All of these lots have a view of the mountain; although some trees might need to be removed from the property to make that happen. The upper lots, which will be released later, probably have the best views of all. To discourage lot flipping, owners are required to start building within three years of purchase.
Are there any aspects of living in Fernie that have surprised you?
When you are moving to Fernie, you’re moving to a real community that is founded upon outdoor activities: not just skiing but golf, mountain biking, running, fishing, arts, you name it. People are passionate about the outdoors, here. It used to be all about ‘going big’ but I think as that generation of baby boomers had kids, the need to constantly prove yourself has mellowed.
Find out more about the Timber Landing development on the RCR Properties website.
- Published in Blog, Fernie, Real Estate