SkiFanE
New member
FYI: I have 3 kids who I've raised as skiers. They know about "rises" and never stopping below. If they fall, they know to move out of the way as quick as possible. My son was leveled and knocked out when he was about 35 pds by a flying 54yo man in a congested area...skiing is dangerous even if you're just getting to lift line like my son was. And...I do not ski fast - you will rarely catch me in middle of trail because I'm a bumps, glop and crap snow skier - I'm always on side of trail - groomed trails bore me and I don't go that fast any more. The fact I go over this rise, see these 2 people and turn in a dime to avoid them means I was in control and within my abilities. I ski SL skis, not fast cruisers. We're both lucky I didn't level them. Side of trail is my home, and safest spot in these days of icy cruisers and skis designed to ski them. So telling a skinner to stick to side of trail sucks for me lol.So if that person below the blind rise is not me skinning up while training for my rando race series, but instead, say ... my five-year-old daughter having fallen down, then what?(Or substitute an all-too-typical snowboarder sitting down with no line of sight.)And how do you explain all this to me if I then show up, whether in my role as her father or as a ski patroller?(BTW, having previously also been an NCAA alpine race coach, I am impressed by the sense of entitlement here for fast skiing.)