First Tracks
Adaptation comes naturally to skiers
Art Director Norm and Managing Editor Anne
were giggling on a conference call the other
day when I had to leave the conversation
briefl y to chase a black squirrel out of my
offi ce. During tomato-growing season, which
for us this year extended into October, I’m at
war around my attic offi ce balcony with these
proverbial fl ea-bitten varmints.
Normie, who grew up in Leamington,
Ontario, as you all know the tomato capital
of North America, seemed to take particular
delight in hearing my tales of trapping the
belligerent little thieves. Of course, my catch
and release program includes sneaking the
critter downstairs past a sleeping Labrador
and taking a drive to the other side of the
lake in Toronto’s High Park, near where
one of many Ski Canada home offices lie in
Ontario, Alberta and B.C.
When I rejoined the story meeting, Anne
asked rightly “Don’t the squirrels just come
back?” A valid question. In time, yes, I
imagine they do, or others bagsie the vacant
territory, but the lull can give me enough
time in the late summer to harvest the crop.
And on changing territories, I’ve decided
squirrels, like skiers, learn to adapt.
It’s a late September day as I write this
diatribe, in another Indian Summer, as in a
New Delhi Indian Summer. The thermometer
is reading over 30 degrees again and the
heat in our non-air-conditioned house is
going to my head—not the most inspiring
weather when you need to be thinking about
skiing. I’m reminded of some of the bizarre
weather stories from last season and many
others before it.
For those with short memories, while
skiers in the west were enjoying a fantastic
early start to what became a banner winter
last year, we in the east were limping our
way through the Christmas holiday on a thin
layer of man-made left over from a week of
cold weather in November. Refl ections of the
early ’80s, which had even warmer winters.
Indeed, by last January few ski areas were
still open. Blue Mountain made national news
for its closing and massive layoffs.
But it seemed just as pessimists began
talking of winter never arriving—like the
season B.C. had two years ago—the cold
and snow suddenly came. Bull wheels began
to turn again, ski shops scrambled to get
sale signs up and the bean counters started
amortizing Christmas season losses. In an
ironic end-of-season twist, skiers at Blue
(like those at Intrawest-sibling Whistler)
were still on man-made, glacier-thick slopes
the weekend of April 22—after the golf
course had opened at the base.
Despite last year’s wacky weather, or
perhaps because of it, Intrawest claims early
bookings of ski holidays are way up after
years of difficult-to-manage, last-minute
mentality among travelling skiers. To ensure
the accommodation, dates and price are
available, the keenest among us, and that
includes Ski Canada readers, are evidently
changing habits and committing while the
weather is still warm.
Merit Ski Vacations has noticeably left out
some key information in its 2008 brochure:
prices. Gone are the days when the leading
tour operator would offer Saturday-to-Saturday
pre-packaged ski holidays like a Jack Tar
Village in the Dominican Republic. “Everything
is customized now,” says Merit’s Katarina
George. “We deal with the best resorts of
Canada, the U.S., Europe—even Chile—and
tailor details around the skier.” Knowledgeable
online research by many clients is standard
now, and tour operators have had to
drastically change how they do business and
offer more value than a do-it-yourself holiday.
Merit will even work with flights secured on a
client’s own airline reward plan.
Last year our family’s big trip, booked
in October, was to Austria and Italy (the
story begins on page 50) in what turned
out to be Europe’s warmest winter in 300
years. As you’ll see, our adaptation to the
“marginal conditions” wasn’t so hard to take.
Ultimately, weather is what we all love to
talk about, though, and who better to take
a fresh look on climate change than resident
Ski Canada curmudgeon George Koch.
Following a very convincing primer on
cat-skiing (page 28), something, by the way,
Canadian skiers are embracing lovingly now
after decades of almost national disinterest,
George’s take on global warming and how
much skiers need to be prepared to adapt
to changes around us begins on page 76.
George might not make you feel all warm and
fuzzy inside, but he might change the way
you think about the future of our sport.