ohmyashleyy
ohmyashleyy t1_jd1575h wrote
Reply to comment by sir_mrej in Wachusett mountain by funsk8mom
It was done to limit crowds during Covid and now makes them $$$
ohmyashleyy t1_jd14pen wrote
Reply to comment by shunny14 in Wachusett mountain by funsk8mom
I went Friday night and yesterday. With the cold temps after the warm days it was icy yesterday and probably worse today.
ohmyashleyy t1_jd14mce wrote
Reply to comment by wet_cupcake in Wachusett mountain by funsk8mom
I hadn’t skied in 15 years and we got our 4yo on skis this year. We’ve been going to Wachusett because of the distance, but you’re right, it’s pricy. We’ll probably going to get a season pass next year, we’re not likely to make the long drives to NH/VT/ME next year with a 5yo who can only handle a few hours.
And that’s really how they get away with it - proximity to Boston.
ohmyashleyy t1_jd14cjk wrote
Reply to comment by sir_mrej in Wachusett mountain by funsk8mom
You buy tickets for a session - roughly 3-4 hours. If you want to ski longer, you buy multiple sessions. They’re roughly time blocks like 7-11, 11-3, 3-7, 7-10
You used to just buy a ticket for the whole day.
ohmyashleyy t1_j4vyj3z wrote
Reply to comment by hour_of_the_rat in This winter is a repeat of the winter of 2019-2020 by nba123490
I think 20-30 is a stretch. That would imply we should be in the teens for normal temp and that’s been quite cold here for as long as I can remember.
ohmyashleyy t1_j4vxygu wrote
Reply to comment by keymonkey in This winter is a repeat of the winter of 2019-2020 by nba123490
Interestingly, the “local small mountains” like Nashoba and Bradford are more expensive than many of the Southern NH ones, and even Wachusett, at least on the beginner side of things
We’re looking into getting my 4yo on skis and we took him to Nashoba thinking it would 1) be close and 2) be cheap because of how small it is, but I could save a lot of money by driving the extra 30 minutes to Wachusett or Pats Peak or Macintyre.
(Though I assume you’re including all of those in small and local as compared to, say, Loon or Killington)
I agree with you on everything else though - I need gear since it’s been 10 years since I skied, but I got a cheap pair of snow pants on Amazon and will (hopefully) by some cheap used skis and boots at the end of the season.
ohmyashleyy t1_j4vf708 wrote
Reply to comment by binocular_gems in This winter is a repeat of the winter of 2019-2020 by nba123490
Even in the really bad 2015, I believe the snow storms didn’t really start until after MLK weekend. It’s still fairly early.
ohmyashleyy t1_iz7qpnp wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Massachusetts, New England grocery stores ranked by consumer nonprofit by JBupp
I worked at shaw’s in high school and when it was slow, they’d make us go block the aisles - what you call straightening. It’s really just supposed to be pulling stuff forward, not mixing things around, but the first thought I had last time I went into an MB was “wow this is some impressive blocking”
ohmyashleyy t1_iyx3yi0 wrote
Reply to comment by SharpCookie232 in Why are houses in Randolph so cheap? by Clementine823
Stoughton is way worse now than it was when I grew up there 30-15 years ago it and it wasn’t great then either. Funny enough my parents moved there from an apartment in Randolph.
ohmyashleyy t1_iyozyc3 wrote
Reply to comment by Snafu55 in Boston college has a policy that employees' kids can attend for free, as long as they are accepted. This janitor has five kids, all of whom got in, saving nearly $700k in tuition. by ClnclyDprsd420
It’s not free. My mom worked for UMass for 40 years. When I graduated HS, it was the same benefit as the John and Abigail Adam’s scholarship based off the MCAS - free tuition, but when I went to UMass Amherst, tuition was $1700/yr. Academic fees were an additional 15k, plus room and board on top of that. Only the $1700 was covered. My mom didn’t even bother with the paperwork and I just took my MCAS scholarship. She used it for my brother and sister though.
I think they’ve since adjusted how tuition and fees work (I believe tuition used to be frozen, hence the high fees) so maybe it’s a better deal than 15 years ago, but not free.
ohmyashleyy t1_irtwmzc wrote
Reply to comment by UpCoconut in Thanksgiving questions from a foreigner by obcork
And if you do frozen, it will take DAYS to defrost. You can’t just pull it out the night before.
ohmyashleyy t1_jdmpawy wrote
Reply to How common was remote/hybrid work ,before COVID, in Boston? by Mei_Flower1996
My husband is a software engineer and worked fully remote for a small startup/government contractor before the pandemic. In fact, they were in the process of opening their first small office when the pandemic hit.
I’m also a software engineer and would wfh when I had an appointment, at the end of my pregnancy, when my kid was sick or on a random Friday because I felt like it, but I was in the office more often than not and regular WFH weren’t super common.