In late January, the Wall Street Journal published an article entitled “The Tiny Western Town That’s Quietly Become the Coolest Place to Ski,” pointing to the “small” town of Truckee, California. I live here and have for quite some time, and I have two words for this article: um, no.
Truckee is just a few minutes north of Lake Tahoe, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. It’s well known within the ski and outdoor sports world, though may not have the name recognition to average people of some place like Vail. It’s population is about 17,000 year-round, though there can easily be four to five times that many people (honestly, maybe more) on busy weekends, especially as it’s only a few miles from other popular north Lake Tahoe towns like Kings Beach, Tahoe City, and Incline Village. Other ski resort towns have much smaller populations, including Vail, CO (4,500); Breckenridge, CO (4,900); Ketchum, ID (3,600); and even Jackson, WY (10,600). So trying to position Truckee as a “small” town, as if to imply it’s somehow under-the-radar, already threw up some red flags.