Downieville Winter 2021

Max Ryan • Jan 08, 2022

Record Breaking storm hits the sierra!

It's safe to say that we won't soon forget December 2021. Snow totals officially hit over 200" in the Sierra. DEEP-cember was in full effect. Guests who planned to be here were mixed with travelers who were totally bewildered to end up in Downieville. It was straight chaos mixed with family adventures. Guests made ramps in the snow for sledding, families filled the town with laughter and snow ball fights. It was a true Downieville Winter Wonderland.


On Christmas day cars were buried and lost, we ran out of rooms in town so couches became beds and floors became snuggle piles. Groups of five or six ended up sleeping in rooms with one king or queen bed. The county opened warming shelters, the Downieville school opened their gym, and the town truly came together to make a Christmas Miracle happen.


Several people were stranded with cars in various states of disrepair or lost in the deep. A sweet couple in their Tesla came to the Riverside Mountain Lodge just to charge up at the hotel.. They were on their way to Reno. The young lady was very pregnant, and vocally concerned about road conditions. However, even with their awareness of the harm they could face, they chose to head back out into the storm. They saw Cal-Trans say "All roads to and from Tahoe area are either closed, or too treacherous to pass. Stay where you are, do not attempt to travel at this time. " Another Tesla got stuck in town, as their car became to cold to charge! Others ended up turning around at the edge of town and finding Downieville as home for the evening, despite their trials and errors to pass through the storm.


In their mind was "Google maps says we can take a 6 hour route through the mountains over to Nevada. Let’s give it a go. Let's cross the pass even though the sign said 'road closed ahead'." To their dismay, as the storm heaved on, the pass became to treacherous to enter.


The innkeepers in town became a source for all information, counselors for issues far outside the scope of renting rooms. They shoveled out cars covered in white fluffy powder and crawled on their bellies to apply snow chains for guests who looked on in awe.


The hotels in town had piles of laundry that have accumulated as tall as the snowdrifts while the housecleaners are snowed-in, unable to get out. Tens of thousands of people in Northern California are without power, and it continues to go on / off in Downieville and surrounding areas. Local residents came together to help local hotels in order to provide clean rooms and services to guests stuck in town.


Closed highways became a winter playground for cross country skiers, and kids who were sledding and making snow angels. Dogs bounded and trounced in fluffy powder, chasing tails, falling snowflakes, and blazing powdery trails that caved in on them as they ran.  One guest even had the opportunity to join a local Husky on a jaunt on skiis through town, pulled by the local pup himself! He loved every moment of it and it was truly a joy to witness.


St. Charles Place Bar was bustling, mostly with locals who came out of their homes to enjoy camaraderie and escape the cabin fever. Visitors, quickly becoming locals, set up on the bar stools and ran the pool table and the juke box. They kept commenting on how "amazing" Downieville was, and how "awesome" it was that they "got stuck here" as they threw back shots and played pool. The town was alive during what most locals know as our slow and quiet season!


One guest mentioned the similarities of a late November of 2021 storm in Britain's highest pub that turned into a weekend-long lock-in when snow carpeted the Yorkshire Dales.  Over the course of three very strange days, Downievilleans, the guests who planned to be here, and the stranded travelers at the lodges and inns found themselves strangely connected. Families were huddled together walking along Main Street, soaking in the winter wonderland. Smiles and laughter mixed with fear and uncertainty of getting home.


Restaurants were closed because owners were snowed in or they closed for Holidays. One local, a well known baker, brought treats and snacks for the guests. These items and others from generous townsfolk, were delivered to the front doors of traveler's accommodations.


This same local baker, helped arrange a warming shelter for guests who couldn't arrange accommodations due to full hotels and houses. Visitors could warm up and use the water, bathrooms, and even sleep on wrestling mats in the Downieville School's gymnasium. Local's providing pillows and blankets. It's safe to say small-town kindness is alive and well in Downieville.


And through it all, Two Rivers Cafe remained strong! They ran out of pizza dough early on, but recovery was quick. Not long after, they ran out of buns for burgers. The most important thing is through it all, they stayed open even during blips in the power. A warm and welcome place for parents and kids to gather.

It's been one for the history books!


We hope everyone has been safe in these storms. Enjoy the stillness and beauty of all of this incredible December snowfall!


Please stay safe and be patient as resorts, the town and local businesses wait to regain power, unbury from the snow, and rest after we helped hundreds of stranded travelers - hopefully everyone was able to get where they wanted to be in time for New Years! We are happy to be right here in lovely Downieville!!


See you soon.


Sonya and Mike Meline


**Photos by Sonya Z Meline and Melanie Haiken


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Downieville, CA: March 2021 — Longtime adventure seekers, Michael and Sonya Meline, purchased Riverside Inn (which they renamed Riverside Mountain Lodge), a 12-suite rustic lodge in the mountain biking boomtown of Downieville, California nestled in the Tahoe National Forest. The couple moved to Downieville with their son, Gregory, after they say they looked at over a dozen properties in Colorado, Idaho, and California before settling first on the purchase of the town's other river-front hotel, the Carriage House Inn. “The Carriage House was the culmination of our five-year dream” remarks Sonya. “We just never imagined we would purchase another property so soon after the inn. The Riverside [Mountain Lodge] had been shut down by the previous owners for the entire year of 2020, and with COVID-19, they had no plans to reopen. We felt the pain our visitors felt when they called to book a room at the Carriage House, and we had to turn them away because we were full. There just wasn't enough supply to keep up with the demand! We also felt the pain of the local community who relies on the tourism economy with 1/3 of the hotels in the area being shut down.” Sonya said that while she and Mike were waking their dog one afternoon, they noticed signs of life at the then-shuttered Riverside Mountain Lodge. It was the former owners of the lodge who offhandedly said “Hey, you guys should just buy this place!'” and from there the seed was planted. COVID created huge swings in the couple's guest bookings throughout 2020. They were forced to cancel months of reservations during the peak season of 2020 in April through June with the California stay-at-home orders in place. However, when they were finally permitted to take reservations again, the bookings poured in. “We were so busy that even with all the extra distancing, masking, and sanitation and other measures we had to comply with for COVID, that the late summer-season made up for a dismal spring.” “People just want to be in the mountains with everything going on.” said Michael Meline. “We were even full during the mid-week at the inn, while hotels in cities and more densely populated areas were really hurt by COVID. Here, with fast internet, many people can still work-from-home, but then they can do it with the wide-open spaces and the mountains to keep them company. Or [they can] walk out the back door and be steps away from one of California’s most clear and unspoiled waterways on the Yuba River.” Mike once worked as a fabricator and materials scientist in the automotive, aerospace, and sporting goods industries. One of his favorite roles was in the R&D department at Soft Ride Bikes where he discovered a love for mountain biking. He was drawn to Downieville because of the trail system that brings all who travel them to some of California’s most enjoyable terrain, complimented by breathtaking vistas. Mike commented that “it really is an exciting time with e-assist mountain bikes becoming a reality. This allows people of lower experience levels, to get places they would have never been able to go before. Also, it's great for people who would normally take a public shuttle, who with COVID still rampant, are not interested in getting into a van with people outside their pod. For both of these reasons, eBikes are the dawn of a new era for mountain biking.” The Melines report that they already have several week-long-bookings for the entire Riverside Mountain Lodge, and they plan to increase these types of buyout events — stating that the mid-week stays are also good for the community. They hope to do more company retreats, small weddings, and family reunions. “We inherited several of these groups that buyout the hotel. One comes every year for what they deem the Summer Kickoff Festival. They rent almost every room in the entire town, and there are several unique event spaces here including The Masonic Hall and the picturesque meadow of The Lure Resort. While here, groups partake in the riding or hiking on the trails and river sports such as rafting, fishing, and swimming in the many hidden swimming holes of the Yuba and Downie. It’s so cool to be in the middle of all these group events and feel the energy and excitement as the town fills up with people escaping city life” said Sonya, who herself used to plan large-scale events and festivals. “I can’t wait to go rafting on crystal clear waters with big rapids and no crowds” added Mike.  For more information about Riverside Mountain Lodge, or the town of Downieville through the eyes of the Meline Family, reach out to Sonya Ziegler Meline at sonya@riversidemtnlodge.com
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