Cannon MountainNew HampshireNatural Beauty
Cannon Mountain is set amid the natural beauty of Franconia Notch State Park in Franconia, N.H. Choose from 72 trails plus the new 86 acre Mittersill Backcountry Area for a total of 264 skiable acres, and a vertical drop of 2,146. Cannon has 9 lifts, including an 70-passenger tram. Cannon… More Cannon Mountain Photos
Click a thumbnail to view all full size images.
Comments and Reviews for Cannon Mountain
» Post a review for Cannon Mountain, New Hampshire.
jantista@nesna.org
Nashua, NH Novice Reviewer
Reviews: 3
Great location- close to Boston.
More advanced mountain so I can avoid the MA crowds.
Aug 16, 2011
jantista@nesna.org
Nashua, NH Novice Reviewer
Reviews: 3
Cannon is NH best mountain for the aggressive skier. I personally like it because of its location, price and lack of crowds. With their recent expansion its got my number 1 ranking. They get good snow, have some steeps, have some bumps and best of all a great new bar.
Feb 4, 2011
GRMorell
Northampton, MA Advanced Reviewer
Reviews: 12
Dominating New Hampshire’s towering Franconia range, Cannon Mountain looms large. A great boulder of a beast, its visage is steep and intimidating and challenges the intermediate and advanced skier to ride its back.
Cannon shares the Franconia region with nearby Loon Mountain to the South. Hosting two peaks, the main mountain rises to a height of just over 4,000 ft with a vertical drop of 2,180 ft. The lesser mountain, Mittersill, peaks at 3,650 ft and services only expert terrain. At Mittersill, the trails are ungroomed natural snow where you are advised not to ski alone. Trail and glade areas flow in and out of each other without clear definition. A good yardstick to determine whether or not to attempt the challenge of Mittersill is how you manage the Avalanche trail on the main mountain. If you can ride Avalanche with energy to spare, you can test your legs on Mittersill. Eighty-six acres of Mittersill will keep the quads burning. My personal favorites on the main mountain are the serpentine blues and blacks at the top of the big hill. Well designed and well groomed, these trails are a pleasure to schuss as you glide through their smooth tree -lined roller coaster curves. Cannon has its share of serviceable lifts, but as this was my first trip to the mountain, I was looking forward to riding their very unique tram--a trolley to the sky climbing over 5,000 ft. It was the first tram built in North America and a 1938 engineering miracle. The current tram (1980) ferries 80 skiers at a tim up the hill in a few short minutes of air travel. Unfortunately, I failed to note that the tram runs only four days a week --Friday through Monday and on all holidays. Trams, like gondolas, offer great wind protection on blustery days, but the disappointing factor is when it’s really windy and you really need them, they don’t run. So be advised -- if you’re a fan of the tram, avoid Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays at Cannon. The novice trails at Cannon are confined to the lower foothills squeezed between the two peaks called the Tuckerbrook family area. There are thirteen trails for learning and relaxed skiing or for skiers with a touch of vertigo and those plagued with acrophobia. Saturday nights are family fun nights when the adults can enjoy the comforts of the Cannonball Pub and a bowl of Banchee Chili while the kids play in the mini-park under the lights and enjoy a movie in their own lodge. Tuesdays and Thursdays are 2 for 1 days, when an individual ticket drops below $35. Cannon is a robust mountain in the middle of a New Hampshire State Park and is without condos, McMansions, wafflehouses and halfpipes, but it does have a comfortable lodge and pub.
Jan 26, 2011
|
Cannon Mountain![]() Contact InformationCurrent Weather
Snow Conditions
Trail Maps |