92 Year old Maine skier:
http://bangordailynews.com/2013/01/..._EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email?src=facebook
http://bangordailynews.com/2013/01/..._EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email?src=facebook
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Very cool, I lost an 80+ yr old ski buddy last August. We met while sharing a chair four years ago. We chatted on the ride up, when we got off, she went right, I left. I had a slightly longer route back to the chair, but I did not dilly dally. I get to the chair, and here comes Anne around the other side. I thought to myself, "Either I ski like an 80 yr old lady, or that 80 yr old lady was hauling ass." I think it was a little of both. I found out her husband, an engineer at Corning Glass, had proposed to her fifty years earlier with one stipulation, she learn to ski. She said yes, and began to share her husband's passion for the sport.
She had a home in Ithaca, and a condo at Greek Peak. She skied ten runs a day, every day. One day we got 8" of the heaviest, wettest, slop possible. All of her friends skied one run, and called it a day. Anne was determined to get her daily ten runs in. She had to stop and rest several times down the hill, something she never did. Anne didn't make her ten runs, only eight, about two more than I would have done had I not been with Anne. I will miss her, she was an inspirational fire plug. When we first met, I would only have to slow down slightly to finish our runs together. The last couple years she had problems with her vision that slowed her down, and kept her from skiing on flat light days. I didn't mind waiting for her at the chair. I didn't find out about her passing until my first visit to the hill this year, a mutual friend had told me. She was in my thoughts as I skied the fresh powder that day, Anne would have loved it.
Very cool, I lost an 80+ yr old ski buddy last August. We met while sharing a chair four years ago. We chatted on the ride up, when we got off, she went right, I left. I had a slightly longer route back to the chair, but I did not dilly dally. I get to the chair, and here comes Anne around the other side. I thought to myself, "Either I ski like an 80 yr old lady, or that 80 yr old lady was hauling ass." I think it was a little of both. I found out her husband, an engineer at Corning Glass, had proposed to her fifty years earlier with one stipulation, she learn to ski. She said yes, and began to share her husband's passion for the sport.
She had a home in Ithaca, and a condo at Greek Peak. She skied ten runs a day, every day. One day we got 8" of the heaviest, wettest, slop possible. All of her friends skied one run, and called it a day. Anne was determined to get her daily ten runs in. She had to stop and rest several times down the hill, something she never did. Anne didn't make her ten runs, only eight, about two more than I would have done had I not been with Anne. I will miss her, she was an inspirational fire plug. When we first met, I would only have to slow down slightly to finish our runs together. The last couple years she had problems with her vision that slowed her down, and kept her from skiing on flat light days. I didn't mind waiting for her at the chair. I didn't find out about her passing until my first visit to the hill this year, a mutual friend had told me. She was in my thoughts as I skied the fresh powder that day, Anne would have loved it.
You should see the older racers that show up at Hunter on Mondays..these guys are fast..saw one guy last week, no helmet, just sun glasses whipping down every run faster than I want to go..then again he's probably been skiing longer than I've been alive.
check out this guy:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4oIG3RXOt4k
check out this guy:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4oIG3RXOt4k
I like his friends.![]()