Friday, January 11, 2013

Worn Out on Skiing Every Day


  


A couple of weeks ago Bob was trying to figure out why he isn't as interested in skiing as he had been in the past. This is what he wrote.



q  At some point I wore out on skiing every day. Don’t get me wrong I still like to ski, but I don’t need it every day. From age 40 to 63 I skied every way imaginable. I skied fast and slow, on race courses and on bunny slopes. I skied in huge mega ski areas like Vail, Snowmass and Breckenridge and small hometown ski areas like Nashoba Valley. I skied from opening to closing chair and I skied just one or two runs in a day. I skied when I had to drive 100 miles to ski and I skied when I could walk to and from a ski lift. I skied when it was hot, warm, lukewarm, cool, cold, very cold, frigid cold, and arctic super cold. I got frostbite on my nose and frostbite on my toes. I hit rocks with my skis, hit a tree with my knee, and yes, once or twice even hit another person. When skiing I once hurt a shoulder and I once hurt a knee and I once hurt a thumb, but I never missed a ski day due to a ski injury. I skied when it was calm, when it was windy, and when there were howling, screaming idiot winds. I skied in brilliant sunshine, cloudy weather, drizzle, rain, pouring rain, light snow, heavy snow, and snow that was pounding so hard I couldn’t see in front of me. I skied green trails, blue trails, black trails, red trails, yellow trails, double black trails, and any other color available. I skiied trails that were labeled “Caution” and trails that were labeled “Cliffs” and trails that were labeled “Closed” (oops). I skied groomed snow, I skied knee-deep powder, I skied broken crud and breakable crust, I skied feathery light snow and wind-buffed snow, I skied Sierra cement, I skied over rocks and walked over rocks with my skis on. I skied snow that barely covered grass and snow that covered tall trees, I skied hardpacked snow, spring corn snow, loose granular, frozen granular, mashed potatoes, slick snow, ice, rock-hard blue ice and wind-scoured sastrugi. I skied little moguls, big moguls, ice-covered moguls and snow-covered moguls. I skied trees and I skied moguls in trees, I skied steeps and I skied easy runs, I skied chutes and I skied couloirs and jumped (not very high) off cornices. I skiied on perfectly groomed snow, turn after turn down magnificent cruisers. I skiied in a foot of puffy, light untracked powder where each turn sent snow streaming up my thighs. I skiied on soft, rhythmic bumps and in cruddy, choppy snow; and in untracked snow through perfectly-spaced trees with no other skiers to be seen. I skiied in wild, steep areas filled with trees and rocks as well as steep bowls filled with nothing but snow. I skiied beginner runs, making slow turns and feeling the changes in snow texture under my feet. I skied way up high at 13,000 feet and pretty much down at sea level. I skiied short-radius turns and long-radius turns, I did side slips and pivot slips, I did edge sets and hockey stops, I did blocking pole plants and railroad tracks (oh, how I did railroad tracks), I did crossover turns and crossunder turns, I did smear turns and carved turns, I absorbed and extended, I turned using my feet, ankles, knees and femurs. I got up ski hills using single chairs, double chairs, triple chairs, quad chairs, six-pack chairs, a 2-person gondola, 4-person gondolas, 6-person gondolas, 8 person gondolas, even bigger gondolas, trams, t-bars, j-bars, rope tows, a magic carpet, a boat-shaped lift, snowcats, and my own feet. I once was evacuated from a chairlift. I took ski lessons at Loon and at Breckenridge and at Keystone. I skied with big names like Steve Mahre and Billy Kidd and Pepi Steigler and Pam Fletcher. I skied in big groups, and with a few friends, and by myself. I skied with Sue and I skied with Ken. I skied with my children and I skied with strangers. I skied with ski school experts and with novices. I skied all the way from October to June. I skied in the east and I skied in the west. I skied on long skis and short skis, stiff skis and floppy skis, skis with a lot of sidecut and skis that were pretty straight. I skied using rear-entry boots and front-entry boots. I skied with aluminum poles and carbon-fiber poles. I skied wearing neon clothes, body-bag one-pieces, blue jeans, trash bags, and high-tech ski clothes.  I skied with no headgear, with a headband, with a hat, and with a helmet. I skied in lunatic crazy crowds with hour-long lift lines and in totally uncrowded conditions where you could ski the same trail over and over and the only tracks were yours. I ate lunch and snacks in hot, sweaty, overcrowded ski lodges, in fancy resort hotels, and outside at the top of mountains. I had skis and poles stolen and ski socks and goggles stolen. I skiied when I was full of energy and when I was dog-tired. I skied in conditions that were so horrible you wanted to cry and in conditions that were so achingly beautiful you wanted to cry. I skied and sometimes felt completely incompetent and at other times felt like a pretty good skier. I skied more than 1,350 days, 20,500 runs, and 28 million vertical feet. I skied and skied and skied for 12 years in New England and for 12 years in Colorado and at the end of that I felt that I was pretty much done. Just done. I had done it all. Or if I hadn’t done it all at least I had done enough, and that I no longer needed to ski every day. 

Christmas with all the trimmings

Thank you Kit and Jess for the lovely Christmas in Boulder.  We had such a good time and nothing was left out.  Here was our Xmas 2012.

The Connolly Family

Never a dull moment

The stockings were hung by the chimney with care


In hope that St. Nicholas soon would be there!!  

Then all the work started!!  

What a magical Xmas morning.



Opening presents took all morning and we had an amazing breakfast of french toast and egg nog!!

Even got to do some sledding.

We survived the sledding!!  Have a healthy and safe New Year.