McFatt
Member
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2020
- Messages
- 32
- Points
- 8
Ok, BoomerI grew up skiing in the 60's, my Dad grew up skiing in the late 30's (Stowe) into 1941, then the war. I happened to ask him one day (Late 50's) what he was reading, and it was a ski or skiing magazine. He decided that if I wanted to know what he was reading, the pictures must have interested me, so rental skis, and repeat tries on the small hill in the front yard. (Winter of 59-60). Soon after I could do that, we went up to Gunstock. A few lessons and he could leave me and my sisters in the beginner area and he could take the main lift for a few runs. Mom (Whole different skiing story) sat in the lodge so us kids could have a place to go with a parent. (Remember, its the early 60's.) As time progressed I skied more and more with my Dad as my skills got better, and my sisters decided other things were more important. Fast forward to the late 60's, and we were going north most Saturday's. If it was open, we skied Whittier as it was steep and nearest. Early and late season it was up to Wildcat, 2 t-bars, a gondola, and the upper mountain double (Lynx chair). If Wildcat was closed for wind, we would go elsewhere, like Cranmore, or to a little place called Tyrol. Tyrol only had a Poma platter lift, and was more of less maybe equal to or smaller than Bradford in Haverhill, Ma. I asked one day why we bothered skiing such a small hill, and his answer was, "It's skiing, we came up here to ski". I learned Dad could be happy on any type of snow, and any type hill as long as he could ski. As we grow up idolizing our parents for the most part, I learned to be happy skiing most anything that had decent snow. Low crowds were a rarity, and most lift lines were tedious, but that was how skiing in the 60's was.
Once I had kids, and they got interested in skiing, off we went. My kids got bored at a few places we went, but I told them that it was skiing, would they rather do something else, because if they wanted to, I'd leave them home to do it. Now they are good skiing anywhere that is open, and have learned they actually like trying new places no matter what the maps on web sites look like because.....IT'S SKIING!!!
I see a lot in here bitching about Vail. Have not had the ability to try a Vail NE Resort as a result of my VERY uncooperative back, but just two trails at Wildcat would not be a lot different from my 1960's days as ALL of them were only natural snow days. Give Vail another year as many have surmised WHY Vail is so disappointing at Catitash, so give them a non-pandemic year to see what they can do to fix it.
You ALL are VERY Spoiled brats! Skiing is skiing, If its not what you want to be doing, go do something else. If its what you want to be doing, ENJOY it in spite of weather, management and labor limitations, crowds, or COVID. In much of the world it would be a luxury you would not be able to do.
It's all in ones perspective, and you need to refocus your perspectives.