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- From: lowell@tc.fluke.COM (Lowell Skoog)
- Subject: The most challenging runs in the world
- Message-ID: <1992Nov24.014242.9227@tc.fluke.COM>
- Organization: John Fluke Mfg. Co., Inc., Everett, WA
- Date: Tue, 24 Nov 1992 01:42:42 GMT
- Lines: 30
-
- Recent postings have compared various ski runs for steepness and
- challenge. This got me thinking about what really makes a run
- challenging.
-
- At one end of the spectrum are the extreme skiing runs. On these
- slopes the challenge is simply to survive. You won't find them
- marked in ski areas--except with Closed signs. Usually it takes
- mountain climbing techniques just to reach them.
-
- Next are the "stunt skiing" runs, on which the challenge is not so
- much to survive, but to ski difficult terrain in good style. These
- are what you see in Warren Miller's extreme skiing films.
-
- Beyond this, there is a whole world of runs where the challenge is
- not just in skiing them, but in HOW you ski them. Race courses
- require speed; moguls require agility. For some skiers, the greatest
- challenge is to leave a perfect set of powder eights. For others it
- is to push the limits of free-heel equipment. For still others it is
- simply to ski the next run better than the last.
-
- When we focus on which run is steepest or roughest, we see only the
- objective side of challenge. I'd guess that most skiers judge
- challenge not with a protractor, but with some more personal,
- subjective standard.
-
- I'd say the most interesting question is not which run is most
- challenging, but how you bring challenge to your runs.
-
- --Lowell Skoog
- Seattle, Washington
-