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- Newsgroups: rec.skiing
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!paperboy.osf.org!david
- From: david@postman.gr.osf.org (David George)
- Subject: Into the future on the cutting edge
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.172519.3128@osf.org>
- Sender: news@osf.org (USENET News System)
- Organization: OSF RI Grenoble
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 17:25:19 GMT
- Lines: 81
-
-
- Into the future on the cutting edge
-
-
- Doug Sager/Financial Times
-
-
- Will you still be skiing in the year 2010 ? We are all getting older
- but demographic research indicates that by the first decade of the 21st
- century the majority of the skiing population will be over the hill.
-
- Statistics compiled by the United Ski Industries Association indicate
- that while most skiers are currently between 25 and 24, by 2010 the
- largest group will be veterans between 45 and 55. No one knows whether
- hordes of young snowboarders will make the transition to two skis or
- give up winter sports altogether.
-
- These veteran skiers will be fitter and better off financially.
- Furthermore the end of the cold war will allow winter resort development
- to spread to huge areas previously untracked. Already, helicopter skiing
- in former Soviet republics is drawing rave reviews.
-
- Even so, growth in the ski industry is predicted to continue at its
- current glacial pace. Global warming, recession and even the ecological
- backlash have all helped slow the schuss which began in the 1960s, when
- the masses were introduced to package skiing.
-
- In the past few years ski and boot manufacturers have suffered enormous
- losses. Sales of skis in Britain are running at less than half their
- peak in the 1980s.
-
- The travel market has responded with unheard of bargains and price
- breakthroughs. Ski the American Dream recently advertised a full week
- of skiing in California, with non-stop flights and unlimited mileage car
- hire for less than 400 pounds.
-
- Skis will continue to evolve in materials and design towards the perfect
- carved turn, initated by the skier simply pressing foot down flat on to
- the ski. Bumps and bunions will be eased by foam and silicon injected
- ski boots as comfortable as carpet slippers.
-
- Skis and boots are already "interactive" in the new Marker Selective
- Control binding, which can be adjusted for varying snow conditions.
- Electronic bindings are expected on the market within five years.
-
- Gizmos have always attracted skiers. Gadgets such as the Ortovox
- electronic mouse which allows one to home in on a ski buried in powder
- snow should not distract attention from the single most important
- development in skiing, the parity between comfort and performance.
-
- Skiing gear, both hardware and clothing, is becoming so non-intrusive
- that you hardly know it is there. Yet the ordinary skier is able to
- float through deep powder (on the new Atomic wide body skis) or carve
- rails through sheet ice (on a slalom ski such as the Volkl P10) with
- more authority and security than an Olympic champion of any previous
- generation.
-
- Once they have been let loose in thigh high powder snow, skiers are
- reluctant to return to the piste. Skiing is splitting into fringe
- disciplines. Surf and telemark are the most visible trends. The future
- is in adventure skiing; off piste excursions, ski safaris, snowcat and
- heliskiing.
-
- Good skiers are abandoning groomed and crowded pistes for transalpine
- ski safaris, which offer more varied and extensive skiing in a week than
- many resort skiers experience in a lifetime. Wilderness siing by snowcat
- or helicopter allows the committed skier, for whom time is more scarce
- than money, into the kind of untracked heady snow which is available
- in resorts only once or twice a season.
-
- Ecological awareness has encouraged more skiers to invade the wilderness,
- seeking the 'natural' experience of snow structures untouched by piste
- machines and far from the irritating crowds. But it has also brought moves
- to curtail unrestricted off piste skiing in the Alps. The future for such
- 'free' skiing is in Canada, where authorities still welcome development
- of resorts and helicopter operations, and in previously unexploited terrain
- from Kashmir to the Caucauses.
-
- -- reproduced without permission.
-
-
-