Showing posts with label PSIA-AASI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PSIA-AASI. Show all posts

Sunday, May 29, 2022

Nothing good ever lasts

By Eino Holm

The lights are dim, kinda smoky even.  New Year's Eve, 1999, Crystal Mountain.  It's Noël, Chelsea, Peter, and me.  We're all acting like it's a normal night, that the world isn't going to end in a handful of hours, cos, well, why would it end on Pacific Standard Time if it didn't end, say, on Japan Central Standard Time earlier in the day?  We're all in various states of curiosity, though, if nothing else.  All around us are people we don't really know, even if we each know a handful of 'em a little bit in our own ways.  Peter and I had bumped chairs all Summer, Peter first with his head eight or twenty times on my 18th birthday back in June when the two of us were building that old, elevated, loooong ramp on Old 3 from whatever crunchy corn Bruce Engdahl brought up from the Back Traverse.  I don't think Peter'd ever really spent much time around chairs.  Maintenance was running the beautiful ol' '63 Riblet double to find any kinks they hadn't found during the short spring fix-it season.  For whatever reason, Peter couldn't grasp the fool-me-once adage.  I'd felt bad.  Anyway, this night, six months later, it was both light and dark, quiet and loud, quick and slow.

I asked Kim Rausch the next morning, just to confirm, and she said the two booms had been a 50 sack and a hundo.  Or whatever jargon she used.  ANFO, that slow-burn explosive that so nicely dovetails with a stick or two of DynoAP for avy control, makes one heck of a shockwave when Patrol sets off about 45 kgs at once.  I've experienced this twice, and the second was no less surprising than the first.  Kim said that even though they were on top of 70-odd inches of good snowpack that they'd controlled all season, they still brought up dirt.

Walking around the base area was a little surreal, orange light and crazed locals and all.  Griffin Eshpeter slid by us on the slickery* Boulevard heading down, fireworks already all boomed and ANFO all burnt, smoke still hanging above Silver Creek.  Maybe it was Alex Kemp, doesn't matter.  They didn't crash, and I don't know that whoever it was was actually drunk, despite appearances.  They were a year behind me in school, but my age.  (That shouldn't have mattered then, and it certainly doesn't today.)

The light slowly faded, and by the Family Cabin at the bottom of the Boulevard, it was a normal Winter night.  We shared some Champagne, or at least bubbly; I don't know where it was from.  The elkers and White River ghosts watched us from the trees, digging for food under the snowpack.

-

Lisa leans out from the shack at the top of New 3.  "GO TO SIX NOW!!" she says.  Stina and Catherine and Steve Holmsen and I don't wait.  We point it.  Six has been closed all day, and there's a break in the weather after puking for who knows how long.  I don't know it for sure, but I think Baugher wants some skier compaction before the cycle gets going again.  It's one of those glorious March days, cool and showery, and the snow piles up more than you think.  Steve and I ride up in the quiet.  Baugher is bumping chairs at the bottom, Patrol Director name tag and thirty years of service notwithstanding.  His assistant, Brent, is up top.  He's grinning as he does, crooked tooth and general good nature.

Brent pulled me over once, seventh grade, but I dodged a ticket.  I argued with him like a good 12 year old.  I'M IN CONTROL BRENT WHY YOU PICKIN ON ME.  He was polite and firm, like Noël told me to be with the missionaries in Ogden.  "You were out of control, son.  I know it when I see it."  The difference between being able to change direction, but not stop, and being able to stop on command.  I don't know that I really understood that until I was bumping chairs myself years later.

Stina and Catherine and I wait at the bottom of 6 a good ten minutes for Steve while he digs under the line for his phone, somewhere up near the Punk Rock.  Stina's yelling, as though he can hear us from this distance.  HURRY THE (*&$)@#(*&^#$(*&#^$(*&#^(*#&$^(*&  UP STEVE ITS JUST A PHONE THIS IS SNOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWWWWWWWWWWW and then he finally finds it.  He reaches his hand up like some kinda treasure hunter, and then heads on down in that albatross stance of his, turns solid, round, expert, and just a little bit goofy.  Catherine and I ride up this time, shoulder to shoulder, still quiet for these two irreplaceable runs.  So unique in the midst of all that year.  114 days on snow that time, and these two runs right under Crystal's marquee stand out like the first day driving Blue by myself, power sliding skidding out of Fed Forest by the ol' hollow-truss bridge at almost 90 cos, well, yer 16.  How else does one drive at 16?

--

Sometimes it takes years to build a community.  People on this here internet always talk bout building one, but really, you can't.  They happen, quietly and otherwise, through shared experience, or shared value.  Some are as transient as the snow they're built on, some are as durable as the pavement connecting the houses and schools.

Most ski areas, the good ones anyway, this takes a few weeks or months.  Maybe the bonds are tenuous, and years later you sit bolt upright in bed and wonder just where did Food Service Ryan With the Earrings and Goofy Grin go?  It's been 21 years since you lived together accidentally, and you'd long forgot.  Sometimes you wake up in your house in a different time zone, with a friend sleeping in her van in your driveway, boyfriend beside her.  It's funny calling Stina in her 50s and Martin in his 60s "boyfriend and girlfriend", but there you go.  I've known her for over 20 years, and we've been good friends for almost all of that.  I skied up next to her and the Former Guy and Kenny Tataku in line at the bottom of 9 headin South, and she looked down at my skis and said, "Do your skis fight?"  I mumbled something about Ma and Pa bein Scandihoovian and how on a map, Norge is on the left and Sverige is on the right, but basically, she's been there ever since.  I appreciate someone who can joke at my expense.

Eino's car fights with itself.


The dark closes in quickly at the bottom of any valley, killin' woods or not.  The White has those and more, deep cover and crunching elk hooves and the ghosts of who knows how many.  Only a handful of folks in modern times have ever really called it home for life.  It's a ways to town, twenty or more miles just to the bottom of the hill.  The local tribes hunted up here, for elk and deer and whatever else they looked for.  Millennia stretch to epoch, with the alternating quiet and violence of natural life interrupted by snow and fire and flood and lahar.

In peak Pineapple, there's nobody to help but neighbours, conservative-value cliché aside.  Filling sand bags at the Fire Hall, watching a friend's dog if she's stuck in town, loaning your shovel and your time to throw logs from one side of the bridge to the other on the Greenwater to keep the lumber roiling downstream from blowin it out.  It isn't always life-and-death.  In point of fact, it rarely is.  Sometimes you just sit on the floor with Jen's awesome old lab mutt and scratch the poor girl's ears and think out loud.  Discuss the verities, and head home when it's bedtime.  Wonder what those noises are outside the door.

Usually they're just the elk.

Characteristic bull elk glare, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.


Crystal is known for its view, something I took almost for granted for most of my time there.  Tahoma, obvs, but Pahto and Loowit, and sometimes all the way to Kulshan.  Stuart and the Wenatchee Range, the Castle, Fifes Peaks, Aix, Goat Rocks, countless smaller hills.  The White almost five grand below, silent at this distance.  The upper White isn't this dramatic, punchy place full of toothy giants.  It is home, though, time and distance and interlopers notwithstanding.  Just over the ridge, in the next small drainage, a couple small subalpine lakes sit quietly under some impressive rock bands, with a nice mess of Abies lasiocarpa for company.  Crystal is not known for tree skiing, even though it should be.  Stina and Kenny showed my scores of little lines, whether before we officially met when I was just the 18 year-old kid chasing one or both of them, or when we were there together and on purpose.

One run, not really tree skiing, per se, but with trees, I snuck between some hemlock and dropped about three or four feet onto what I had assumed was a puffy, ten-inch-thick pillow of angel hair and unicorn dreams, just to find it was two inches on top of a rock-hard ankle biter.  My back has not been the same since.  I don't know that Stina or Catherine really knew that my life would be different after, that my chiro bills would run into the many thousands and my identity as a bum would slowly winnow until I'm in a different drainage entirely.  A desert, really.  I can't say at all that my ganked back and fussy ribs led me here, but nothing is ever isolated.  In the rental shop Stina showed me some stretches I still use today, and Catherine did some energy work that I as a cynic don't really believe in, but still absolutely appreciate and cherish.  Sometimes someone giving a shit about you means more than anything else in the world possibly can.

-

Moving day is hard, really no matter where you are.  Sometimes it's physical, sometimes emotional, sometimes spiritual.  Sometimes it's the last you'll see of someone.  I keep in contact with a handful of people from the various hills.  Some have moved on, some unfortunately have passed on.  I wish them well, mostly.  Even that one jackass who hit on Amy in front of me, and then had the stones to come to my shop for basework.  At least he could make a good beanie.  My other good beanie--besides my favourite that I can't wear here because BoyCee people just cannot let go of BSU--was also knit by someone I haven't spoken to in years.  Kind of an odd reminder, each of these.  These pieces of people, real or felt, keep the past nearby.

We headed down the Boulevard that last day, mid-April of '011.  We'd had a couple beers, shared some nachos on the tiny deck of Rafters The Bullwheel Rafters with Sean, absorbing the late April Sunday evening and the warmth that surrounded us, laughed at some jokes, wondered at the ethereal among the fir and hemlock, generally acted as though it was another day, and, well, every day is just another day, I guess.  No controlling that.  Haven't seen Sean since, though I hear tell from time to time.  Abbie, Sam, so many people whose names I forgot or didn't bother to really know.  Sam, unfortunately, passed away this winter.  The details aren't important, but dammit, I wish he could have caught a break.  He and I started working for Brad the same day, tuning skis and generally tryna avoid responsibility.  We were never close, but he's a good dude and we got along really well.  We joked about entering the Powder 8s on our teles just to do a single Powder 8, but full-length.  He fell into a crevasse doing sweep on the Emmons Glacier as a climbing ranger, and never quite recovered.  His seizures got to the point where he thought speed-flying was a good idea cos it was fast, and he only had a minute or so from start to finish where he was in danger.  He still had to be airlifted a couple times.

Sam was rumoured to be a better-than-decent cat driver, and for a ski area, he was definitely a fairly hard worker.  Stina said the last time she talked to him, he was figuring stuff out, and had been seizure-free for quite some time.  Some sort of medical progress or surgery had helped out, and things were looking up.  His passing was accidental, and yet it wasn't all that surprising.  It hurt more than I expected, that understanding that none of us really controls anything.  I had made peace with the knowledge that either Pa or Stina would call, matter-of-fact as they both are, and I still almost threw up.  Sam deserved better, or at least to be taken while he was chasing some adrenaline high.  I always hoped he'd find some help, the kind that he actually did, and that his seizures and his luck would both improve.  That he'd find another lady, someone who'd love his dog, someone like Abbie, but like, not, at the same time.  I hoped we'd actually one day get to skate out to the Boxcar, and drop in.  Sam first, me following.  He'd go left, make his one right-hander, then I'd jump and we'd make that tandem, knee-dropped left, then I'd finish with my one right-hander, and we'd ski off knowing whoever it was we thought we were competing with so long ago was long gone, and it was just cold smoke off the top of the snow, some mountain hemlock, a little breeze, and a lifetime of stories.

-

Almost as an afterthought, we dropped by Sean's trailer that last night.  It was closing in on dark, and a handful of instructors and random folks were milling about drinking brown bottle beer and wondering just what came next. We'd already technically closed that year, but as these things seem to go, Crystal kept reopening for weekends until they either ran outa steam or snow.  We left before that happened.  

As parties go, it wasn't.  Just some tired, sad folks slowly aging out of the scene, looking for grander dreams or a way out of the flatland life.  Either chasing a dream of bumming from here on out, or of finding some real motivation and a "real" career.  I certainly wish there was some way of forgetting the emotional damage and the physical toll a life of bumming actually exacts.  I wish I could show up for closing day, wear a cape or whatever and throw a backie off the end of the pond skim, and slither into whichever cave I'd find for the summer, but I cannot.  What might have been, I guess.

As Closing Days go, it wasn't.  Everyone else had already left, LB and Abbie and really anybody, and it was just me and Brad, and then just Brad.  Amy and I met my buddy Jason on the side of a road in Oly and then it was foot-down until Exit 19 in the late afternoon, catching up to Pa and Ma and unloading the trailer they had pulled out of Enumclaw at 5 am.  Ashland, OR is such a different place than Greenwater, WA.  It's a small town, comparable to Enumclaw, but it feels like a city.  Shakespeare and folks from The Bay and fancy hotels.  Lithia Park wedged between million dollar houses, but even with all that money, there are cougars and bears in the trees and chupacabra on the highway.  Eleven years have passed, some successfully and others, well, I speak for both of us when I say I'm happy they are passed.

The nachos we shared with Sean that night weren't memorable, but I still remember them.  The nachos Marquez and his ex shared at the old Caldera dive under 99 the night before we left Ashland three years later weren't any better, but I still remember them, too, also.  Mt A hadn't opened that year, not even for a day just cos, so that quiet night with a couple beers was all that we really got.  Closing Day can border on spiritual some years, to the point where I can't stomach missing it and I also can barely stomach participating.  I grab my Closing Day Poles from behind the door, the ones I got from my Father-in-Law all those years ago, and hope to ski in a button-down and sunscreen and maybe, if we're lucky, some real good spring corn.

Eino on Closing Day, with his Closing Day Poles, 2022


The light is dim, kinda smoky, even.  Catherine and I are at the top of Rex, a couple years before that silly gondola.  It's chilly, the April corn freezing slowly in the waning warmth.  The sun sets quickly, as it does when one doesn't want it to.  The lifts are silent, unlit.  Green Valley is dark, disappearing quickly, and we don't dawdle.  The freezing corn snow is skiable, 100 or so days on snow so far that year.  (4th of July would be 114.)  My legs are solid.  Quads and hams and calves ropy from dropping the knee at speed 10 or 12 days a week.  It's embarrassing, really, but in the 14 years since, I have never been as fit.

To be honest, I don't remember the turns.  I say the snow was skiable, and it had to be cos we made it down, but Catherine's like a PSIA Level 5 Alpine and Level 7 Tele, and I'm, like, pretty good, so skiable is relative.  Six inch sun cups in 4th of July fog is skiable, too, if you want it to be.

It's the light I remember.  The White, milky in the early spring runoff, down below to the west.  The dim, smoky sunset red and black.  The orange flashed and faded, and then we just had to turn tail and run.  Neither of us had lights.  These moments are always there, as are the old ones watching from the subalpine fir atolls.  I don't know if they're benevolent, and I don't know if it matters.  We'll all join em, one at a time.  

Abies lasiocarpa atoll, courtesy of The Gymnosperm Database


Interesting resources for them killin' woods:

https://conifers.org/

https://www.michaelkauffmann.net/ 


*Pa coined this term.  Don't argue.

Title from Iris DeMent's "Our Town"

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Mt. Ashland

By Amy Post

When I was thinking about going back to school, I looked for a graduate program with some specific, non-academic criteria: a place where we could live together (A lot of programs in my field are residential; think cabin in the woods with bunk beds.  Fun but not conducive to adulting.), a place where we could both work (He does bikes and skis, I do teaching and random stuff.), and a place where we could ski (and I could teach skiing).  While searching for programs, we visited Ashland, Oregon, and it checked all the boxes.  We skied Mt. Ashland on that trip.  At the top of Ariel, I saw the Cirque and said, “Hey, that’s steep!” and knew it could hold my interest for a few years.  I applied to the grad program, was accepted and we moved at the end of our last season at Crystal.

When I showed up at the Mt. Ashland job fair, there was no one at the front counter.  I waved down a lady with a Mt. Ashland vest and said I was here to apply.  She looked at me and said, “You just got here?”  The job fair was scheduled to go on for another hour so I was confused by her question.  I said, “Yeah, I just got off work and came right over.”  To which she gave me a weird look, like, “Then why are you here, at a job fair?”  When I actually sat down for the interview, we were half way through when I noticed I was speaking to Kim Clark, general manager.  “Oh!” I said, “You’re the boss!”  “Yes,” he responded, “but I got my start as an instructor.”  So, we chatted PSIA, he shook my hand and said, “See you up there.”

Kim was a great leader.  Mt Ashland had the best workplace culture of anywhere I’ve ever worked, and that is a testament to Kim’s leadership.  The ski school director, Brian was awesome; he got the job right out of school, graduating from that ski area management course at Sierra Nevada University.  He had clear expectations and a sense of humor.  Also, he liked me and I became friends with his wife.  At Mt. A, I met some great people, taught some fun lessons, passed my alpine level III, and skied a lot.

My second season at Mt. A, I worked full time over the university's winter break.  It dumped and we skied powder most days.  The thing about Mt. A is that it is small, about 200 acres.  So, the place is usually tracked out before morning meeting is over.  One day Kim showed me his secret stash, a tree shot off Lower Tempest that was pretty dense getting into it, then opened up.  Mt. A has some great tree skiing amongst huge hemlocks and Shasta fir.  Oh, and there 's this giant, granite boulder in the middle of Dream that's called the Big Rock.

Amy at the top of Dream

I took a field botany class in grad school, and we spent a lot of time on top of Mt. Ashland, exploring the ridge-top flora.  It was a new experience to spend time during the summer in the place I skied during the winter.  I got to know the land more intimately, on my hands and knees, looking at tiny flowers with a hand lens.  I got to know the land in a more expansive way as well; the Cirque is even more intimidating in the summer, with steep, rocky, unscalable (at my skill level) slopes and glacier moraines.  I never did ski every line in the Cirque because Light Brown is rocky and requires mandatory air.  I think it’s good to leave a place before you ski every line.

I’d be remiss to write about Mt. Ashland and not mention the expansion.  So, back when Alberta Tomba was crushing the World Cup, Mt. Ashland made plans to add a chairlift and runs into the next drainage north, adding about 200 acres of skiable terrain and almost doubling the size of the ski area.  It also would’ve added some beginner terrain, which is something Mt. Ashland lacks and one could argue, needs to be competitive.  As is, I got used to teaching a beginner flats progression on a double fall-line, hiking up to the bottom of the beginner lift and having my students lose control on the steepest part of the bunny hill, a pitch that Kim called “Sonnet face.”

Like most ski areas in the western United States, Mt. Ashland is on US Forest Service land, so they can’t just go chopping down trees and doing whatever they want.  In order to develop anything new, lease-holders have to complete an Environmental Impact Statement and defend it in court under the NEPA laws.  The town of Ashland is very liberal, full of environmentalists, and for the record, I identify with both those labels.  Many folks in Ashland were concerned about this expansion for its environmental impacts.  The ski area is situated at the tippy top of the city’s drinking water watershed, in a diverse, relatively undisturbed wooded ecosystem.  While the expansion would have impacted only about 1% of the watershed, the land is at the top of the watershed, affecting everything downstream.  The area is also potentially critical mountain-top habitat for the Pacific fisher and wolverine.  So, some environmentalists took Mt. A to court, and 23 years later (when I arrived in Ashland), each party was embroiled in hyperbole.  Environmentalists were convinced that Mt. Ashland was evil and greedy and going to poison us all.  Expansion proponents said that the future of the ski area hung precariously on the addition of one ski lift and a handful of runs.  The EIS said that the expansion would have a small impact, but the scope of that impact was relatively unknown and potentially significant.  In my opinion, the expansion just didn’t seem to make good business sense.  It created a rift between the ski area and the local community, the very community it relied upon to keep the lifts spinning.  Plus, a small ski area that doesn’t get a lot of snow is never going to attract a lot of destination business, so the expansion wouldn’t’ve really increased its appeal to the wider skiing demographic.  In the end, management abandoned the expansion plan, but not because the other side won.

The last season we were at Mt. Ashland, the hill didn’t open because it didn’t snow.  My plan that winter was to teach skiing full-time and finish my thesis.  Well, I actually got my thesis done ahead of schedule because I never went to work.  It was super depressing to be doing data entry and statistical analysis in February and giving up on my season.  So, we moved to Utah that spring, because we need a place to ski and I need a place to work.  Ashland and Mt. Ashland are magical places, so any hippy in town will tell you.  I just wish that magic would make it snow a consistent 300 inches/year.

R.I.P. Kim Clark

Kim got fired that spring because the board of directors decided not to roll-over season passes, and he thought they should.  He was right and they were wrong, but he got blamed for the PR shitstorm.  They were probably also just sick of the whole expansion nonsense and wanted someone to blame.  Kim moved over to Bluewood and took up general managing there for the last eight years.  Kim Clark passed away a few weeks ago from a heart attack.  He was on the hill when it happened, probably acting the kind, honest leader I knew.  It was really sad news, piled onto the sea of heartbreak that is Covid times.  The world lost a good man when Kim died.  I’d hoped we could’ve visited him at Bluewood, but now we’ll just have to go there to ski a run in his honor.

Sunday, September 5, 2021

10 Tips for Taking Your PSIA-AASI Exam

By Amy Post

You invest a lot of time, energy and money into preparing for your certification exam.  The high-stakes nature of an exam adds a layer of stress to the event.  Whether you are totally Zen or quaking in your boots at the thought of exams, the following tips can help you prepare and show up in your best form on the day of your exam.

1) Choose your gear early.

A month or two before your exam, choose the gear you will use.  You should be comfortable performing all the exam tasks on this equipment.  Buy new gear and get your boots fitted well in advance of the exam so you have time to get used to the changes.

2) Tune your gear, then test it out.

Get your gear tuned about a week before the exam.  Then make sure your gear is performing the way you want it to before you arrive at your exam.  Equipment issues the day of the exam can at best, interrupt your day, and at worst, lead to injury.

3) Train like crazy, but with focus.

It’s great to get tons of training from a variety of sources, but hone in early on trainers who help you the most.  As your exam approaches, focus your training to one or two essential changes.  The last week, practice the changes you’ve made so they shine through on exam day.

4) Make an arrival plan.

Getting sleep the night before an exam and arriving on time is essential to keeping a clear head.  Know where you need to meet in the morning and give yourself extra time to drive and park.  If you can, travel the day before your exam and stay somewhere close to the base area.

5) Don’t overdo it the day before the exam.

Take it easy the day before your exam so you aren’t tired and sore the next day.  Some people like ski or ride the day before the exam to check out the terrain and snow conditions.  If you do, just practice one or two things that will help you the next day.  I personally like to take a rest day before the exam.



Amanda Dilworth and me at a Level II exam, Tamarack Resort, March 2019.
She was passing the exam while I was shadowing as an examiner-in-training.



6) Hydrate the night before the exam (i.e., don’t party).

Don’t let exam pressure lead to over imbibing the night before the exam.  You’ve worked too hard to arrive at your exam out-of-sorts.

7) Pack your bag the night before.

Pack your bag, double check that you have all the essentials, and pack extra layers, socks, gloves, goggles, handwarmers, etc., just in case things don’t go according to plan.  Check the forecast for the next day, but expect the unexpected.

8) Plan your meals.

Plan how you will get breakfast the morning of the exam, and don’t skip it.  Pack some extra food in case the lunch line is gigantic, and conversely, bring your credit card in case getting back to your bag at lunchtime isn’t convenient.  Put an easy-to-eat snack in your pocket for chair ride munchies.

9) Don’t forget your meds.

The pressure of an exam and the interruption of routine can make you forget essential things, like taking medication.  Pack these things the day before and set a reminder on your phone if it’ll help you remember to take them.

10) Bring your lucky penny.

Ask yourself, what will help me stay calm and focused during the exam?  Plan to do or bring something unrelated to the exam that will help you, just make sure it doesn’t interrupt the actual exam.  It could be meditating in your car when you arrive, listening to your favorite song as you put on your boots, calling your mom at lunch, rubbing your lucky penny on the chairlift, doing burpees when you’re nervous, or whatever else gets you through the day.


This article first appeared in the winter 2020-2021 issue of Carve' Diem, PSIA-AASI Northern Intermountain Division's newsletter.

Sunday, August 29, 2021

Introducing Mimi

By Amy Post


Oh hey!  Mimi here.  Actually, my name is Amy, but we thought it would be funny to name our blog after names we've been called that are not our real names.  I thought that was funny, and then I couldn't think of a better idea.  My boyfriend gets called the wrong name all the time.  Pretty must the only name that gets confused with mine is "Mimi," and it's usually when I have congested sinuses and can't enunciate.

When I graduated from college in 2006, I didn't know the first thing about finding a job.  Then the economy crashed, and jobs became even more impossible.  So, I moved in with my parents for the winter to be a ski bum.  Fifteen years later, I've somehow transitioned from ski bum to ski professional, although professional bum might be a better way to describe my career.  Then, in the Year of Our Lord 2021, I dusted off that ole English degree and started writing again.  So, here we are.

Credentials include:

  • PSIA Alpine Level 3
  • PSIA Children's Specialist 2
Hats I've worn:
  • DCT at PSIA-NI
  • Ski instructor
  • Staff trainer
  • Boss lady
  • Boot tester extraordinaire
  • Race coach
  • Education program developer
Places I've Worked:
  • Bogus Basin, Boise, ID
  • Bogus Basin Ski Education Foundation, Boise, ID
  • Crystal Mountain, WA
  • Mt. Ashland, Ashland, OR
  • The-place-that-will-not-be-named, UT
Also, I also wrote my Master's thesis on ski area development impacts on plant community composition.  To accomplish this, I read a 1,000 page EIS, did botany surveys at a ski area and in the surrounding mountains and taught myself statistics.  Here's my recommendation: disturb the soil on your ski slopes as minimally as possible and don't get embroiled in a 25-year-long NEPA process, because in the end, everyone loses.

I like to go adventuring in the woods.  Sometimes the best snow on the mountain is in the low-angle bushes.  I like to ski fast.  I don't like to leave the ground.  In my un-scientific assessment, when you get to the upper-levels of this industry, the gender ratio is about 15 dudes to 1 woman.  Teaching kids is easier than teaching adults because I don't know how to talk to grown ups.  Kids just want to tell you about their favorite things and if I sing "Do You Want To Build a Snowman?" they look at me weird and then they trust me.  Snow makes me giddy and my feet are always cold.