HOA logoHOA destinations

SKI BIG WHITE MASTERS
Story and photos by Yvette Cardozo

High on Adventure, September 2017

 

Big White morning sunshine on village base
Morning sunshine on the Big White village base

Like so many things of yesteryear (vinyl records and photo slide film to name just two), ski weeks are making a comeback.

And, not surprisingly, they’re aimed at the same folks who went on these back during the ski week heyday in the 1970s and early ‘80…the boomers. The original ski week hit when the baby boom became yesterday’s millennials. They had money, they were skiing, they wanted the social experience.

Big White master ski class
Women in a master class with their helmet decorations

Then boomers started having families, and taking an entire week off no longer worked. So short, specific clinics (racing, bumps, women’s) that lasted only a long weekend took over.

But why have ski weeks recently returned?

Because the kids have grown up, the money is available and, once more, so is the option of taking off for a week. Plus, you’ll be skiing with your own age group. No trying to keep up with someone 30 years younger. “It started as 50-Plus in 2011,” said Katie Balkwill, regional sales manager for Big White Ski Resort. “We ran it that way with very small numbers until 2013. There was a suggestion to change the name to Seniors Ski Club, which we did. And no one came the following week.

“Then we changed the name to Masters Monday and had 30 participants the next week. We average 45 people every Monday for most of the season now. “It truly is all in a name.”

  Big whie instructor shows exaggerated bad form    
 
Ski instructor's exaggerated bad form
 
Exaggerated good form
 

As for the Masters Week, it has grown steadily from 23 the first year (19 of whom have returned) to 59, then 109, then last year, 229. It was extended to two weeks and after the second session, a third was added for the end of the season. And so, I signed up for Big White’s Masters Ski Week, along with 90 others. We would ski together each morning and have a variety of social programs in the afternoons or evenings. The first day of my week, when we were joined by the Monday-only groups, the resort was expecting perhaps 130 for lunch. Nearly 200 came - many signing up just that morning. There was quite a scramble for food, but nobody went hungry.

Since we had all filled out forms suggesting our ski level, the first morning we separated into skill groups ranging from novice to expert. Then, after a bit of skiing, a few people shifted around and we were set for the week.

Our group, Level 4 of 6, was perfecting its stance, getting more aggressive on our turns, and playing a bit in the year’s epic powder.

  Big White cheddar beer soup on the sleigh ride   Big White gunbarrel coffee show  
 
Big White cheddar beer soup on the sleigh ride

 
Gunbarrel coffee show - flaming brandy is poured down a gunbarrel into a glass of coffee
 

Anthony, our instructor, tailored exercises to each of the five in our class.

For Sandy, it was ski downhill while holding polls horizontally in her hands, that, Anthony said, helps lead the turn with the lower body. Sandy’s upper body was turning into the hill, which threw her off balance.

For Norm, it was a “prayer stance” holding his hands together in front of his chest. This balanced him and helped lead with the legs, rather than the upper body. For me, it was making sure I looked downhill when turning, not to the side...again, helping with balance.

And for all of us, there was a maddening exercise where we dragged our downhill pole along the snow, which truly is not intuitive. Anthony insisted that this would get onto us our downhill skis throughout the turn.

And, well, it did. Each day after class, there was an activity...a clinic, aprés ski, a sleigh ride.

One night, we met for beer and pizza at Dizzy’s Ski & Board Shop where Lindsay Bennett (aka Dizzy) talked about ski gear.

 

 

 


Big White collection of antique ski boots at Dizzy's Boot Shot

 
Big White Dizzy with 1973 antique ski boot
 
 
Dizzy's collection of antique ski boots
 
1973 revolutionary tech; also 1973 design problems
 

Along shelves in the shop sat hundreds of old boots, some from the 1940s, each representing a tech breakthrough.

“I skied down in a bare sock more than once,” he laughed.

“Boots are,” Dizzy said, “the single most important piece of equipment you can own. A decent boot will last for 200 days of skiing. And custom foot beds are perhaps the most important thing you can have in a boot.”

No one knows that better than I. Slower than most to catch on, I spent a decade trying to figure out how to even make a turn at all. Then someone noticed my board flat feet. I splurged on custom footbeds, headed for a lift and in the space of 30 seconds, went from struggling novice to solid intermediate. I had been making the right moves all along but my feet weren’t connecting with the boots.

A few tips...get ski socks. They’re made from a blend that keeps you warm without being too bulky. Don’t pull the liner out of your boot each night. Electric boot dryers will do a better job. And park your boots up high in your hotel room for the night where the air is warmer.

  Big White sleigh ride   Big White skiers at the end of the day  
 
Sleigh ride courtesy Big White
 
Big White skiers at the end of the day
 

I went into the shop the next day and an added thin innersole and heel lifts, both of which helped my aging boots fit snuggly again with the added benefit of tipping me forward just a bit.

The next night, my friend Kay and I went on the dinner sleigh ride. We rode in a large sled pulled by two beautiful Clydesdale horses through a magic scene of snowy trees and swirling flakes. Dinner was both gourmet and rustic - chicken cassoulet and bison ribs. We bonded with our seatmates, who produced bottles of good red wine and topped it all off with mini cheesecakes.

Our final gathering was aprés ski at an Irish pub with good munchies, great beer and the warm sharing of wonderful memories.

It snowed every day but one that week, and on the last morning, fog settled in clear down to the village.

We all gulped, shrugged, and took off for lessons on how to deal with a whiteout. We headed for the Black Forest chair whose medium width trails were lined with trees heavily frosted in Christmas card snow.

“Ski along the trees,” Andrew said. And sure enough, there magically was definition in the snow at our feet.

“Don’t look at your skis,” he added. Yes, it’s scary to peer into the white void, but find something ahead...another skier, a line of trees, a pole, a lift, and keep your eyes on that. It absolutely helps avoid vertigo and, of course, falls.

I had truly hoped that last day we could find some steep cruisers along one of the outlying chairs and some untracked powder, but the fog and near-blizzard conditions squelched that hope. Instead, I took the lessons home where, yes, it all made a huge difference.

  Big White skiing the snow ghost trees   Big White base condos and chairlift  
 
Skiing the snow ghost trees Courtesy Big White
 
Big White base condos and chairlift Courtesy Big White
 

INFO

Big White Ski Resort’s Masters Week is actually five days, Monday through Friday. There are on-slope lessons each morning, then social activities in afternoon or evenings.

For 2018, Big White is planning at least two Masters ski week programs, Jan. 29 - Feb. 2 and Feb. 26 - Mar. 2, plus possibly a third at the end of the season.

Price for the week (lessons, clinics and most social activities) will be $278 Canadian. Canadian dollars have run about .75 per US dollar for a few years meaning $278 Cdn works out to about $208 US.

There are also Masters Monday classes, held each Monday morning, for people who don’t want to commit to an entire week.

Big White: http://www.bigwhite.com/
Masters Ski Week: https://www.bigwhite.com/ski-school-rentals/camps-special-programs/masters-week
Photo diary: https://goo.gl/photos/JGaXNvAc7o323x9E7


     
 
 
 
 
  HOA logoHOA destinations