
The Sherwood and Bluebird lifts are buried by debris. (Photo: Lee Canyon Ski Resort)
You’re looking at the Sherwood chairlift at the main base area of Lee Canyon, a small ski resort located about 35 miles outside Las Vegas, Nevada. What a mess, right? Stones and mud are piled high enough to reach the machine’s drive bullwheel—the apparatus that powers the lift. At the adjacent lift, Bluebird, the debris pile touches the hold-down assembly—the series of wheels and sheaves that the chair rolls over before proceeding uphill. Nobody will be riding these lifts for a while.
This past winter’s epic powder dumps in Utah and California made skiers like myself accustomed to seeing those glee-inducing photos of chairlifts disappearing into chest-high snowdrifts. The images of Lee Canyon’s lifts buried by mud and rock hit a little different, right? It’s a macabre reminder of nature’s destructive power.

The rock pile is from a massive landslide that ripped down the adjacent 11,289-foot Lee Peak over the weekend of August 19-20. The avalanche of rock and mud tore open some of Lee Canyon’s ski slopes and pushed boulders up against the towers of its lifts. Aerial images of the slide I saw on social media show exposed water pipes jutting from a rift in one run. Another image shows tree trunks scattered around the base like Lincoln Logs.
“This was an extraordinary storm event, which has left significant damage to Lee Canyon and the Spring Mountains,” said Dan Hooper, Lee Canyon’s general manager in a statement. “Our goal is to ensure public safety. When the U.S. Forest Service deems it safe, Lee Canyon’s teams will begin restoring affected areas.”
We wish them luck, and hopd to one day see photos of the Sherwood and Bluebird lifts covered in snow.