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What a great story! Just wanted to highlight how awesome it is that you do this. This past weekend had some of the best snow of the season but my favorite moment was when I was on the chairlift and saw a sit skier dropping off a ~10 ft cliff.It's Military in the Mountains week here, and I've been working with this dude for the last 2 days, with one more to go. A former skier, he lost the use of his legs to his progressing MS.
Yesterday we started him off on a mono ski, because he has good mobility in his torso. He found the outrigger emphasis too hard on his shoulders, so we switched him to a bi-ski setup, which emphasizes body movements much earlier in the learning process than mono.
And
He
Crushed
It.
The silver Natty Light jacket is their laurel wreath for the sendiest member of their group for a given session. He was linking turns by the end of day one and end of the day today he's working on "scarving" short radius turns on the steepest green we've got. I'm psyched to see what he's able to do by the end of the day tomorrow.
And, 10 weeks ago he couldn't even lift himself into his truck. After 9 weeks of training for this, he can.
Tomorrow we're going out just the two of us. That's a huge milestone for me as an adaptive instructor: they're trusting me to take out a sit skier on my own for the first time. I'm a little nervous, but lucky for me my student is super chill.
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Did you find it useful off piste/in fresh snow, or does it just get confused?
Every year I've been competing with this local high school kid who has my same first name on the mountain's vertical tracker (I don't know if he knows I exist...I just want to be #1 with my name)
He seems to usually cut back/stop skiing late season and I was on track to catch him, but he put up a big day yesterday and I'm still 20k vert behind him. Ultimately it will come down to whether he skis this saturday and sunday or not.
Obviously it doesn't actually matter and I have a bunch of days at other resorts or skiing slower/low-vert chairs or chairs where they don't scan your pass (my ski tracker app reports >200k feet more than the resort)...but I'm still tempted to take off a day of work later this week. I'm not willing to just go burn out a mega-vert nonstop groomer day, but a bonus sick day might seal the deal.
As it stands, <450 people have skied more than me...and I bet most of them aren't working full time jobs.