2025 Bucket List

Glide Through an Allegheny Winter Wonderland

A Nordic adventure in the Alleghenies
People in a snowy woodland gather under a warming shelter with their skis

Photo: Gabe DeWitt

A warming shelter at White Grass Ski Touring Center in Tucker County.
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Where: Allegheny Mountains, West Virginia
When: winter
If you like: the outdoors and sports 

Why you should go: Flying downhill is a fun way to enjoy snow, but it’s not the only way, especially in the Allegheny Mountains of West Virginia. Come December, when the peaks and slopes start whitening up for winter, cross-country skiers cut a leisurely course through this Southern snowbelt. “To be able to glide through the forest and fields in your favorite places is so special,” says Chip Chase, who for over four decades has operated White Grass Ski Touring Center in the Canaan Valley of Tucker County. With a base elevation of 3,200 feet, the center maintains thirty-one miles of trails and a handful of warming shelters stocked with woodstoves and snacks.

Nearby, Blackwater Falls State Park offers ski rentals and groomed trails, as does Canaan Valley Resort State Park. For a more advanced, backcountry experience, Nordic skiers can take to the ungroomed trails of Monongahela National Forest, where some of the most difficult—and beautiful—terrain awaits in the Dolly Sods Wilderness and Cranberry Wilderness. 

G&G tip: When you’re not skiing—or if you’re waiting on a snowfall—stop by the Snow Sports Museum of West Virginia in the mountain town of Davis, or shop around the colorful, artsy town of Thomas just up the road.  


Lindsey Liles joined Garden & Gun in 2020 after completing a master’s in literature in Scotland and a Fulbright grant in Brazil. The Arkansas native is G&G’s digital reporter, covering all aspects of the South, and she especially enjoys putting her biology background to use by writing about wildlife and conservation. She lives on Johns Island, South Carolina, with her husband, Giedrius, and their cat, Oyster.


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