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Forget the Neighborhood Egg Hunt: Why the Mountains Are the Secret to a Better Easter

Posted on March 13, 2026 by Adam Torkildson

Let’s be honest about the typical Easter Sunday. It’s usually a frantic sprint. You’re trying to find matching socks for the kids, hiding plastic eggs in a backyard that’s probably still half-muddy, and rushing through a massive ham dinner just so you can collapse on the couch by mid-afternoon. It’s a nice tradition, but it’s rarely a vacation. By the time Monday morning rolls around, you’re back at your desk feeling like you need another weekend just to recover from the one you just had.

If you’re tired of the same high-stress routine, it’s time to change your altitude. Moving the spring holidays to a mountain resort isn’t just about a change of scenery; it’s about hitting the reset button during that weird, slushy transition between winter and true spring.

When you celebrate in the high country, the air is sharper, the distractions actually disappear, and you get a much-needed break from the suburban noise. Here is why the mountains are secretly the best place to spend your Easter weekend.

1. The “Second Spring” Vibe

In most towns, March and April are a bit of a gray, messy slog. The novelty of the snow has worn off, but the trees haven’t quite decided to turn green yet. In the mountains, you get what locals call “Second Spring.”

It’s a bizarre and beautiful contrast. You can look up and see snow-capped ridges while looking down at a valley floor that’s starting to explode with wildflowers. It’s a massive visual upgrade from a flat suburban backyard. Whether you’re an amateur photographer or just want a family photo that doesn’t feature your neighbor’s fence, the spring light at higher elevations is a total game-changer.

2. Egg Hunts Without the Elbows

We’ve all been to those community egg hunts at the local park. It’s a sea of strollers, crying toddlers, and parents treating it like a competitive Olympic sport. It’s chaos.

Mountain resorts tend to do things a bit differently. When the location for an egg hunt is a wooded trail or a rolling meadow, it stops being a 30-second scramble and starts being an actual adventure. There’s something far more memorable about a kid finding a hidden egg tucked into the roots of an old oak or hidden near a creek than finding one sitting on a manicured turf lawn. It turns a chore into a morning of exploration.

3. The End of the Kitchen Lockdown

One of the biggest holiday killers is the meal prep trap. You spend three days shopping and six hours in the kitchen, and by the time you sit down to eat, you’re too tired to enjoy it.

When you’re at a resort, you finally get to choose your own adventure. You can book a table at a lodge where someone else deals with the lamb and the dishes, or you can use the cabin kitchen to cook at your own pace. There is a massive psychological difference between cooking in your everyday kitchen and cooking in a mountain cabin with the windows open to the forest. Without the pressure of the extended family dropping by, the meal actually becomes about the conversation.

4. Burning Off the Sugar High

Easter is a sugar-heavy holiday. Between the jellybeans, the chocolate bunnies, and the Peeps, most kids (and plenty of adults) are vibrating with excess energy by noon.

In the mountains, you have an immediate outlet for that. Instead of fighting the sugar crash on the sofa, the whole family can head out for a mid-day hike. Spring is arguably the best time to hit the trails—the waterfalls are roaring from the snowmelt, the air is cool enough that you won’t get sweaty and miserable, and the bugs haven’t woken up yet. A three-mile trek to a scenic overlook is the perfect way to justify that second slice of carrot cake.

5. Reconnecting in the Quiet Zone

The real reason to head for the hills is the forced unplugging. In our daily lives, holidays are often just regular days with better food. We’re still checking work emails, scrolling through the same feeds, and worrying about the Monday morning commute.

The mountains have a way of putting all that noise on mute. When you’re sitting on a porch swing watching the mist roll off the ridges, those urgent emails feel a lot less important. Easter is supposed to be about renewal, but it’s hard to feel renewed when you’re staring at the same four walls you see every day. The silence of the woods gives you the mental space to actually talk to your spouse and play with your kids without checking your watch every ten minutes.

What to Pack for the High Country

When you’re packing for a spring trip to the mountains, you have to prepare for the fact that the weather is famously indecisive. You can easily experience three different seasons in a single day, so your suitcase needs to be all about strategic layers. Start with moisture-wicking base layers and a solid mid-weight fleece; you’ll likely be peeling these off during a sunny midday hike, but you’ll be desperate to wrap back up the second the sun dips behind the ridges and the temperature drops.

Since spring is “waterfall season,” the trails are going to be damp and the meadows will be soft, so leave the white sneakers at home and opt for a pair of sturdy, waterproof hiking boots. You should also toss a pair of binoculars into your bag, as Easter coincides with peak bird migrations and the window when black bears start emerging from hibernation. Finally, while your phone is convenient, consider bringing a dedicated camera. The way the sharp spring light hits the morning mist creates the kind of depth and color that a phone sensor just can’t fully capture.

Escape to the Mountains

You only get a handful of holidays a year where the kids are out of school and the world slows down for a minute. Don’t waste this one doing the same thing you did last year. Easter in the mountains offers a mix of adventure and peace that a backyard brunch just can’t touch. Whether you’re watching the sunrise over the peaks or hunting for eggs in the forest, you’ll come home feeling like you actually had a break.

Stop checking the calendar and start checking the altitude. The mountains are calling, and they’ve got a much better view than your backyard fence.

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