SHORT TURNS from Buyer's Guide 2010
Soup’s on!
When it comes to accommodation, Big White is one of Canada’s most complete ski-in, skiout
resorts. “Home for lunch” can be as easy as
choosing from one of the village’s 15 eateries.
One cabin and condo rental agency, Rent Chalets,
goes a step further and stocks your cupboards
before you arrive—and, for Ski Canada readers,
Rent Chalets will pay the first $100 of your grocery
bill. Just send them your list before arrival and
they’ll do the rest. That means, no stopping at the
SuperStore down in Kelowna or schlepping your
grocery bags from the car to the fridge, just fly in
(or drive in), head to the slopes and click into your
bindings. See you at lunch! www.rentchalets.com
Dropping Records
Ski Canada caught up with Jamie Pierre last winter in Utah, at the U.S. Freeskiing Nationals. If
you don’t recognize the name, Pierre’s the skier who set a world record in January 2006, dropping a
spectacular 78-metre cliff at Grand Targhee, Wyoming. Though roughly a year later, in March 2007,
Norwegian Fred Syversen inadvertently launched a 107-metre drop, and lived, many argue the record
remains Pierre’s since Syversen had misread his intended line and punched it off only when he realized
there was no turning back. Clips of both airs are readily available on YouTube and elsewhere online.
After Pierre produced a couple of beers from his jacket pocket, he enlightened us with some of his
experiences as a pro skier—or as Pierre modestly calls it, “being on permanent vacation.” During
his rise from ski bum to full-time athlete, and despite his ever-increasing notoriety and world-wide
recognition, Pierre explained it was challenging to maintain sponsors supportive of his quest to, quite
literally, “go the biggest.” He recounted numerous incidents in which he was “mischaracterized as
a loose cannon, a daredevil and a liability,” including impromptu lectures from patrollers and others
familiar with the Utah skier’s exploits on the morning tram ride at Snowbird.
Although accepting some of the blame for his mixed reviews on his tendency to speak his mind, he
also pointed to his virtually non-existent injury record as proof that the labels were incorrect. “Well, I
might have had skier’s thumb a few times,” said Pierre, “but who hasn’t?”
—Chris Lennon
Photo: BRENT BENSON
To read more about athletes who haven’t been so lucky, see “Death Becomes Them”
Tune in,
tune up
Acclaimed Toronto filmmaker, and
weekend race coach, Steven Munro wanted
to make a ski-tuning DVD for his charges
(or their parents anyway) to show both how
simple but also how important the practice
is. “We have so little time with them and
video is such a great tool to steal that
extra time,” says Munro. “When I showed it
to coaching colleagues from both Western
N.Y. and Southern Ontario, they all wanted
a copy, so YouTube seemed like the logical
vehicle to transmit the message and it’s
been well received by a wide audience.” With help from Jason MacLaren of Swix
and Fischer, Jeff Stone from Action Sports
Outlet and Oakville’s Corbetts, the (so
far) four-part series can be easily found
by searching YouTube for: “Ski Tech 101.”
Although some natural ski waxes come
from Brazil, as it turns out, searching for
“Brazilian waxing for a super G spot” will
take you to a completely different series.
Wheely fast through Verbier
Helicopters dangling paparazzi hovering overhead, hundreds of campervans lining the
resort’s access roads, 150,000 screaming fans, bars open by special license until 4:00 a.m.
and the mountains gleaming with a fresh dusting of powder after two days of torrential rain.
No, it wasn’t an Olympics dry run at Whistler—it was the Tour de France taking a detour into
Verbier, Switzerland, in late July.
With its glacier skiing long melted into the past and current summer tourism restricted to
elderly, if affluent, listeners to a classical music festival, Verbier paid a reported $1 million for
this unprecedented injection of youth and animation.
A startling sight for most in “neutral” Switzerland was the French national gendarmerie in
tow. Among local businesses, pharmacists were particularly enthusiastic at the prospect of 180
professional cyclists in town. Nevertheless, the event was an overwhelming success, not at all
dampened by the threat of an H1N1 flu outbreak. “It went off like Swiss clockwork,” said one
organizer. “Maybe not a Rolex, but definitely a Swatch,” added another.
—Charlie Fricke
Backcountry Lite
Everyone can appreciate the
rewards of getting off the groomed,
but life beyond the ropes needn’t be a
mystery reserved for expert skiers. If
you’re not up to heli-skiing with RK,
the cautionary wordage on the gates
into Taynton Bowl and Extreme Dream
are too off-putting and you’ve already
enjoyed your day dog-sledding, you
ought to consider Panorama’s backcountry for beginners. Rental cross-country
skis or snowshoes can help you up to the Hale Hut in its seemingly remote setting only four
km from Pano’s impressive Greywolf Nordic Centre and its 20-km network of trails. Wood is
regularly supplied to make a fire at the cozy warming hut—wine, bread and cheese are
your responsibility.
Ski Cross Canada
Back in 2000, the FIS Freestyle Committee
took a leap of faith by developing a plan to
bring skiercross into the FIS structure, and by
December 2002 Ski Cross became a Freestyle
World Cup event. In the fall of 2006, Ski Cross
was accepted into the Olympics—an even
bigger win for Freestyle.

With the Olympic decision made, Canada
burst onto the scene with solid funding and
some of the best management and coaching
talent around. Last season, the first Ski Cross
World Cup in Canada was also the Olympic test
event on the same slope at Cypress Mountain on
which the Olympic Ski Cross events will be held.
Canada swept the podium in the men’s race
with Chris Delbosco, Stanley Hayer and Davey
Barr finishing 1st, 2nd and 3rd respectively. The
women did almost the same, with Aleisha Cline taking gold and Ashley McIvor silver.
FIS Freestyle will have to make some decisions
about how to manage Ski Cross in years to
come: culturally it fits with Freestyle, athletically
it is more aligned with Alpine. Currently, the
Canadian Ski Cross Team exists independently,
with oversight from a joint Alpine/Freestyle
committee under the Canadian Snowsports
Association. After the Olympics in Canada this
will change. Some think Ski Cross will be the
poster sport at the Games—where it ends up
afterwards may become one hot potato.
—Chris Robinson
How many days of skiing did you get in this past season?
more than 100 days 3%
30 to 100 days 16%
20 to 29 days 23%
10 to 19 days 29%
5 to 9 days 6%
2 to 4 days 16%
1 day 3%
didn’t make it out once 3%
.. from the
www.skicanadamag.com
online poll archives
Fancy feet with Chris Lennon
Every year, many of us ski ourselves into shape in the early season. For keen and
nimble hikers and those excellent at concentrating while moving forwards, a great way
to improve your balance and footwork in the off-season is to run across challenging
and uneven terrain.
» Find a dry riverbed or rocky shoreline with substrate
free from moss, algae and other slippery bits.
» Wear a quality pair of trail or scree running shoes
with good lateral support and a large tread.
» Start slowly and increase to about a 3/4 pace,
running across and hopping from rock to rock.
» To increase the difficulty and benefit, change your
direction frequently and run in a zigzag pattern.
And for those without the genetic makeup of a
mountain goat, don’t attempt to chew gum at the
same time.
Buddy plan
Sit-skiers are part of so many ski areas in Canada nowadays they’re practically
commonplace, but there’s plenty more behind all the high-tech gear and volunteers in the
lift line. Last March, Sun Peaks hosted both the 2009 Para-Alpine National Championships and CADS Festival, and the co-ordination was the impetus for B.C.’s first buddy program.
B.C. alone has more than 600 volunteers for more than 700 disabled skiers, but a special
level of mentoring began at Sun Peaks with national team members pairing up with new or
younger skiers at the beginning of the week based on their disability and ski method, such
as sit-skiing or three track. The athlete-student buddies skied together, hung out, exchanged
stories and became friends as they shared in their passion for the sport.
“The majority of the CPAST athletes all learned to ski through CADS grassroots
programs across Canada,” says Sian Blyth, high-performance director with the Disabled
Skiers Association of B.C. “This is an opportunity for them to now inspire new and up-and-
coming athletes and help the programs that got them started.” More on how it’s done
in B.C.: click here
Flying to Sun Peaks,
Canada’s second largest
ski area, is about to get easier
with WestJet’s new increased service to
Kamloops starting November 1. The airline
already connects skiers through Calgary
but, like Pacific Coastal and Air Canada
Jazz, will soon be offering direct service
through Vancouver as well. Early birds
from Toronto can catch the 7:15 fl ight
and meet their Vancouver buddies on the
SunBurst chairlift before lunch!
Betting on Tremblant
If the thought of playing blackjack or
Texas Hold’em while still in your ski boots is
daunting, fear not, the Mont Tremblant Casino,
which opened its doors in June, has already
secured an ample supply of special slippers for
gamblers who arrive at the posh chalet of sin
via skis or snowboard.
While the Loto-Québec brass was boasting
to 600 VIP guests on opening day about the
$66-million casino’s third fl oor with private
game rooms, chic décor, mountain views up the
ski area’s Versant Soleil side —and poker and
blackjack tables with minimum $100 bets—all
gamblers will still be impressed by the goldlaced
water wall behind the fireplace in the
welcoming lobby and upscale lodge. On the first
two floors there are 400 slot machines, along
with lower-bid game tables and Texas Hold’em
electronic poker machines.
The fourth of its kind operated by Loto-
Québec (but the first for the slipper-crowd),
the Mont Tremblant casino is the only ski-in,
ski-out venue in Canada that we know of, with
a 300-metre trail linking the extended-hours
Casino Express gondola for pedestrians. In
the master plan, the two hotels, shops and
restaurants that were set to be built next to
the casino are on hold, for now. And although
it is in Quebec, a more relaxed dress code is in
effect due to its resort nature—so no need to
ski in a tux.
—Marie-Piere Belisle Kennedy