
Some of you have noted that I don’t write equally about
snowboarding. A few have even implied that I may be anti-snowboard.
Let me explain, when I think of the sport of sliding downhill on
snow, I call it “skiing.” Whether your board of choice includes two
skis, one snowboard, a mono-ski (rather rare in Maine, more popular
in Europe), telemark skis or even snowblades (very short skis that
make me chuckle), I think of all of these as “skiing.” Some of my
colleagues use the term “snow sports” to be all encompassing and
non-discriminate, but to me that that opens the door to snowmobiling
which requires separate classification. Non-motorized snow sports
might cover it but that doesn’t sound fun frankly.
Snowboarding is a very cool sport, pardon the obvious pun. I tried
snowboarding once, and therefore I have immense respect for the
sport that I just couldn’t grasp. Incidentally, I also have respect
for my wrists so snowboarding and I didn’t hit it off after my first
forward flop. Can’t type a column with two wrist casts.
When snowboarding is done with proficiency and the right snow
conditions, there is nothing more elegant. A single board floating
through snow in a seemingly effortless series of arcs is art. I
could argue it is prettier than skiing when done to this degree.
It’s like surfing on a sparkling wave of snow.
We, skiers and snowboarders alike, have so much to be grateful for
since the advent of riding. There is continuous debate over who
drummed up the snowboard. Tom Sims created a board in 1963 called a
skiboard. Sherman Popper invented the snurfer with a rope handle in
1965, and Jake Burton Carpenter debuted his first fiberglass board
in 1979 on the slopes of Stratton, Vermont. What is indisputable is
that a whole new energy ensued as snowboard riders took to the
slopes in the 80’s and ever since. Along came man made jumps, table
tops and eventually terrain parks on which snowboarders played and
performed tricks which to this day continue to escalate.
Snowboarding also propelled a new spirit and style in skiing.
Traditional ski manufacturers soon emulated the shaped side cut of a
snowboard, and shaped skis became the rage amongst two plankers.
Twin tip skis were next as skiers wanted to ride backwards and
forwards like snowboarders in the terrain parks.
Today’s ski clothing has clearly been stylized by snowboarding’s
casual culture. A more urban street smart style with baggy pants,
belts with bling and crazy colors have all been inspired by the
modern (three decades old) movement of snowboarding.
Wait until you see the U.S. Olympic Snowboard Team’s outfits for the
Vancouver Games. Seth Wescott and teammates will be wearing Burton
uniforms featuring a plaid jacket, and torn denim pants. The style
is very hip – resembling the worn out pants high schoolers wear, not
your typical ski team uniform. But it is red, white and blue – phew.
Greg Dacyshyn, Senior VP at Burton said, “Although we are creating a
uniform, our first objective is to express the individuality of
snowboarding. We are taking vintage American looks and interpreting
them in a unique and unexpected fashion, yet performance and
function are not jeopardized. The result will be a progressive and
fresh look that challenges the former conservatism of the Olympics.”
Snowboarding continues to push the limits of the perhaps
conservative ski industry, from technical aspects to cultural
clothing and a volcanic eruption of trendy terminology and slang. In
the next few weeks, we will witness further evidence of
snowboarding’s influence on competitive ski events.
Snowboarding halfpipe and racing debuted at the 1998 Olympics in
Nagano, Japan, then snowboarder cross arrived in 2006 with Seth
Wescott winning Maine’s first winter Olympic Gold. This February’s
Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver (Feb. 12-28), skier cross will
debut following in the footsteps of boarder cross.
Skiing has a long Olympic history; Nordic skiing debuted in the
first ever 1924 Winter Games. Alpine skiing arrived in 1936, and
alpine ski events have slowly evolved to include all disciplines of
racing plus freestyle moguls in ‘92 and aerials in ‘94. The
snowboarding curve has been far speedier. I wonder if we will see
ski or snowboard Big Air or halfpipe sanctioned by the Olympic
Committee, and if so, which first?
I am excited to watch the upcoming 14th annual Winter X Games hosted
at Aspen’s Buttermilk Resort on Jan. 28-31. Who knows if skier Simon
Dumont, of Bethel, would be competing in Big Air, superpipe, or
slopestyle ski events if snowboarding had never been invented?
Watching our U.S. Ski Team fly down the slick Downhill and Super G
Olympic courses (especially with the promise of Bode Miller
theatrics) is always a thrill, but I now find equal excitement
seeing Shaun White fly like a tomato on his board above a snowy
superpipe in contention for X Games Gold.
While as a skier (by equipment definition), I enjoy a traditional
ski day at Deer Valley or Alta in Utah (where snowboarders are
banned along with Mad River Glen in Vermont), I am also grateful for
the vibrancy and innovation that snowboarding and its creative start
ups like Burton have brought to ski resorts.
When snowboarders spend their day in the terrain park practicing
their “misty” like monkeys in a playground of metal rails and
whales, leaving the remainder of the ski resort to me, I like that
too.
Is that political correct that I said ski resort? I know many
resorts that offer both types of snow sliding have changed their
names from Ski Area or Ski Resort to become “Mountain Resort” in
order to welcome all skiers and riders to their slopes.
So if snowboarding has not been given equitable verbiage or singled
out more often in my scribe, that is because I view the sport in its
entirety - not in two plank versus one exclusivity. I hope to see
you out skiing (or riding).
Vermont| New Hampshire |Canada | Rockies | Sun n'Sea Travel
All Stories by Heather Burke
All Photography by Greg Burke.
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