The Future Is Here
Among the thousands of reasons the abrupt end to the season is a bummer is this: Those of you who were planning to demo the Roam Robotics Elevate will need to wait until we’re back on the hill.

Roam Elevate backpack and control device
Elevate is world’s first computer-assisted knee exoskeleton for skiers.
I had the good fortune to try the device toward the end of February. I met DJ, a company representative, at Deer Valley on a bluebird day and we spent much of the afternoon trying the Elevate on a variety of terrain.
If you missed our earlier article reporting on Rick Hovey’s experience with Elevate, click here. I think that Rick, a PSIA II instructor and a person with a serious knee condition, reports more thoroughly on the many benefits Elevate delivers.
But I wanted to go on record with my positive experience and encourage any skier with knee or other orthopaedic conditions to give Elevate a test run.
DJ helped me get the exoskeleton on my legs; a simple procedure involving a few easy-to-fasten straps. It’s a good-looking product that the company keeps refining.
Next, I hefted the pack containing computer, battery and air compressor onto my back and attached air hoses and power connections. The initial sense of weight and bulk disappeared quickly. That said, DJ explained that next season’s version will be lighter and sleeker.
We skied to one of the lifts and took a few runs. DJ asked if I could tell the difference. Elevate is supposed to anticipate your moves and send puffs of air to the exoskeleton to relieve pressure on the knees. I told him I didn’t feel a thing.
Then he asked me to turn it off. The control is a device mounted near the shoulder. I did what he said and immediately and dramatically felt the difference. Elevate had been assisting me in such a subtle and effective way that I couldn’t tell until I turned it off. Amazing!
Then we entered a field of moguls. DJ had suggested moguls farther down the hill that weren’t quite as big. I took that as a challenge and went where I shouldn’t have gone. Not that I don’t ski moguls. I do. But that day was the first using new skis (I had the bindings mounted that morning) and I was a bit tired, and…enough with the excuses. I fumbled my way down and felt foolish.
That was me, not the Elevate. By then I was ready to call it a day and we headed back to where we began.
Bottom line is that Roam Elevate is approaching the end of its development stage and will be ready for primetime and purchase next season. If the season were still going, I’d strongly recommend that anyone trying to avoid knee surgery for a while try Elevate. I’d also recommend it to anyone wanting to add more ski days to the week and more ski hours to the day.
Roam Elevate is an entirely new approach to assistive ski devices. Unlike others that wrap around the knee or use springs or pistons, Elevate uses intelligence to inform how it functions in real time. The manufacturer has been using its demo centers at nine major resorts in California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana and Utah to educate future purchasers, to collect more data, and to further refine an already highly developed piece of equipment.
It’s the future. And as all of us realize, especially at this moment, sometimes the path to the future has some bumps. The difference is that the people at Roam know where their path is taking them and they’re using this time to refine and miniaturize an already elegant solution to a common problem for older skiers.
Knee issues? Wish you had greater stamina? The solution is here and getting better. Tune in this fall.
Snow In Literature: Two Tramps In Mud Time (Excerpt)

[Editor Note: This time of the year, we like to re-publish this verse from Frost’s Two Tramps In Mud Time. We also note that we’ve published a number of Frost’s poems in our Snow In Literature this publishing year. Unintended. But his words reflect the world of people who know winter and all it brings. You can listen to Frost himself reading the whole poem by clicking on the YouTube link at the bottom.]
By Robert Frost
The sun was warm but the wind was chill.
You know how it is with an April day
When the sun is out and the wind is still,
You’re one month on in the middle of May.
But if you so much as dare to speak,
A cloud comes over the sunlit arch,
A wind comes off a frozen peak,
And you’re two months back in the middle of March.
Mystery Glimpse: Yes, It Was Buddy
Buddy Werner, Movie Star
Many readers identified this Bogner-clad high-flyer as Buddy Werner, the celebrated ski racer. And yes, there is a strong resemblance to Jean-Claude Killy in this pic. Many thanks to Steamboat’s Tread Of Pioneers Museum for contributing this photo.

Just three weeks after the 1964 Innsbruck Olympics, Buddy Werner was in Switzerland to film a movie produced by Willy Bogner. According to Wikipedia, Werner and German racer (and Olympic medalist) Barbi Henneberger, age 23, were caught in an avalanche on the Trais Fleur slope, near St. Moritz. Both skied out of the first avalanche, but were caught up in another; their bodies were found hours later.
Bogner, 22, and Henneberger were to be engaged that summer; he was tried by a Swiss court for homicide by negligence. He was initially acquitted, but the prosecution later won a conviction on appeal, of manslaughter by negligence, and Bogner received a two-month suspended sentence.
After a memorial service in Denver, Werner’s funeral in Steamboat Springs overflowed the United Methodist Church,and he was buried at the city cemetery at the base of Howelson Hill. Coach Bob Beattie and teammates from the U.S. Ski Team were pallbearers.
Kudos to reader Bruce Boeder for following the hints and connecting the dots. In case you missed it, here’s his entry: “Went to the Internet Movie Database and find that Buddy Werner did appear in a movie called SkiFascination made by Willy Bogner (Werner and Bogner’s fiancée were killed in an avalanche while making the movie—but people subscribed to this website well remember Buddy Werner). Accordingly, piecing together the clues—photo from the Steamboat museum, Head Comps with long thongs, and Scott poles— it may be Buddy dressed in the Bogner finest?!” Elementary, my dear Bruce.
Here’s a preview of SkiFaszination, released in 1966. Bogner skiwear galore.
Thanks To The Ski Museums Who Contributed To This Series
Our Mystery Glimpse series would not be possible for the many ski museums who allowed us to use photographs and artwork from their archives and collections.
These museums are scattered across the country, all mostly staffed by dedicated volunteers and a few paid employees. If you’ve never visited a ski museum, you have a treat ahead. Please consider a visit—virtually, or in person (when the virus lifts), stop at the museum’s gift shop, make a donation, and marvel at the care taken to curate the history of snow sports.
The ski museums which have contributed paintings and artwork this year:
- New England Ski Museum
- Tread Of Pioneers Museum
- Colorado SnowSports Museum
- Alan Engen Ski Museum
- Ski Museum of Maine
- Peak Resorts Archive
And many thanks to our insightful readers for their many guesses, comments, memories, and contributions to our trip through snow sports nostalgia.
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