Alaska Spine Skiing: A Virtual, Visceral, Vicarious Experience

While We All Await The Snow To Fly, This Might Give You A Rush.

Now this is hard skiing. Alaska spine with jumps. Credit: Richard Permin

Now this is hard skiing. Alaska spine with jumps.
Credit: Richard Permin

Pro skier and extreme athlete Richard Permin rips down a spine ridge in Alaska somewhere.  While we aren’t advocating this kind of skiing, we do appreciate the skill and courage it takes to even try it.  Note Richard’s heavy breathing as he negotiates some knarly steepness and major, major jumps.

A special thanks to Snowbrains for originally posting this.  Here’s a link to the original, complete with narrative about Richard.  It appears he did this…stunt…only months after recovering from a really bad broken ankle.  Richard, you da man.  Almost as gutsy as the great classic daredevil Dick Buek or Toni “Straight Down” Matt.  Click here for another story of gutsy skiing from SeniorsSkiing.com.

 

 

Resort Review: L2A, France—”Two Alps, Two Seasons”

Les Deux Alpes, France: Seniors 72+ Ski Free.

The "two Alps" in the name do not refer to the two facing mountain-sides that comprise the resort, but rather to two adjacent areas of the original mountain pasture on the north-south plateau on which the resort was built. These pasture areas (or 'alps') are part of the two villages of Mont-de-Lans and Vénosc that lie in the deep valleys, respectively, to the north and south. Credit: L2A Promotion

The “two Alps” in the name do not refer to the two facing mountain-sides that comprise the resort, but rather to two adjacent areas of the original mountain pasture on the north-south plateau on which the resort was built. These pasture areas (or ‘alps’) are part of the two villages of Mont-de-Lans and Vénosc that lie in the deep valleys, respectively, to the north and south.
Credit: L2A Promotion

Editor’s Note: This Resort Review was written by Val E., a reader who has an interesting background in the ski industry. Val used to work as a ski slalom course supervisor, snowboard technician, ski/snowboard clothing consultant, ski engineer, ski/snowboard writer and photographer in the U.S. and in Europe. He traveled to 25 countries, found snow in 11 of them, and he still searching. Val currently lives in Washington DC Metropolitan Area.

Les Deux Alpes (“le døz-alp”, aka L2A) is a big ski resort located 44 miles east of Grenoble. The name means “two alps”. It is the second oldest French ski resort which has the largest skiable glacier in Europe where people can ski from November to April and from June to August. Les 2 Alpes is one of the few places to offer summer skiing in the Alps. The Les 2 Alpes summer ski season is quite short, so check conditions and lift availability here.

Terrain

The resort has 102 runs, five of which are free. To get to the top of the hill you need to take one gondola, then another, et voila—you are at… the bottom of the glacier. You can go to the highest point (12,000 ft) by a t-bar or an underground railway—the

Here are some summer skiers doing the upper L2A. BTW, seniors 72+ ski free. Credit: L2A Promotion

Here are some summer skiers doing the upper L2A. BTW, seniors 72+ ski free.
Credit: L2A Promotion

latter is convenient if you want to relax between the runs. Some people call L2A “reverse mountain” because the slopes on the top are relatively easy, while the ones in the middle and at the bottom are steeper. With a total 7500 ft vertical drop and 10-km in length, it has one of the longest ski runs in the world. A lack of snow is rare, but the army of 214 snow cannons is ready for action. A six-day pass may cost you 220€ in winter and 197€ in summer. Skiers from 65 to 71 years old can get 10 percent off; anybody older than 72 can ski for free!

Getting There

If you want fewer stops on your flight to Europe, fly to Geneva, Switzerland, then drive south 140 miles. Some people prefer to travel through French cities: Paris (400 mi), Lyon (100 mi) or Grenoble (75 mi). To minimize driving from Paris you can take a high speed train to Grenoble— three hours, and then take a bus—one hour. Traveling through Italy is another option—the drive from Milan is 210 miles.

Lodging

L2A village is relatively compact and walk-friendly. You can rent an apartment or chalet or stay at a hotel from budget to four-star. Those who want to save money and are ready to commute by a chairlift may prefer to stay at one of two villages: Venosc or Mont-de-Lans. Larger hotels provide transportation to the slopes, but otherwise you can take a free bus circulating around the village. Lodging is located below 5500 ft, so sleeping should not be a problem, while skiing above 10,000 ft may require some adaptation. Because of that, staying there for at least five-seven days could be a good idea.

Food and Culture

French people are passionate about food, and you will notice that in L2A. Six restaurants rated by Michelin in 2016 are proof of that. There are plenty of places to eat and drink on the slopes and in the village. Responsible skiers may try hot red wine right on the slopes. To avoid lines at the restaurants and enjoy less crowded slopes, don’t plan your lunch between 12 pm and 1:30 pm. As in many European places do not expect free water at the restaurants, free soda refills, or many free public restrooms, especially on the hill. The English language should be enough to communicate, though the locals would be pleased to hear simple phrases like “Bon Jour” and “Merci”.

TIP: Check the Ice Cave on the glacier, buy wine and cheese in the grocery stores, and visit Grenoble—a charming historic city.

Bottom Line

If you have free time, some money, and a desire to enjoy skiing and French culture, go to L2A in winter, spring or even summer.

Here’s a short animated video showing the “nouvelle piste” blue route down from the top.  It’s 10-km long!  

L2A is the highest resort in the Alps. The summer ski season attracts camps, racers, and snow-starved skiers. Credit: L2A Promotion

L2A is the highest resort in the Alps. The summer ski season attracts camps, racers, and snow-starved skiers.
Credit: L2A Promotion

ON3P Ski Review From A Reader

A Reader Has Discovered A Perfect Ski For Seniors.  Here’s His Story.

Portland-based ON3P are hand made. And you can customize. Credit: ON3P

Portland-based ON3P are hand made. And you can customize.
Credit: ON3P

Editor’s Note:  We received this ski review from Seniorsskiing.com subscriber Tom Levak, an enthusiastic skier who skis in the Portland, OR, area and also hits Mt. Hood every summer.  As far as we know, Tom is not associated with ON3P; this is an example of how our readers can contribute to our editorial content.  This is not an ad or sponsored content. Just an attempt to expose our readers to other readers’ favorites. We love the idea of a “reader-reviewer”.  If you have something to review, let us know at info@seniorsskiing.com, and we’ll get back to you.

Screen Shot 2016-08-30 at 1.04.25 PM

First, my qualifications: I’m a 77-year old Level III+ male skier and Level II snowboarder. Before I moved to ON3P Kartels, most recently, I was on Volant Chubbs, then Salomon Pocket Rockets, then Atomic Bentchetlers. I was on the snow 50-plus days last season and, in the summer, I go up to the Mt. Hood’s Timberline Palmer lift every two weeks or so.

Now then, here’s my opinion about the ON3Ps: it’s the best ski on the market for anyone, but, in particular, senior skiers.

In 2006, Scott Andrus, the ON3P founder, who started skiing at age three in Vail/Beavercreek, was a college sophomore, majoring in biology. That was when he decided that he could build a ski that was better than any on the market, even though he knew nothing about building skis. So, in 2008, he graduated and set up a 220 square foot factory in his garage and got several of his ski friends to help him put it together. He had no money, so he and most of those who helped him spent hundreds of hours sleeping on couches in the garage. Don’t laugh, but it took him ten months just to figure out how to build a ski press. Ultimately, by the end on his first year, he had built 53 different skis, all with their own characteristics and graphics, and by the 2008-09 ski season, he had talked amateur and professional friends to test them all on Mt. Hood. They loved most of them (some of them not so much).

By 2009, he was marketing several skis, and of course he had some problems, such as when Scott USA sued him for naming one of his skis “The Great Scott.” He just changed the name to “Cease and Desist.”

Over the years, Scott’s Portland factory has grown into a super facility, located in a manufacturing strip mall. A couple of months ago, Scott took me for a tour, which was pretty darn impressive, and a hell of a lot of fun (Do you like bidets? One of the bathrooms has one). Each room of his operation is a separate part of the process. And every ski is hand-built by employee friends who love their work—there’s no contracting out.

All of their skis are fiberglass/carbon with FCS certified bamboo cores. Of course, they manufacture all types of skis, but the shop’s all-weather favorite is mine too: The Kartel. ($799.00 with free shipping on domestic orders.) They also custom manufacture to your personal specifications. Because Mt. Hood has every kind of weather and snow, I’ve skied the Kartel on everything, and I can say, unreservedly, that it does everything: It holds tight on the hard stuff, floats in the powder, and turns like a dream. With its twin tips and center balance, I was even able to easily ride them switch (backwards).

I could load up a bunch of photos with this review, but there’s really no point, you can just go to shop.on3pskis.com and take an on-line factory tour. Or you can take a demo tour on the slopes. Check for demo dates for 2016-17 season here. Facebook is ON3P Skis. The factory itself is open 8a.m. to 5p.m., Monday through Friday. If you’d like to take a personal tour, Scott would appreciate it if you would call ahead at 503-206-5909. When you arrive, he’ll be the first person you see, sitting at his desk, working on the design of his next ski.

This Week In SeniorsSkiing.com (Aug. 26)

Seven Word Food Maxim, Looking Back At Portillo’s FIS Moment, Water Park Fun In VT, Hits From The OR Show, NZ Ice Follies.

Fifty years ago, Portillo hosted the first FIS World Championship below the equator. It changed a lot of minds.

Fifty years ago, Portillo hosted the first FIS World Championship below the equator. It changed a lot of minds.

It’s been a busy post-vacation week here at SeniorsSkiing.com.  We came back to lots of emails offering really good prices for season passes if you buy now.  Once again, Sugarbush is offering its very excellent mid-week season pass for 65-plus for $119 before Sept. 14th and $209 after. Ragged Mountain NH is offering a season pass for all ages at $299 until Sept. 15th and then bouncing up to $349 before Oct 31th.  Alta’s season pass for 65 plus is $649. Powder Mt is $540 for 62-74 and then $20 for 75-plus.  Thanks, Powder Mountain.  Do some searching now for some real deals.  If you have any recommendations, please use the Comments Box at the bottom of this page to let us and our readers know.

Outdoor Retailers Summer Market is a huge trade show in SLC. Credit: Harriet Wallis

Outdoor Retailers Summer Market is a huge trade show in SLC.
Credit: Harriet Wallis

This week, we hear from our West Coast correspondent Rose Marie Cleese, who bravely tells us about the downs and ups of the fitness journey she started last summer.  She has some good news and not so good news.  But she is inspired anew.  Thanks for sharing, Rose Marie.

We also discovered that this year is the 50th anniversary of the first and only FIS World Championships held south of the equator.  Portillo hosted all the world’s great skiers back in 1966 and this short video document shows some of the biggest names of the day recalling their experience ski racing in the Andes at 9,000-feet.

Correspondent Janet Franz brings us an idea for summer fun with grandkids, reporting on the awesomely diverse water parks (plural) at Smuggler’s Notch, VT.  Still time for a weekend get away with the little ones.

The venerable and stalwart Harriet Wallis has visited the Outdoor Retailers Summer Market for us and brings news of some interesting and useful items for seniors. Welcome back, Harriet.

Finally, while it is warm where you are, it is freezing in New Zealand.  We have a video clip of the brave lift operators dealing with ice rime at Whakapapa Ski Field, NZed’s largest winter resort.  Strange weather everywhere, it seems.

Once again, thanks for reading SeniorsSkiing.com.  If you haven’t yet registered for the Promotive/Experticity discount that we have arranged for our subscribers, please email us at info@seniorsskiing.com.  Just verify you are a subscriber and we will send you information on registering with Promotive/Experticity.  There are about 40 top gear and clothing brands available to our subscribers with big discounts.

And remember, there are more of us every day and we aren’t going away!  Tell your friends about us, please.

New Zealand's Whakapapa has lots of ice.

New Zealand’s Whakapapa has lots of ice.

 

On The Fitness Road Again!

How My Fitness Journey Took A Detour, And How One Powerful Documentary Is Going To Help Me Get Back On Track.

Michael Pollan's PBS documentary and book have inspired RoseMarie to renew her fitness quest.

Nutritionist Michael Pollan’s PBS documentary and book have inspired RoseMarie to renew her fitness quest.

So, to let all of you who were following my fitness journey here last summer know, I was doing great…and then I wasn’t. I don’t know exactly when I lost momentum or let complacency set in or thought I could let some old bad habits wiggle back into my life here and there without bad effect. But here I am again a year later feeling like a stuffed sausage in too-tight jeans and nowhere near fitting into that favorite dress of mine again. Somehow I’ve managed to gain back half the weight I lost.

But I’m not throwing in the towel or losing the tape measure or chucking the scale. I’ve got three-plus months to get back to where I was last fall, and I vow to continue this time until I reach my goal. My plan is to continue my exercise program, finally conquer my habit of staying up late and getting up early, stick to a healthy and sensible diet, and make all of this a permanent, everyday part of my life going forward. I’ll report periodically on how I’m doing and share with you any insights or good tips I’ve found on my renewed journey to fitness.

My big piece of advice for you today is to check out In Defense of Food, the excellent two-hour PBS documentary about nutrition produced by Michael Pollan, America’s most personable, passionate, and brilliant nutrition activist, journalist, and award-winning author. At the heart of the documentary, which is based on his best-selling book of the same name and which first aired on PBS last December, is Pollan’s seven-word maxim to help Americans figure out how to eat to be healthy: “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.”

During my fitness program last summer, I had actually incorporated some of his philosophy into my new eating regimen. I became very vigilant about portion control, and I started eating less meat and white food (e.g., bread, cheese, etc.) and more fruit and veggies. But after watching Pollan’s riveting documentary, I have a whole new view on what “food” is.

When Pollan says to “Eat food”, he’s talking about 100% real food, not quasi-food or “edible food-like substances”. Believe it or not, probably most of the food in your local supermarket falls into the latter category. Anything artificial or with additives does not qualify as real or pure food. When Pollan says “the quieter the food, the healthier the food”, he’s talking about the “health” claims that cry out from the packaging, most of which are horribly misleading or worse, untrue. As much as the government tries to regulate what can be said on packaging, the manufacturers find clever ways around the rules. To follow this part of the maxim, always read the labels and buy food that’s free of packaging, which will make it easier to follow the third part of the maxim: “Mostly plants”. Eat lots of fruits and vegetables and consider meats “special occasion” food. For the freshest produce with the least amount of packaging, shop at your local farmers’ markets.

And to follow the middle part of the maxim, “Not too much”, Pollan suggests eating your fruits and vegetables first during a meal, and use smaller plates and glasses. And of course, be mindful of your portion sizes—think palm-full, not plate-full.

Enjoy Mr. Pollan’s documentary…and wish me luck!

Pollan's seven word rule for selecting and consuming food. Makes sense.

Pollan’s seven word rule for selecting and consuming food. Makes sense.

 

Remembering Portillo’s FIS World Championships 1966

Fifty Years Ago, Portillo Changed Everyone’s Idea About Skiing Below The Equator.

Fifty years ago, Portillo hosted the first FIS World Championship below the equator. It changed a lot of minds.

Portillo improbably hosted the first FIS World Championship below the equator in 1966. It changed a lot of minds.

At the time, it was a wild idea.  Hold the FIS World Championships in Chile, at Portillo, at 3,300 meters, in the Northern hemisphere’s summer. Somehow, resort owner Henry Purcell convinced the FIS to award the 1966 event to the nascent resort.  Despite a 1965 hurricane that destroyed lifts and created monstrous snow falls and avalanches, the FIS held fast and the World Championships were (heroically) held in the Andes with skiers gathering from all over the world.  You can read about Portillo’s history here.

In the commemorative documentary video below, you’ll see Henry Purcell, the owner, describing how the event changed the world’s view of South American skiing.  Nancy Green, Canadian super star, Austrian ski race legends Egon Zimmerman, Hermann Maier, and Erik Schinegger, Carlos Senorer, Italian gold medal winner, and even modern day whiz Ted Ligety offer their thoughts and memories about that most pivotal event.

Portillo continues to attract summer skiers and racers preparing for the season.  As we have seen, this season has had its moments of really, really big snowfalls.  Click here for a report of a nine-foot snowfall this June. Have you skied ‘way down south?

Vermont Ski Hill Morphs Into Summer Water Park

Grandkids Would Love A Summer Day At Smugglers.

[Ski resorts are being creative about developing off-snow season attractions.  Smugglers Notch in Northern Vermont has gone the extra mile in creating three separate water parks.  There’s still time to get up there if you’re looking for a getaway for Labor Day.  Special thanks to Janet Franz, a feature story writer covering health, fitness, business, recreation and community affairs and a member of the North America Snowsports Journalists Association for this story.  She’s also chair of Vermont Governor’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports.]

View from top of slide at Mountainside Water Park. Credit: Janet Franz

View from top of slide at Mountainside Water Park.
Credit: Janet Franz

If you are entertaining your grandchildren in the Northeast this summer, consider how many bodies of water they can splash into on one day? About a dozen, if you’re spending the day at Smugglers’ Notch in northern Vermont. In summer, the ski resort transforms into a water park village, with three diverse wet “playgrounds” and two reservoirs spread across the resort’s three interconnected mountains. Consider a daytrip to Smugglers’ Notch with your little ones—a “Daycation” ticket and free, on-call shuttle give all-day access to every location.

My family of four visited Smuggs last month on a mission to plunge into every pool, slide and spray zone. Here’s how we made a splash:

We parked in the Village Center near Mountainside Water Playground, where four separate watery spaces cater to all ages. In the ankle-deep Little Smugglers’ Lagoon, tiny tots sloshed under a gentle waterfall, explored a faux cave decorated with happy bears and floated on colorful rafts. Nearby, kids up to 48 inches tall rode the Turtle Slide into a shallow pool.

My boys, ages 8 and 12, could hardly wait to try the 30-foot tall, 300-foot long Great River Rapid Ride, a slide restricted to people at least 48 inches tall, or 42 with a lifejacket. We grabbed tubes and carried them 55 steps up the tower where an attendant helped riders settle in and launch toward a pool below. On multiple rides we slid forward, backward, spinning, and — everyone in my family’s favorite — the slingshot: The staffer holds your ankles, pulls you forward, then thrusts you down banking off the sides.

After breaking for a home-packed picnic, we waded in the 75-foot long Mountainside pool. We found plenty of chairs, a snack bar and clean bathhouse with showers and changing rooms.

Using the poolside phone, I called the shuttle and we took a five-minute ride to Notchville Park, a tiered area with three pools. My kids tested Ninja skills on the Lily Pad Walk, jumping between floating mats toward the Twister Waterslide. I tried it, but disliked the sensation of lying on my back inside the enclosed tube that dumped me plunging underwater.

We sat together under a waterfall in the large pool. The boys swam and I wet my feet in Splashville, where tiny tots romped through gentle fountains and glided down a colorful slide onto a soft pad.

Again, I called the shuttle and this time a golf cart arrived. The kids sat facing backward while we zipped along a wooded trail as though on a forest safari.

At Courtside we dipped our toes in the nine-foot deep lap pool and checked out the 120-foot Flume waterslide. We felt too sweaty for hot tubbing, but I appreciated that there was an adults-only whirlpool and another, cooler one for families.

We drove our own car five minutes to Morse Mountain and hiked 10 minutes to Rum Runner’s Hideaway, a six-acre reservoir in a scenic mountain setting. The boys waded in marshy water and inspected a floating, inflated trampoline. We contemplated renting a paddleboat, but instead hiked down to our car and drove to Bootleggers’ Basin, another reservoir surrounded by fields and mountains. The inflated Zoom Flume slide was closed, so we explored the sandy beach and scenic view before heading home, exhausted, wet and happy.

Details

Smuggs’ Water Parks are open through September 5. Daycation tickets cost $69 per day for adults, $49 per day for youth 3-18 years, under 3 free with a paying adult. Vermont residents receive a 50 percent discount with valid ID. Bring your own towels. Lifejackets, noodles and inner tubes are provided at pools and slides. Shop for supplies and food in the village (including Ben & Jerry’s Scoop Shop).

Overnight accommodations available here.

For plenty of fun activities to do in the region click here.

Top Picks From The Outdoor Retailers Show

Improve Your Balance, Wear The Newest Fabric And Protect From The Sun.

Outdoor Retailers Summer Market is a huge trade show in SLC. Credit: Harriet Wallis

Outdoor Retailers Summer Market is a huge trade show in SLC.
Credit: Harriet Wallis

Outdoor Retailers Summer Market Tradeshow is the largest show of its kind in the U.S. where manufacturers strut their products and retailers place orders for next year. The massive show has over 1,500 exhibitors, and it covers acres within Salt Lake City’s convention center.

A few passes are issued to media writers and photographers—such as SeniorSkiing.com. That’s how I got in.  Here are some of the most interesting senior-oriented products I discovered.

Get balanced. Take it from Louis Stack, you can age gracefully if you keep your body’s balance. This former Canadian speed

Stack with his stand up desk trainer. Credit: Harriet Wallis

Stack with his stand up desk trainer.
Credit: Harriet Wallis

ski champion—clocked at 127.33 mph—crashed at a pinnacle of his career, and it destroyed his knee and both feet. In the pits of his adversity, he was determined to restore his health, his balance and his race career.

And so he invented the first ski cross trainer which he lugged from race to race around the world, using it to fine tune his balance and stay fit. Athletes loved it. Physical therapists loved it. So this racer-turned-inventor went on to create the “wobble disc” trainers and other balance boards for all levels of athletes. He now has gentle balance trainers for those who stand at workplace desks. Check Stack’s website Fitter1.com here.

“Maintain your balance and you’ll age gracefully,” he says. “It’s like brushing your teeth. You have to do it to prevent problems.”

My chiropractor has Stack’s “wobble disc” and I love using it. I teeter on it and sharpen my skiing balance. But until the recent Outdoor Retailers show I had no clue who invented the disc or why. Now we know.

37.5 VP Tim Rogers describes the new high-tech yarn. Credit: Harriet Wallis

37.5 VP Tim Rogers describes the new high-tech yarn.
Credit: Harriet Wallis

Newest fabric technology. Another top find at the show is a thermo-regulating high tech yarn/thread called 37.5. Instead of wicking away moisture after you sweat, it carries away vapor before you sweat. By regulating the body’s temperature, elite athletes’ performance increases as much as 26 percent.

“It’s in the DNA of the yarn,” says Tim Rogers, a company VP. 37.5 is being woven into high end athletic wear as well as Kenneth Cole men’s business suits. Nobody wants to sweat during an important business meeting.  Click here for more on the 37.5 technology.

Sun protection. Joshua Tree sunscreen isn’t new, but its zinc content makes it work really well, and it doesn’t feel gooey. It doesn’t advertise and it’s not sold in mass market retailers, so you’ll find it in specialty shops such as Christy

Joshua Tree products now include sun and "after-sun", and arthritis creams. Credit: Harriet Wallis

Joshua Tree products now include sun and “after-sun”, and arthritis creams.
Credit: Harriet Wallis

Sports. In addition, it has branched out into after-sun care and also arthritis cream.  Click here for a store locator.

Nifty Back Stories:

Heat Factory founder Chris Treplow at the show. Credit: Harriet Wallis

Heat Factory founder Chris Treplow at the show.
Credit: Harriet Wallis

Stay warm. Chris Treptow grew up in Wisconsin and knew what cold weather was. When she attended Badger football games, she and other fans would stuff newspaper into large trash bags, step into them and pull them up around their waists to fend off the brutal cold. She went on to found Heat Factory, the air activated hand and body warmers company.

Belts, dogs, guitars. Croakies woven belts include hundreds of designs for all

Tie-dye artist Jeremy Strebel displays a Croakie belt. Credit: Harriet Wallis

Tie-dye artist Jeremy Strebel displays a Croakie belt.
Credit: Harriet Wallis

sports. As a fisherman, I love the trout designs. It also has dog collars and guitar straps. The company hired tie-dye artist Jeremy Strebel to design that line of colorful belts.

Whakapapa Ice: Happening Now

North America Swelters, NZ Freezes.

New Zealand's Whakapapa has lots of ice.

New Zealand’s Whakapapa has lots of ice.

In case you missed it during this hottest summer of all time, the ski season is in full swing down under.  Here’s a clip from Whakapapa Ski Field, New Zealand’s largest winter resort.  Located on the North Island, Whakapapa is on the north side of Mount Ruapehu.  You really have to give the crew credit for keeping the lifts open in what appears to be a mess of icy frost.

 

 

 

This Week In SeniorsSkiing.com (Aug. 19)

SeniorsSkiing.com Is On Vacation!

For the first time since we started publishing in 2014, we are taking a break.  See you next week.

If you haven’t signed up for your Promotive discount, let us know.

Sticker2016

Volcano on Chile's Nevado de Chillan Ski Resort

This Week in SeniorsSkiing.com (Aug 12)

V for Vail, Vandals, Volcanoes…and Vacation!!!!

Volcano on Chile's Nevado de Chillan Ski Resort

This week we report on V‘s: Vail (purchasing WhistlerBlackcomb), Vandals (destroying the world’s oldest skier image), and Volcanoes (erupting in Chile’s Nevado de Chillan ski resort). We figure it’s an appropriate use of the alphabet, since both Mike and I are taking Vacations next week. He’s with family on Prince Edward Island. My wife and I will be on a road trip to Colorado’s Western Slope, hiking, soaking in hot springs, taking it easy.

Out of respect to the adjacent letter, “W,” we’re including a quirky video from Whakappa in New Zealand. If you’re in a hot and humid place, watch it. You’ll shiver!

If you’re contemplating purchasing a season pass, now is the time to do it. The cost of resort and multiple resort passes generally increases after Labor Day. Some resorts, like Snowbird, include a variety of goodies for early purchasers.

SeniorsSkiing is taking a break next week — our first since we started publishing in 2014. We’ll have some interesting and exciting developments to share as we approach the 2016-17 season. More on those when we return August 26!

In the meanwhile, keep doing what you do to condition for Winter. It’s going to be a great season for older skiers. There are more of us every day, and we aren’t going away!

Rock-Carvings

Vandals Destroy World’s Oldest Skier Image

Picture Used as Lillehammer Games Logo.

5,000 year old Tromso rock art skier before and after

5,000 year old Tromso rock art skier before and after

The world’s oldest known image of a person on skis — a 5,000 year old petroglyph on the Norwegian island of Tro — has been destroyed by vandals. The image was used as the logo for the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics.

Image used for Lillehammer Olympics

Image used for Lillehammer Olympics

 

This is a tragedy for those interested in skiing history. It also is a tragedy for Norway, which considers the picture among it’s national treasures.

The vandals were young people who claim they were trying to improve the visibility of the faint petroglyph.

I live in an area with an abundance of ancient rock art. A short walk from my home takes me to a major panel made by people from the Fremont Culture, who were here about 1,000 years ago. There are pictographs (painted images) and petroglyphs (pecked and carved images). Over the past century, visitors have carved names and dates. Archaeologists consider these more recent markings “historic.” Over the past few years, the site has degraded as vandals have defaced the 1,000 year old images, scratched in their own graffiti, and used charcoal from the site to leave drawings, names, and stupid sentiments.

Ancient rock art is rare. Many people do not understand its importance as a connection to prehistory. Nor do they understand that it should be left alone.

Some educational programs encourage people to “Respect and Protect” ancient rock art. I recently met with personnel from the Bureau of Land Management to discuss ways to protect the panel near my home.

For a cultural treasure so important to the Norwegians, what measures were in place to prevent young idiots from to destroying this iconic ancient skier?

Blackcomb Mountain

Vail Purchases Whistler Blackcomb

Chinese Skiers Expected to Fuel Growth.

Aerial view of Glacier Creek, Glacier and Jersey Chairs

Aerial view of Glacier Creek, Glacier and Jersey Chairs

Vail Resorts Inc. has reached an agreement to buy Whistler Blackcomb Holdings, owner of Whistler Blackcomb ski resort. The C$1.4 billion deal is expected to result in Vail’s marketing machine to attract greater numbers of international visitors to Whistler Blackcomb.

“We have felt for a long time that Whistler (Blackcomb) is really the best positioned North American resort to benefit from the growth that we expect in outbound Chinese ski visitation, especially as China starts to ramp up towards the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics,” explained Vail CEO Rob Katz.

News of the sale had a positive impact on Whistler Blackcomb shares, which jumped to C $36.63 per share in Toronto, up by C$11.49 following Monday’s announcement.

Earlier this year, Whistler Blackcomb announced a C$345-million infrastructure and real estate expansion.

David Brownlie, Whistler Blackcomb CEO, will remain chief operating officer.

Whistler opened in 1966, with a four-person gondola, a double chairlift and a day lodge. It merged with Blackcomb in 1997. The combined areas comprise the largest and most visited ski resort in North America

This Week In SeniorsSkiing.com (August 5)

Falling From The Sky, More Snowless—And Rough—Skiing, Promotive Discount Reminder, First Resort Review Of Season, Free Skiing Endures.

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It’s been a busy week at SeniorsSkiing.com.  We have some far-reaching stories that may help you through the latest heat wave.

Co-Publisher Jon Weisberg reports on a daredevil who jumped from a plane to the earth without a parachute or batwings. No, it’s not skiing, but it’s a visual rush. Hold onto your seat and enjoy.

From Finland, we have the latest episode from Real Skifi, a group of very athletic teens who basically—how can we say this—ski through the streets and parks of their home town.  Urban skiing at its best.

On a more serious note, we report the results of our most recent poll which suggests that many subscribers are not taking advantage of really significant discounts via Promotive.  As a subscriber to SeniorsSkiing.com, you are automatically eligible for the same kind of discounts that pro skiers and instructors get on top-brand gear and clothing.  Check the article to find out how you can sign up if you missed the opportunity when you subscribed.

We are also posting our very first resort review of the 2016-2017 season.  It’s from Jim Barber who lives near and loves Mt. Baldy, BC, a small but very senior-focused resort that gets big powder snow every season.  We promise you that you will not believe the price of a senior season pass.

Finally, we update the story about the NH state legislature’s attempt to wipe out free skiing for state resident seniors.  The news is good; we salute the spirit of offering free skiing for seniors.  Along those lines, we are updating our listing of US and Canadian areas that offer free skiing for seniors which will be coming along before the first flakes fly.  Watch for it.

Thanks again for subscribing to SeniorsSkiing.com.  Please tell your friends about us.  Remember, there are more of us every day, and we aren’t going away.

Here are just some of the top brands available to SeniorsSkiing.com subscribers.

Here are just some of the top brands available to SeniorsSkiing.com subscribers.

Don’t Try This At Home!

Luke Atkins Drops 25,000 Feet Into Giant Net.

 

Luke Aikins caught like a butterfly after his 25,000 fall with no parachute.

Luke Aikins caught like a butterfly after his 25,000 fall with no parachute.

Okay, our focus is on the 50+ snow sport enthusiast, and this article is about a 42 year old skydiver. By now you’ve probably read about or watched Luke Aikins’ history-making 25,000 foot descent without parachute or wingsuit. He jumped and directed himself (using GPS technology) to a 10,000 square foot net suspended high enough above the ground to catch him safely. The stunt was dubbed “Heaven Sent,” but he could just as well have named it “Catch and Release.” Aikins, a third generation skydiver, has a lot of experience, reportedly more than 18,000 jumps. But this one is a doozey!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6qF_fzEI4wU

Urban Skiing: Snowless Daredevils From Finland

Impossible but true.

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Crazy kids in Finland ski in the city without snow.  What gives?

Several years ago, four Finnish teen boys played around with skiing without snow in their city of Jyvaskyla.  In parks, streets, and into rivers and ponds, they would skid, slide, crash and burn.  Since beginning in 2011, these lads have made 16 episodes showing their mischief and athleticism, and they’ve been viewed more than three million times around the world. Their site is called Real Skifi.  Check it out here.

Meanwhile, here’s the latest episode. Fun or foolish?

Poll Results: Promotive Discounts Underutilized!

Results Show That SeniorsSkiing.com Readers Not Taking Discounts.

Here are the results of our most recent poll:

Question: Have you signed up for Promotive discounts?

Yes, I’ve signed up 7%

Yes, I’ve signed up and bought stuff 2%

No, I haven’t signed up 26%

No, I didn’t know about Promotive 51%

Hmmmm.

One of the clearest and most unambiguous findings from our two most recent reader surveys revealed that discounts are very important to our subscribers.  Well, big discounts on clothing, gear, goggles, gloves, you name it are now available to you, our readers.  When we saw the overwhelming interest in discounts, we approached Promotive, an online accumulator of discounts from name brands.

Here are just some of the top brands available to SeniorsSkiing.com subscribers.

Here are just some of the top brands available to SeniorsSkiing.com subscribers.

What Promotive does is offer discounts to groups of professionals that they form into “teams”.  Examples are Professional Skiers, Ski Instructors,  Ski Team Members. Promotive formed a special group just for us called “Snow Sports Influencers.”  So when you subscribe to SeniorsSkiing.com, you can register with Promotive and get huge discounts from big-name brands like:

  • Helly Hansen
  • Outdoor Tech
  • Fisher
  • Swix
  • Injinji
  • Scott
  • Obermeyer

and many more.  Many vendors are taking 40% off suggested retail prices.

What to do if you didn’t notice the instructions for getting registered with Promotive when you subscribed to SeniorsSkiing.com?

Contact us via email, confirm you are a subscriber, and we will send you the step-by-step instructions to become part of the SeniorsSkiing.com Snow Sport Influencers team.

 

Resort Review: Mt. Baldy BC Has A $19 Senior Season Pass! Seriously.

A Small Area Enchants Seniors, Offering Bargain Skiing In Big Powder.

Mt. Baldy is small but powdery and friendly. Credit: Mt. Baldy

Mt. Baldy is small but powdery, friendly and inexpensive.
Credit: Mt. Baldy

Editor Note: This review was written by Jim Barber, a long time skier and ski business veteran.  He lives near Mt. Baldy and loves his retirement home in BC.  Here’s his story:  “My wife and I started our life together in the ski shop business at Hunter Mountain N.Y. in the seventies. We helped Lloyd Lambert set up the Hunter Mt Ski museum and the first 70 plus ski club.  We have no kids by choice so we have had plenty of time and money to ski all over North America. We moved to Washington state and got married in the late seventies. I worked for Weyerhaeuser in forestry research and my wife Marian taught Special Ed in a juvenile  institution. We knew we wanted to semi retire to a ski hill and the rest is history. Today our two homes are 40 miles apart in two different countries.”

Mt. Baldy Ski Resort is in British Columbia’s southern Okanagan, just over forty miles from Washington State and the Canadian border. We found it fifteen years ago while on a skifari to find out were wanted to spend our senior skiing years. We found it at Mt. Baldy, the last ski area we thought we would end up at after skiing at many ski mountains across North America.  We moved here from upstate New York’s Hunter Mountain.

 Mt. Baldy started in late 60s as a Cat skiing site. Soon, a t-bar was added and Mt. Baldy started to grow. It has the highest base elevation—5,800 feet—with all natural BC powder.  No snow making is needed here! Cat skiing without the cat!  One thing that sold us on Baldy was the number of seniors that own cabins and ski here. When we first started skiing here, there was a 90-year-old snow boarder. Need I say more?

We have two near by towns—Oliver and Osoyoos—with ample lodging and restaurants. There are countless vineyards in this region boasting BC wines. Oliver’s motto is “Wine Capital of BC.” If you love golf, you can ski in the morning and golf in the afternoon. On the mountain, there are cabins to rent and the Honky Tonk Hotel. There’s a ski rental shop and a great ski school. The lodge has a full cafeteria and upstairs is the infamous Baldy Bar and restaurant, staffed by top chefs from the wineries.  Baldy is a little out of the way, but if you are on a ski trip through the great Northwest, stop by a ski resort were everyone will show you their secret powder stashes, and you are valued and respected for being a senior skier/snowboarder.

 There is no rush at Baldy and no lift lines. No high speed lifts, because you need the time on the lift to rest and meet the locals. Eventually, everyone at Baldy becomes a local. Baldy is what skiing used to be and still should be.  That’s why workers from other resorts ski at Baldy on their days off.

Snow and Terrain:  This small area—there are only two major lifts—boasts of boundless powder, a meteorological fact of life in southern BC. There were 13 meters of natural snow on Mt. Baldy in the 2015-16 season. The mountain has 500 acres of skiable terrain with a total of 22 runs with something for every skill level. The Eagle Chair base is at 5,650-ft. above ski level, the highest base altitude of any resort in Canada. There’s also a terrain park.

Culture: Super friendly, lots of seniors, instant friendships and acceptance.  Less glitzy areas like Mt. Baldy breed great skiing relationships. Lots of slope-side accommodations make easy access. New owners have big plans for the helping Mt. Baldy achieve its potential.

Bottom Line:  We saved the best for last. Seniors ski for $19 a day, and guess what?  You can by a Season Pass for the same price.  Yup.  $19. That’s. A. Bargain. The season starts on Dec 1, 2016 and goes until mid-late April.

Trail Map: Click here for Mt. Baldy trail map.

Here’s a 2010 video of First Tracks on Mt. Baldy on a powder day.  Check the music and the skier whooping it up.

Cannon

Cannon Mountain Update: Seniors To Continue Free Skiing

House Rebels Against Bill That Would Have Ended Free Senior Skiing.

Cannon Mountain is a state-owned area, famous for its aerial tram and free skiing for 65+ seniors. Credit: Cannon Mountain

Cannon Mountain is a state-owned area, famous for its aerial tram and free skiing for 65+ seniors.
Credit: Cannon Mountain

Senior resident skiers can breath a sigh of relief after NH legislators agreed to drop a plan that would have ended free skiing for seniors.

House and Senate representatives had agreed to a plan where resident NH seniors would begin to pay $5 a day for lift tickets, increasing by $5 a year until it reached one-third the regular adult rate.  But one (unidentified) representative said he (or she) could not support a bill that “would push granny over a cliff.” In a final vote, the idea was defeated.

The effort started as a way to balance the budget for the state’s park system which is supposed to be self-supporting.  However, making ends meet has been difficult and funding needed maintenance and upgrades has been proving difficult.

Several representatives said the amount of revenue from the $5 a day plan was minuscule.

So free skiing for resident senior skiers lives on.  At least for one more year.