22Jul

Top Five Ski Destinations From Geneva

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Extra special ski destinations need to offer the best of both worlds; top quality ski and snowboard resorts coupled with varied dining, nightlife, culture, shopping and sightseeing create a winning combination.

A ski holiday is the perfect way for friends, family and loved ones with varying interests to gather together and enjoy a winter trip. Ski destinations cater for those who want to take to the snow and anyone not interested in skiing or snowboarding will have plenty to do, from shopping and sightseeing to spa treats and shopping delights.

When the sun sets, everyone can enjoy what’s on offer together. Scores of bars provide après-ski refreshments and restaurants cater for every whim and wallet.

Skiing and snowboarding lovers know that Geneva is the gateway to some of the most demanding tracks in the world whilst the city itself is sleek, slick and cosmopolitan.

For a truly traditional Alpine holiday there are some resorts in particular that are well known for their excellence and ability to perfect the balance of city life with skiing and boarding. Swiss, French and Italian resorts beckon and offer holidaymakers unparalleled choice.

Chamonix in France boasts a beautiful array of medium and high mountain landscapes alongside the well-preserved architecture of picturesque little villages. Visitors can enjoy great skiing on ski runs and off-piste runs.

Megève is a charming resort with a medieval town centre and is one of the oldest ski resorts in the French Alps. Between December and April, Megève is the perfect destination to visit for a vast and varied skiable domain of medium altitude mountains.

The Après-ski scene is strong in Megève so there is plenty to do after hours and you can experience a spot of French chic at its finest.

In Switzerland the quiet village of Leukerbad offers visitors 50km of intermediate pistes, and is famous for its natural hot spas.

Champery is another Swiss destination that packs a punch. 650 km of pistes, 206 lifts and gondolas, 243 km of cross-country skiing, 7 funparks and 3 halfpipes mean there is plenty to keep you occupied.

The Portes du Soleil make up one of the world’s largest ski resorts and Champery is the perfect access point.

Last but not least you can find Sauze d’Oulx in Italy, one of the most popular resorts with British tourists for quite some time. Great skiing, vibrant nightlife and stunning scenery are to be had in what remains a pleasant little Piedmont town.

Off the slopes, non skiers can wander along the shores of Lake Geneva, retreat to one of the city’s spas, shop in the old city centre for antiques, and take a trip to the art and history museum.

Geneva is strung along the shores of Europe’s largest Alpine lake and is Switzerland’s third-largest city. Geneva car rental is widely available and lets you explore areas outwith the city centre.

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06May

Mt. Shasta – From Golf to Skiing to Spirituality

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One visit to the Mt. Shasta area in California will convince you that it is truly a vacation destination that will appeal to almost anyone, from golfers to skiers, and yes, to those seeking a more spiritual path.


Mt. Shasta is home to, well… Mt. Shasta, a 14,179-foot volcano, the second-highest peak in the Cascade Range. Yeah, it’s big. And beautiful. And, some claim, home to a vortex which attracts “New Age” types. A drive down Mt. Shasta Blvd. in Mt. Shasta City reveals a vast array of spiritual shops and assorted healers. You can buy singing bowls and tuning forks, divination tools, yoga supplies, vibrational sprays and magical jewelry. You find can all types of spiritual healers, such as those offering psychic hypnotherapy, reflexology, Reiki and energy work, vibrational healing and massage. If you’re into mineral baths, you can drive a few minutes north of Mt. Shasta City to Weed, where you’ll find therapeutic mineral baths at Stewart Mineral Springs (530-938-2222).


Those of you wishing to take vortex tours are definitely in luck, as there are numerous guided tours to choose from, including Shasta Vortex Adventures, which offers Mt. Shasta Guided Tours all year round. You can choose from guided hikes, healing earth journeys, bus tours and winter outings, such as snowshoe, cross country or telemark ski outings. Call them at 530-926-4326 for more information.


For those seeking outdoor activities and adventure, Mt. Shasta does not disappoint, no matter what season in which you’re visiting. During the warmer months you can hike or visit the many lakes which dot the area, including, of course, Lake Shasta, 10 miles north of Redding, the second largest lake in California, after Lake Tahoe. Shasta Lake is a very popular destination for boating, water-skiing, camping, and fishing. They also claim to be the houseboating and wakeboarding Capital of the World. Lake Shasta is also home to the Lake Shasta Caverns, which is open all year round. In order to view the underground caverns, visitors are taken on a 15-minute catamaran cruise across Lake Shasta, where they then board a bus which carries them up a mountainside, more than 800 feet above the lake, where the caves are accessible. All this for only $20; $12 for those 3 to 15. Call 1-800-795-CAVE for more information.


If the size of Lake Shasta is too overwhelming for you, as it was for me during one visit, you might want to visit a smaller lake near Mt. Shasta City, Lake Siskiyou, a 430 acre recreational and sailing lake, which offers some of the best bass and trout fishing in Northern California. You can purchase a cheap day pass and swim, picnic or rent pedal boats, or you can rent RV or camping space, or a cabin at Lake Siskiyou Resort and Camp (1-888-926-2618). The resort is open April 1st – October 31st and is very family friendly, with a great swimming area, sandy beach, and nightly movies in an outdoor amphitheater. The lake is actually closer to Mt. Shasta than Lake Shasta, and you can swim with the beautiful snow-covered mountain looming in the backdrop.


Close to Lake Siskiyou you’ll find Mount Shasta Resort, home to a championship golf course, as well as luxurious cabins and a day spa.


Skiers will delight in skiing Mt. Shasta at the Mt. Shasta Ski Park, where you’ll find 31 trails on 425 acres of skiable terrain. Night skiing is also provided on 14 trails and 3 lifts. The terrain level of difficulty is 20% beginner, 55% intermediate, and 25% advanced. There is also a cross country ski and snowshoe center for those wishing something other than downhill skiing. And for beginners, the ski park offers ski, snowboarding and telemark lessons.


Whether you’re looking for a place to get pampered, a place to enjoy the outdoors, or a place to explore the metaphysical, Mt. Shasta does truly have it all.

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23Apr

George from Briše

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Največja smučarska legenda balkana

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14Mar

Austrian Ski Package This March: The Best Of The Best From Elite Luxury Travel

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Thinking of an Austrian holiday this March?  The Thurnhers Alpenhof resort is offering a very limited Firn & Sunny Days package from March 13 – 26, 2010.  Family owned and run for more than 35 years, the Thurnhers Alpenhof luxury ski resort opens its doors each winter to travelers who come to explore the snow-covered wonderland of Zürs, Austria.

Guests of the Thurnhers Alpenhof are enveloped with the sense that they have been welcomed to a gracious private home. Gourmet breakfast buffet, traditional afternoon Austrian snacks and sumptuous five- to seven-course dinners at the Alpenhof’s renowned restaurant – all are included in the stay for a luxury ski vacation that is truly carefree.

The Firn & Sunny Days package includes 7 nights accommodation with Gourmet half board, Firn and/or deep-snow skiing with a guide, one 25-minute massage, a 6-day Arlberg ski pass excursions to the prettiest ski huts in Arlberg.   Enjoy barbecues on the sun terrace, as well as Pilates, yoga, and relaxing massages and beauty treatments.  Rates start at 3,600 Euros (or $5,100) for a double room.

Each room or suite of this lovely country estate offers a private balcony with a spectacular view of the Alps and Murnauer Moos, Europe’s largest nature reserve. Luxury accommodations are furnished in charming alpine country style with every modern comfort. There are six exclusive and very individual suites that range in style from colorful country-house to classically elegant, plus apartments and flats ideal for longer stays. New for the 2009/2010 ski season is a luxurious Spa Suite, complete with a spa bath with private whirlpool, steam shower and integrated table for in-room massages.

Enjoy ski-out access to many of Zürs’ acclaimed ski slopes, as well as the complimentary services of a sports and activity trainer — a certified ski trainer and guide who is equally at home entertaining youngsters with trips to the in-house cinema and carefree romps in the snow. At the end of the day, guests can retreat to the hotel’s health club for soothing water therapy. Night might bring a romantic torchlight hike with Austrian baked apples and punch. Or, a venture into a lively Alberg club to dance the night away.

The Thurnhers Alpenhof is a member of Elite Luxury Travel, which offers luxury travel packages at some of the world’s finest spa, golf and ski resorts in sought-after European, U.S. and now Central America luxury destinations.

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21Feb

Create Wealth From Free Accounts Like Myspace!

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The True Definition Of “Networking” And Making Money By Networking Within A Targeted Demographic By “David Kitwell” Of Myturbotraffic.com

May 6 2008

“Networking”

So you have a myspace account and you have your closest friends and family added as friends

representing your network right? Well thats your “Direct Network” and they are the folks directly

related to your network. The folks indirectly related to your network of friends would be the

people listed as friends on your friends and families friends lists. This is otherwise known

as your “Extended Network”. You can use myspace to keep in touch with friends and family and

share photos from an awesome online photo gallery or you can create a slideshow and showcase your

favorite photos right there on your profile.

“Up And Running On Myspace”

Now after you’ve gotten the hang of networking, take the time to find a “Niche Topic” that you can build your page around and then create a wave of new fans by networking by demographics. Build your friends list carefully and never spam your friends list! You need them to want to be your friend and not to want to report you as spam or to delete you. That would delete the whole purpose of creating your new profile built for corporate branding!

“Building Your Niche Topic Myspace Page”

Your new friends will be now classified as “Friends That Will Make You Money”….And those are the best kinds of friends! Okay as almost everyone knows “Tivo” and “DVR” have really hurt television advertising and big corporations didn’t like the new technology. Frankly, neither did the television networks who had to take huge hits in ad sales spots on television which use to be premium priced. So what did the corporations do? They moved a lot of their big ad campaigns to the internet. They moved them to websites with plenty of traffic and use tactics to advertise their products to certain people. Here is how you can take advantage of this hot new money making strategy but first make it fun so it doesnt seem like work! Pick a topic or a subject like a sport or hobby and gather some intel on it (pictures, music, and short film to ad to your page). Then create a fast loading but very appealing myspace profile to showcase your new bad self and your new niche topic. Once you have it complete…And I mean complete (completely filled out and add a cool fast loading layout that doesn’t have a lot of video or flash on it) then you can now start building your friend list……

“Building Your New Friend Base”

Now that your up and running and adding new friends, only add friends from the age group that usually always shows interest in this hobby or topic that your page boasts about. This is otherwise known as a targeted demographics which is how corporations do business. Take a look at our prospective new advertising myspace page www.myspace.com/233705330 and see an example of what we mean. This myspace profile is still budding as we target a wide demographic from 18 to 40 on a wide marketing spectrum (a wide spectrum is worth substantially less in advertising possibilities). Thats why it is vital to pick an age group and only add people within that age group that are most likely to be interested in the topic of your new page. You can search on myspace by demographics and by keyword. Use that feature to sift through more than 231,689,576 profiles currently on myspace to add new friends to. You will need a BIG friend base to create an income so use this as a moonlight project to get your friends list numbers up and keep it clean! No offensive material and no nudity. Stand out in a crowd and be professional. Do not spam or post those annoying bulletins selling ipods or handbags because people will delete you from their friends list and/or report you as spam which could get you deleted. Remember you aren’t selling anything! You are simply just creating a friend base to eventually advertise to through a large corporation. Don’t be afraid to blog about your topic or post in forums about your topic and always point your targeted traffic from blogs and forums or groups on or off of myspace to your myspace profile. Add me as a friend and let me know youve read this post so I can watch your page grow. www.myspace.com/233705330 .

“Corporate Branding”

This is the section you are mostly concerned with. And you should be! But this is the segment of myspace success that requires the steps listed above to be done correctly. When you achieve a large base of friends on your myspace account that represents your direct level or “Direct Network” of friends above 100,000 people you are on the brink of achieving ad spot success as we call it. In other words if you have targeted a demographic throughout your friend base building project then you have a myspace page that is worthy of “Corporate Branding”. “Corporate Branding” can mean any number of things. From “Myspace Bulletin Posts” to “Top Profile Banners” to “widgets” to “Music” and “Video Players” or to a complete new page layout! Lets say your friend base was built around snowboarding. You built a friend base that makes up the demographics of people who most likely could be interested in snowboarding. It doesnt matter if they snowboard! It only matters that they somewhat like it. Why? Simple. Lets say I had 1,000,000 friends on my myspace account that was built to target the age group and gender most likely associated with “Snowboarding” and had the opportunity to sell “Corporate Branding” on my page. I could sell adspace to a snow board builder! Or I could sell adspace to a company that rents out ski lodges or I could sell adspace to a company that makes and or sells snow board gear or apparel. Or all of them at once. And the spectrum is wide because I could sell adspace to say “EA Sports” if they were promoting a new “Snowboarding” video game for “Playstation 3″!

Now…………….Heres where it gets fun! The same age group that is most likely interested in “Snowboarding” also are young owners of automobiles. Which means I could sell adspace to an auto manufacturer. I could also sell adspace for say “Sprint” to promote a new phone like the “Palm Centro” or something like that. The reason why is because I have chosen an age group based soley on “Snowboarding” and even though my page is all about “Snowboarding” I have top notch ad space that could make me a chunk of change based soley on the fact that this same age group has to eat, drink, buy cell phones and ring tones, fly on airplanes and go to college, chew gum and buy car insurance among other things like dressing like a rockstar and buying high dollar colognes to wear while wearing designer sunglasses while unloading their “Snowboards” at the ski resort you you thought you’d only be selling adspace to in the first place! If you are dumbfounded and dont know what I am rambling about then you certainly need to research further. The bottom line is you can build a big time bottom line by building your new friend base while remaining focused on the possibilities that may take a year or two to build. This won’t happen over night but it can happen! And it doesnt just pertain to “Myspace”. You could use this same exact strategy on any of the big traffic platforms known today like “Youtube” or “Friendster”..Good luck with your new venture! David Kitwell from Myturbotraffic.com

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28Apr

European Ski Packages: The Best Of The Best From Elite Luxury Travel

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Experience the excitement and romance of the Alps with the best ski resorts and five-star hotels in Europe.  Elite Luxury Travel offers unparalleled vacation opportunities with their Elite Ski Packages that will take you the world-class alpine slopes of the unforgettable Bavarian, Swiss and Austrian Alps.  

Ski the Zugspitze in Germany

Nestled in the heart of Germany’s winter sports capital, Garmisch-Partenkirchen is the Alpenhof Murnau, currently offering the SKI THE ZUGSPITZE package available from January 2 – March 31, 2010.  The Alpenhof Murnau in all of its Bavarian charm is well blanketed in pure, natural snow nestled in the shadows of the towering Zugspitze, Germany’s highest peak.

The SKI THE ZUGSPITZE package includes 5 nights accommodation, Happy Ski Card for 3 days, 3-course dinner at Hofmann’s nightly, full daily breakfast buffet, and complimentary entrance to Yavanna Wellness & Spa. Rates for this very special package start at $1,116 per person double occupancy, and for more fun additional nights are available for just $194.  

March Ski Package in Austria

Thinking of an Austrian holiday this March?  The Thurnhers Alpenhof is offering a very limited Firn & Sunny Days package from March 13 – 26, 2010.  Family owned and run for more than 35 years, the Thurnhers Alpenhof luxury ski resort opens its doors each winter to travelers who come to explore the snow-covered wonderland of Zürs, Austria.

The Firn & Sunny Days package includes 7 nights accommodation with Gourmet half board, Firn and/or deep-snow skiing with a guide, one 25-minute massage, a 6-day Arlberg ski pass excursions to the prettiest ski huts in Arlberg.  Rates start at 3,600 Euros (or $5,100) for a double room.

Easter Ski Break in Switzerland

Switzerland’s Kulm Hotel in St. Moritz is calling for this Easter’s Ski Break.  Commonly called the “cradle of winter sports”, St. Moritz was the first to promote itself as a winter destination back in the late 19th century, playing host to the winter Olympic Games of 1928 and 1948, and continues today to be the playground for Hollywood stars and royalty.

The Kulm Hotel is offering this 4 night package April 1-5, 2010.  This package includes a lavish breakfast buffet and a 6-course dinner menu daily at the elegant Grand Restaurant, a 3-day regional ski pass for the entire Upper Engadin ski region, transfers from the hotel to the Corviglia train station and return.  Also included for your relaxation is one regenerating sea salt bath of your choice and unlimited access to the Panorama Spa and Health Club that includes complimentary participation in the weekly fitness program.  Rates start at CHF 1,520 ($1,458) per room for this entire package.

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13Mar

Tips from a Terrified Skier

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I could hardly believe it. More than a year had passed and it had once again been time for the annual company ski trip to the Pocono Mountains. Unlike last year, almost everyone had decided to go the night before and stay in the same hotel, getting a full night’s sleep and reaching the slopes early, without getting lost on the way. Or so I thought. Although Sidonie had intended to join us the previous year, her excessive amount of alter-names had proven too many to fit on the invitation and she had therefore stayed home. This year she had been asked verbally. But perhaps the greatest difference between the two years is that this time I would attempt to ski, an experience, I must admit, I greatly looked forward to–with as much enthusiasm as root canal therapy without Novocain.

Having been the first to make the almost three-hour drive, I approached Mount Pocono shortly before 7:00 p.m., seeing the sun, low on the western horizon, cast a soft, yellow glow through the ubiquitous, bare, brown trees on the snow-devoid mountains. Wait, I thought, no snow meant no ski. The thought of not having to face my ski schizophrenia provided a momentary relief, but I felt sorry for those who had really come for the experience.

Although Mike had not traveled the night before and therefore had not shared the room with me, his ability to dictate my unearthly wake up time had hardly been eradicated. In order to reach the slopes by 9:15, I had to get up by 7:30–at least physically. He would see the rest of me by noon, I had warned.

Making my way down the long hallway and into the breakfast room like a zombie the next morning, I immediately caught glimpse of equally sleep-deprived Dorit, the other company Duty Manager.

“Did you sleep?” she anticipatorily asked.

“Nope,” I answered.

“I didn’t either,” she responded with a hint of desperation. “How could I with the noise in this hotel?”

“What noise?” I inquired.

“From the group,” she answered.

“You mean our group?”

“Yes, I mean our group.”

“What time did you get here last night?” I wondered.

“I arrived at 11:45 and the rest came at 1:19.”

1:19, I thought. At least her state had not robbed her of her accuracy.

I later learned that their late arrival had been due to loss of directions and the need to stop at Burger King.

“It seems they availed themselves of the hotel’s facilities,” she continued to explain, “going from room to room, to the pool, to the Jacuzzi,” whereupon, one by one, they entered the breakfast room, pajama’ed and barefoot. This year had already begun to vie with last year for “events,” I thought.

Leaving the group to its lengthy, “morning-after” preparation, Dorit and I decided to depart on time, as scheduled, she in the lead car with David and I in the trailing car with Damian. David, requesting a momentary bathroom visit before departure, reappeared 20 minutes later, at which time we drove out of the parking lot. Boy, he must have drunk a lot, I thought. Adhering to a self-restricted five words per day, he confidently led me to believe that he would not shatter Dorit’s cherished early-morning silence during the drive.

Following her jeep down the long, winding road toward Jack Frost Mountain, I turned into the parking lot. One year later and there he stood: the Mike. I had awakened at 7:30 and could barely see through my eyes. (I had actually forgotten that Damian had been next to me the entire time.) He had awakened at 5:00 and looked so damn chipper and cheery. With a positive mood like that, there must be snow up here somewhere, I thought. All right, so much for Plan A. There must be a Plan B.

Tires crunching over gravel alerted me to an approaching red car containing the only three who had not elected to drive the previous evening: Annie, Sidonie, and Jenner. Sidonie, wearing her Viking hat, sat in the back and folded the map a final time. Annie, owner and driver of the car and a person who had little patience for lengthy, embellished conversations, sat next to Jenner in the front who, unlike David, restricted herself to five words per second. In fact, she had initiated a sentence upon entering the car in New York and had just reached its verb as it pulled into the parking lot three hours later. As Annie opened the door, I attempted to read her thoughts, which assuredly must have gravitated round a single desperation: I need a Valium!

Jenner, getting out of the car, adjusted her sunglasses and stood before me.

“How was your ride?” I inquired.

Thinking it over, she responded with her universal, one-word-fits-all-occasions response, “Lovely!”

Walking across the road, we entered the lodge. Ordinarily used as a lounge and designated “Canteen,” it had been four times larger than last year’s and had featured a bar, mulitple tables and chairs, a fireplace, a sofa, wall-hung sleighs, and a wooden, outdoor deck with picnic tables. Serving as the group’s base, it would be the location to which we would return throughout the day.

As the others settled in, Damian and I elected to inspect the public areas and have a look at the ski slopes. Opening the door and catching first glimpse, I went into mild panic. There it was: the white stuff, blanketing the mountain. Didn’t it know how late in the season it was and that it should have melted by now? The snow and I were already not getting along. Oh, God, where was Plan C?

Because the group would travel the same short distance as Dorit and I had and would not be given misdirections by Adam, who had been unable to attend this year, they should theoretically have trailed us by only a few minutes, but, in fact, pulled into the Jack Frost parking lot almost two hours late.

“Where have you been?” Dorit inquired, as they filed across the road to the lodge.

“We stopped in McDonalds,” Patrick explained.

Could this group not go anywhere without stopping at a fast-food place first? I wondered.

Back in the lodge, Mike prepared to purchase the ski tickets. Counting the number of people who intended to take lessons and those who intended to partake of full-fledged skiing (do you think I was part of the latter group?), he temporarily left and returned with the stack of ski passes, the sight of which sent fear through my body like a bolt of lightening. Those tickets may well have been gallows! I could not believe that I was going to go through with this!

Mike distributed the triangular-shaped hangars which attached to one’s clothing and on which the peeled, gummed passes were glued. Examining these two items, I could not imagine how they could possibly be united into a single, hanging identification badge, and took some 20 minutes of attempting multiple configurations before I had been able to do so. If attaching the badge were this complicated, I thought, what would it be like putting on the actual skis?

Successfully hooking the assembly to my pants, I stood up.

“You suddenly look very confident, Robert,” Mike observed.

Silently looking at him, I thought: there’s a fine line between confidence and stark terror.

Thus provisioned for my pending trauma, I left the main lodge with Sidonie, Damian, and Jenner, crossing the snow-covered ground to the ski equipment rental shack. Directed first to the ski boot room, we walked among the aisles of boots, clueless as to which size would actually fit us. No shoe store ever looked like this, I thought. “Look at these fashions,” I commented, as Damian aimlessly began to try on the closest boots to his reach.

Deciding upon a set of boots (did they have to have a pair that fit me?), I moved to the next station. As I clumped across the floor in my 100-pound foot armor, displaying as much finesse as a rhinoceros walking down an aisle of Swarovski crystal, I shared a reflection from last year’s ski trip with Jenner and Sidonie. “Now I know what Joseph was talking about last year when he put his ski boots on for the first time and said, ‘These shoes are damn tight,’ only damn’ wasn’t quite the word he had used.” Sidonie gave me that glazed look.

In order next to obtain the properly-sized skis, we had to present ourselves at two counters, where we were required to complete and sign a consensus form more detailed and complicated than that preceding open-heart surgery.

“You have to circle one of the numbers between one and three,” the representative instructed me.

“What do they mean?” I asked.

“One is the lowest amount of ski experience and three is the most,” she answered.

“Don’t you have anything lower than a one?” I desperately inquired.

Assessing my ski boot size, she then waded her way through the racks until she had found the corresponding skis, returning to the counter and, after tightening them with a screw driver, handed them over to me.

Shakingly, I cradled them in my arms and looked at her pleadingly. Puzzled, she looked back, wondering what I could still have wanted. What, I thought, no prayer? I’m a first-time skier!

Now fully outfitted with boots and skis, I walked toward the exit, following Damian, Jenner, and Sidonie, at which time one last person stopped me. Did he want to see my ski badge, too? I wondered.

“Wait,” he said, “you have to get your poles.”

You get those, too? I thought. For all I intended to do, I probably could have done without them.

As the four warriors now emerged on to the battlefield of virgin snow, led by Sidonie in her Viking hat, Jenner proudly proclaimed, “I’m not a novice! I’ve had former skiing experience.”

“Where?” I asked, already anticipating how inferior I would look in comparison to her.

“Holland,” she enthusiastically shared.

With a country entirely under sea level, you could have done better than that, I thought, and my anticipated inferiority image rapidly faded. Sensing my disbelief, she supported, “No, there are small hills there.”

I didn’t know that the country was so overrun with ants, I thought!

Damian had been the first of the four to actually ski…in other words, make the initial plunge into danger. Attaching his left boot to his ski and then the right, he stood erect, grabbed his poles, and catapulted across the snow-covered ground like an F.104 fighter launched from an aircraft carrier deck, careening into a snow bank.

I will certainly look more professional than that, I thought. Following his lead, I attached my ski to the left boot, praying that it would not fit (the moment of truth was at hand and I had run out of plans), and then the right. As if the plug on all friction had suddenly been pulled, I accelerated forward, passing Sidonie and picnic table in a helpless blur, and yelled, “Sidu..” until the facade of the lodge intervened and arrested my travel. So much for the improvement over Damian! I thought

New activities often provide new perspectives and I must admit that, during my initial ski experience, that I had had a profound revelation–namely, that everyone has a goal in life and that mine was to return to the ski rental shop and kiss my concrete-griping shoes to kingdom-come.

Mike, sensing the need for a personal ski lesson, stood next to me, issuing a submachine gun fire of instructions: “Stand up straight…poles on the side…skis directly ahead…bend the knees…lean back on the shin bones…ankles stiff…head forward…eyes ahead…center of gravity over the skis…in other words, work your way into a position like you have to go to the bathroom”

I shot him a glance and stated through chattering teeth, “It may not be like!”

“Okay,” he stated, “that’s it. You’re ready! (Ready for what, I wondered?) “I suggest you ski to the right toward the beginner’s slope.”

“Ah,” I nervously pondered, “I actually think I’ll ski to the left.”

“The left?” he puzzled. “What’s there?

“The place where I return the equipment,” I hesitatedly answered.

“Well, then,” he answered with attempted patience, “I’ll go off skiing myself.”

I almost felt sorry for him after all his work. I said almost, because the question of whether there had been a cast for every part of the body–yes, that part, too–had not yet been answered.

Jenner, upon inquiry from her Station Manager concerning her initial ski experience, stated, “I fell down” and promptly bent face forward to reveal, as evidence, the round, wet spot on the pants covering two half moons which, when put together, equaled a full butt, no buts about it.

Fear certainly has a way of distorting perception. First-time skier Ecaterina had somehow passed me and made it to the top of an 8,000-foot mountain with a vertical drop. “Robert!” she yelled. “You should see the view from here. It’s beautiful!”

“Marvelous,” I yelled, fearing a noise-induced avalanche. “Take pictures! I’ll look at them later.”

I subsequently learned that her elevation had been three feet higher than mine had!

While performing one of my cross-country ski expeditions–translated as between one picnic table and the other–a passing skier yelled, “How’re you doing? By the way, which group are you with?”

I stretched a crooked arm and pointed to the three souls clinging to the picnic table like capsized ship survivors clutching a floating life raft. Cowardly, yes, but they were my group and I loved them!

During one of my “ski walks,” which must have made me appear as graceful as a hippopotamus attempting the ballet, a blue, stocking hat image blurred by to the right, caught his ski on an ice protrusion, and plunged into an almost sequence-indistinguishable maneuver of impact: the right ski tripped on the elevated surface; the left ski rose vertically toward the sky; gravity pulled his rump toward the hump; the skier plunged into the snow, careening toward the left; the right leg flipped over; the head bored a trench into the ice; snow entered the left nostril like a plunger into a backed up toilet; and the entire discombobulated, white-sheathed ice bank came to a halt.

“Are you all right?” I yelled.

The snow pile nodded.

“I’ll try to make it there and help,” I returned, “but at the speed I move, I think spring thaw will get there first.”

Luckily, a more experienced skier passed, lifted the man up, and transformed him from snowman to human. By the time the situation had been remedied, I myself had significantly closed the gap to the scene–by at least a foot!

Meanwhile, picnic table-bound Sidonie had bravely attempted several unaided skiing positions herself, which justifiably must have made her very proud: at the end of the bench, on the middle of the bench, half a butt hanging off the bench, and a full, double-diamond switch–from the bench to the table. I could not help but wonder: why did she look more content than I?

The waning sun beckoned everyone back to the lodge, where the pear-filled schnapps glasses, sporting miniature flags, lined the picnic table on the outdoor deck, and the goulash, dumplings, and spaetzl warmed in chafing dishes on the bar, filling the room with aromas of Austria. One by one, they returned to the comfort and safety of the hut like soldiers seeking refuge in their barracks from battle, nursing their wounds: George, with a black-and-blue buttocks, Munny with a swollen leg, Ricky with torn ligaments, and Sidonie with splinters (from the picnic table). Swelling seemed to be a common denominator in Munny’s ski adventures. Last year, as I recall, he had brought some girl, disappeared, and did not resurface until the end of the day with very swollen lips, as if some cosmetic doctor had gone hog-wild on him with collagen injections.

All too soon it had again come time to leave and make the long drive back to New York.

As I drove out of the parking lot, I could see Mike recede in the rearview mirror and I somehow sensed that the recipe for next year’s trip had already begun to simmer on the back burners of his mind.

Driving through Pennsylvania on Interstate 80 and passing the Delaware Water Gap as Damian and Noemi slept, filling the car with a cacophony of snores and snorts, I reveled in the fact that I had come a long way in overcoming my ski phobia: last year snow tubing, this year ski lessons, and next year–who knows, I may actually put on both skis…

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05Mar

How I Benefitted from Snowboarding Classes

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Let me tell you all about the time that I went to snowboarding classes and why I absolutely think that you should go out there and do the same. When you learn something new it provides and excellent sense of well being and can result in many hours of fun and enjoyment that can come as a result of the new skill that you have attained.

When I was only 16 I really liked watching winter sports on television and although it may sound stupid, it was actually sledging that drove me to want to learn a winter sport. I always liked sledging and I even went sledging when it wasn’t snowing. You see, where I live it is absolutely impossible to go sledging 11 months of the year, and if we are lucky enough to have as much as a month of snow then I am always sure to take advantage of it and go out their and sledge away! That is why, coupled with my love for watching snowboarding and sledging on television, that I decided that I would go out their and learn how to snowboard.

So you are probably wondering why I made the choice of snowboarding over skiing as my choice for the winter sport that I would try. The main reason for this was because I have a lot of friends that do snowboarding but absolutely none that do skiing done at the local ski slope. Although they do snowboarding the slope caters for both and I suppose the decision really did come down to me. Anyway, in the end I decided to go out their and choose snowboarding and I would be lying if I said my friends were my only influence in my decision to choose the board over the ski’s. You see I do not know if everyone will know what I am talking about but I feel that a snowboard just appears to be so much more responsive than ski’s. Do you know what I mean?

At our local ski slope there is only 100M of run that is around 300 feet if you convert it. In that period on ski’s what can you actually do? If it was some kind of complicated slalom then that would be different, but just going down a hill on ski’s to me seems slightly boring compared to on a snowboard. A snowboard appears to be more of a white knuckle ride. That is why I decided to choose snowboarding, but don’t get me wrong I still think that skiing looks fun, and as I now go down to the skiing slope every week or so I have actually started to do skiing some times for a bit of a change. You see, once I learned how to snow board I had some transferable skills, such as an ability to use the lift, how to handle speed, when to slow down etc. That is why I am glad that I learned how to snowboard first. If I had skied first, then I would probably have found it a lot more difficult to pick up snowboarding second. Anyway I went to snowboarding lessons and really enjoyed myself, I am not as good, nor as dedicated as some of my friends but I still really enjoy myself and that is what it is all about.

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29Nov

Ladies Ski Jackets – Protection From Extreme Cold

FILED IN Ski Stuff No Comments

Ladies Ski Jackets : Not all women may have experienced skiing, but all women know how biting extreme cold can be. In instances when cold becomes unbearable and numbs one’s senses, the first equipment that comes to one’s mind is a jacket. A jacket is a must because it is the primary equipment that can keep a person warm and comfortable despite the extreme cold. The importance of wearing jackets is even more important for those who are engaged in outdoor activities such as skiing. As such, for women, it is important to wear proper ladies ski jackets when skiing in the blistering cold.

Importance of Ski Jackets

Ski jackets are worn to protect the arms and torso of the skier especially when participating in tough skiing competitions such as cross-country and downhill skiing. Because of the speed that one may generate in downhill skiing, the cold temperature becomes even colder as one go against the rushing wind. As such, the main purpose why women wear ladies ski jackets is to protect one from the cold.

When it comes to offering protection from the cold temperature outside, nothing beats leather. However, leather has the propensity to get brittle when constantly exposed to cold temperatures. This means that ladies ski jackets made from leather fades in efficiency with the passage of time. Moreover, when it catches moisture, leather becomes heavy. As such, it was replaced by nylon, silk, and cotton as the main materials used in today’s ladies ski jackets.

Another function of ladies ski jackets is that it must be able to protect the skier from injuries caused by pieces of ice hitting the body when kicked up by other skiers during a race. These loose materials are also sent flying when some parts of the icy surface breaks off. When it comes to protection from injuries, leather again is a good choice. However, when leather gets wet, it becomes heavy to wear. As such, modern ski jackets are padded on the interior to act as a cushion, protecting skiers from possible injuries. Today’s jackets are also provided with a hood for protection for the head.

What to Look for in Ski Jackets

When buying ladies ski jackets, one has to bear in mind the following factors:

▪ Ski jackets must be able to provide warmth to the skier. This is the main reason why ski jackets are worn. When a jacket cannot provide the needed warmth, it is as good as wearing no jacket at all.

▪ The design of the jacket. Design may take secondary importance compared to warmth and comfort, but when it comes to the number of pockets provided and the location of these pockets, the subject takes central importance. This is because the number of stuff that one may bring during skiing activities largely depends on the number of pockets around.

▪ Ladies ski jackets must be waterproof. This waterproofing should be complete so that moisture will not seep into the jacket, which causes the skier to feel even colder. This is tantamount to wearing no jacket at all.

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17Aug

A Lesson From A Ski Hill

FILED IN Ski Stuff No Comments

I learned a life lesson at Squaw Valley yesterday.

It was a rough day. Over a foot of our famous Sierra Cement and more coming down.  Sierra Cement is heavy, heavy snow – think skiing slurpies. It changes with every inch – sometimes you move along, sometimes you get grabbed and stop suddenly.  It’s an art to find your balance and stay down the hill when you’re getting thrown all over the place. Even the tiniest mistake and you get slammed.

I was skiing with my good buddy Jim – who also happens to be a Mountain Guide and one of the best skiers I’ve ever seen.  He was being gracious and helping me relocate my ski legs in this stuff.

We had a GREAT day – I found my balance on my new skis and had a blast in the stuff that I used to hate. I was focused and felt really ‘on it’ as we skied some of the steepest, narrowest trees at Squaw (trees force you to make turns and get on balance).  I was thrilled- I’ve never skied that well in this stuff and it’s something I needed to learn again after a few years in UT. But with a lot of focus, and by paying attention to the changing conditions under my feet – I got it!

We stopped about 30 feet above the groomer on our last run to decide what we were doing. We’d come down the hill and it was pouring rain – the snow had turned into glue under my skis.  I decided to head home after such a great day – so we headed toward the base.

As we were heading to the groomer – I looked up to check out KT (a famous Squaw mountain) and lost my focus. My skis left the tracks in this super glue and the next thing I know – I’m face planted on the groomer with a yard sale all around me. I heard my head go Crack as it hit the hardpack and trust me, I felt the pain. I laid there for a minute and thought – “Now that was a bonehead move. What was I thinking?”

We’re not sure if my nose is broken. Hopefully it’s just the cut I got from my goggles. Then there’s my headache – which is surely hurtin’ this am. And my neck has a new position on my spine – which we need to fix too.

My point?  I LOST MY FOCUS.  I wasn’t thinking about what I was doing! I started looking around at KT, which was NOT important to my efforts at that moment.  And I went Splat! That made me wonder…

How often do we look around, get distracted and lose our focus?

What does that cost us in business and in our personal lives?

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