Cool dave. Did you get any alpine turns in when you were up there? Mt Doublehead (aka Mt BooBs) is a fun tour in that area.
Doublehead is an excellent choice that often gives a chance for first tracks because it is not often done. The trail was originally cut by the CCC as a racing trail. The current hiking trail is wide enough to ride and there are some birch stands that you can get into from time to time on either side. Be careful of the stream crossings at the bottom. The most uphill of the two "could," "maybe," be jumped.
Looking at a map, there is one trail that comes pretty much straight down from the cabin and another that comes down from a saddle to the skier's left of the cabin. The straight down one on the skier's right is the ski trail. If you've got the first tracks, walk up the one on the skier's left to save the snow in the ski trail for the descent.
The Wildcat Valley Trail, off the summit of Wildcat, returning all the way to Jackson, is another good run. Wildcat will allow uphill traffic on one of their trails, or will sell a single ride ticket. A couple of tight switch backs at the top, some glades half-way down, some route finding problems where development has encroached on the original line and a flat, ski tour at the bottom to finish the entire route. Take your topo map and choose light rather than heavy equipment to enjoy it the most. Modern tele or AT gear is sort of overdoing it, but I wouldn't take my skating skis either. Something in the nature of the Fischer E99 would be ideal. It is possible to do pure downhill by bailing out to Rte. 16 in the vacinity of Dana Place, but the actual route out at that spot keeps changing, again because of development.
Tommy T.