

Charles Elliott, who helped Boyce launch skiing at Wolf Creek Pass, grew up in the San Luis Valley and taught himself to ski on homemade boards at age 21, hiking up Wolf Creek Pass in 1934. Kelly's lift was driven by an old Chevy truck with tickets at $1 per day. That same year, a group of budding skiers from the San Luis Valley, including a farmer named Kelly Boyce, created the Wolf Creek Ski Club and installed a rope tow on the north side near the summit of Wolf Creek Pass. By 1938, construction on Highway 160 over the pass was complete. The construction project between San Luis and Pagosa Springs was dubbed Wolf Creek Pass.

Prior to 1936, Cumbres Pass was the only direct route through the mountains in this area, and during heavy snowstorms it often closed.

US Highway 160 was constructed as a new project connecting the San Luis Valley to Pagosa Springs. History First site on top of the pass ĭuring the 1930s, people were taming the mountains of Colorado by building highways and mountain passes. It is best known for receiving more average annual snowfall than any other resort in Colorado, at about 430 inches per year. Wolf Creek Ski Area (WCSA) is a ski area in southwest Colorado, located on the Wolf Creek Pass between Pagosa Springs and South Fork. Wolf Creek ski area (the United States) Show map of the United Statesģ7☂8′20″N 106☄7′36″W / 37.47222°N 106.79333°W / 37.47222 -106.79333Ĩ total (2 High-Speed Quad, 1 Quad chair, 2 Triple chairs, 1 Double chair, 1 High Speed Poma Lift, 1 Magic Carpet)
