Texas A&M's Ski Slope Needs Repairs, Fundraising Effort Launched

In the heart of Texas, at A&M University, stands an unlikely, manmade ski slope with artificial snow called Mt. Aggie. Unsurprisingly, the hill is the only place to ski within about 1,000 miles.

First constructed in the early 1970s, Mt. Aggie allowed students to ski even during the warmest months—or at least it did until this past November when a windstorm damaged it.

Mt. Aggie<p>Courtesy Photo</p>
Mt. Aggie

Courtesy Photo

University fundraising is underway to repair the slope, which, according to Texas A&M Today, will require "replacing the plywood with cement, reshaping the mountain and adding all-new surface material."

The planned repairs won't come cheap. To get Mt. Aggie back in working order, the university hopes to raise $800,000.

Since Mt. Aggie's inception, it has hosted kinesiology courses, birthday parties, and other celebrations. Some A&M students credit it as the place where they first learned to ski.

At this point, the artificial ski slope is a time-honored, distinctly human tradition. If anything, we can't resist constructing monuments that, in their own ways, are an affront to Mother Nature. There's the massive freezer inside New Jersey's American Dream mall, the powerplant turned turf-slope CopenHill in Copenhagen, Denmark, and Des Moines, Iowa's burgeoning Sleepy Hollow hill—to name a few.

A&M's campus.<p>Riley Davidson/Getty Images</p>
A&M's campus.

Riley Davidson/Getty Images

These hills, perhaps treated mostly as novelty by hardcore skiers when compared to their alpine counterparts, take on greater significance if couched in the broader climate change conversation. A gloomy, hopefully avoidable version of the future exists where skiing only occurs on artificial snow and inside comically large freezers.

I—like you, probably— hope it doesn't come to that. I don't need to convince you that skiing the way God intended beats the artificial alternative. It raises the question, though: Would skiing be worthwhile without real snow?

I'm not sure. Having grown up obsessed with the sport, I'd struggle to give it up, even if it meant my average summer day looked like this, followed by an exciting and exotic ski vacation to a New Jersey Mall.

Related: Mammoth Ran Its Annual Pond Skim--With A Twist

Don't miss another headline from POWDER! Subscribe to our newsletter and stay connected with the latest happenings in the world of skiing.

We're always on the lookout for amusing, interesting and engaging ski-related videos to feature on our channels. Whether you're a professional skier or just an amateur, we want to see your best footage and help you share it with the world. Submit your video for a chance to be featured on POWDER and our social channels. Be sure to subscribe to our YouTube channel to watch high-quality ski videos.