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Sunday, 12 May 2013
Friday, 10 May 2013
The End
So last time we spoke, I was back in the teaching groove after finishing my BASI Level 3 technical and teaching exams. The season soon wrapped up, with ski teaching work dropping off in Morgins immediately after Easter. Annoyingly, even now, I can see there is snow up the top and the mogul field is still there, looking lonely.
above the clouds in Tux and a rare pic of me skiing (complete with spear throwing pole plant) |
Easter was quite busy this year in Morgins, probably due to Easter actually being at a reasonable time of the year when there was still snow. The first season I was here, Easter fell at the end of April and the resort was already shut by then!
So now all of the lifties in Morgins are happy again because they can finally get their cows out of the shed and get on with their main summer profession, farming. May has been a little disappointing so far, in that it has rained more or less constantly. I don’t know why I am surprised because it always rains for a month in May and then we get on with a long hot summer from June.
I started my summer job in the second week of April this
year, meaning no break between the ski season and the summer football
season. After a month of it now, I’m
fully back in the groove and playing football for myself 3 nights a week, in a
vain attempt to get fit and fight my aging body.
I suppose I did have a little break between the ski season
and the football season by having to go to the Hintertux Glacier in Austria for
the BASI Level 3 Mountain safety course.
For various reasons, I wasn’t looking forward to this course much but
mainly because of the tales I had heard from other people about having to walk
up mountains, in order to ski back down them again. For me, this is something that
I just have absolutely no interest in, my preference is to use the lift that
are there for your convenience. When I
see people skinning up the mountain, I am normally thinking ‘weirdo’ in my
head.
However, I guess the point of the BASI system is to
challenge you to become a more rounded skier and so I tried to be positive and
get stuck in. The course itself was very
different to your standard BASI course in that it was run by a mountain guide
from Chamonix, Dave Cummins. Dave didn’t
appear to be hung up at all on our skiing level; he was more into the walking
up stuff and mountain navigation. That
said, he did ask us for ski tips during the week and he was definitely skiing
better at the end of the week than the start!
The course covered a lot and I enjoyed the bits I was
expecting to enjoy, namely learning more about the snow pack and avalanches, navigation,
working with transceivers and skiing off-piste.
Luckily for me, because the snow conditions over the week deteriorated due
to the heat, we didn’t end up doing that much walking up but I got a feel for
what it was all about and getting away from the crowds. As part of my level 4, I have to go and do 6
days of touring anyway, so I’m going to have to learn to love it I guess.
Another bonus of the week was skiing again with my good
buddy George Walton,
pro skier and all round good guy. I’d
seen George piste skiing in my Level 3 tech exam but it’s clear that his
passion is off-piste and considering we spent most of the week ripping about
hunting fresh or skiable powder and spring snow, his skills were on show and a
pleasure to watch.
Georgy rock jibber |
So at the end of 6 days, another course was passed and that only leaves me now with 1 course left until I get my full BASI Level 3 ISIA stamp. The exam I’ve got left is the Common Theory which you have to go to Scotland to do. Everyone that I have spoken to says that this course is a dull one as it is classroom based but I’m determined to be positive about it, not least because the theory side of skiing is something I am hugely interested in.
See you soon.
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