About 23 years ago, I skied Telluride including taking the lift that passes within 20 yards of this property, and wondered who could ever stay in places this nice.
That was in 1999. And after 23 years I was finally able to fulfill my personal bucket list item and stay in this "luxurious log cabin". It did not disappoint in the slightest. I would recommend it to anybody, whole-heartedly.
With a small amount of effort (a walk of about 30 yards) we were able to "ski out" of the property", and with an additional 50 yard walk ski back in at the end of the day.
The property itself is gorgeous. We had 12 people staying, and empty bedrooms. There were several married couples, and each had a private suite all to themselves, with bedrooms to spare. The "common areas" were WONDERFUL for apres-ski catching up, and large enough to accomodate the 12 of us and 3 or 4 local drop in visitors that live in Telluride COMFORTABLY.
It is truly a beautiful property that I hope to stay again at in the future.
Here is one thing to consider for those of us that live at sea level: According to my iPhone altimeter, this property is at 10,050 feet elevation while the town of Telluride is at a modest 8,500 feet. For scale, they pressurize airplanes to simulate 8,000 feet because that is the altitude most people don't feel any effects. The morning after we arrived most of us woke up with headaches from this extreme 10,000+ foot altitude. They sell oxygen cannisters in every store in Telluride, consider stocking two for each person and sucking liberally at those for the first 24 hours you stay here. Plus bring some Tylenol for the headaches. It's completely, TOTALLY worth it, and within 2 days you become acclimated to the altitude. Alternatively, there is a drug called "Acetazolamide" (you can Google that) that your doctor can prescribe to take for the 3 or 4 days leading up to staying at altitude. Seriously, this is a legitimate medication and not abusable. Take it for a few days leading up to staying at THE TOP OF A SKI RESORT.