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Big Storms Bring Big Memories, and Lunacy

"Will there be corduroy?"

Boy that storm brought back some memories.

"What do you consider a bad storm?" A Vernon emergency management official asked me that question as forecasts for the Friday and Saturday blizzard were coming through.

Tahoe, atop Squaw Valley, about 15 years ago, I was riding a lift and I couldn't see the tips of my skis. Even Lt. Dan would call that a whiteout.

Las Vegas Ski & Snowboard Resort, three seasons ago. A three-day dump hit Lee Canyon and left 54 inches behind. The great thing about the resort is that it lies in a box canyon. What falls comes straight down without any wind. The rep there is the parks, but the tree skiing the day after that storm may have been the best I've ever experienced.

Killington, about seven years ago, an overnight storm dropped 29 inches Saturday into Sunday on the tail end of a weekend ski writers seminar. I skied until noon, went to the SUV and the roads were clear. It was stellar.

U.S. Open Snowboarding Championships, about eight years ago. There were 2 fresh feet at Stratton that day. It was a plain in the neck keeping the pipe clean, but oh was it cool to do ski testing in that stuff.

It's funny, but a storm like the one we just had brings out the lunatics every time.

This was an actual call into customer service center at a Vermont mountain:

"Will there be corduroy?"

"Yes ma'am, but under 3 feet of fresh powder."

The complaints after a storm usually range from why no grooming to too much snow. Yes, too much snow.

I caught up with Okemo Mountain Resort Public Relations Director Bonnie MacPherson on Friday. She said she spoke with a lodging official, and the lodging official said the call center was flooded. Some said they couldn't ski or ride in that much snow. Others did not want to make the trip. But for each cancellation there was an eager last-minute booking, she said.

There's a saying that there is no better feeling in the winter than staring out the window at a major snowstorm knowing you'll get to ski or ride in its bounty the next day.

Pro snowboarder Elijah Teter said you're just raring to go after a big storm.

“I would say there is mostly excitement for that day or the following day because you know it’s going to be good out there on the mountain," he said. "Sometimes it's hard to sleep because you’re so excited."

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
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MAC May 24, 2013 at 01:23 pm
Maria, your dismissive and divisive 'analysis' ignores the fact that POTUS is anRead More "executive" position, also "Commander-in-Chief" of the military! O had exactly ZERO "executive" experience, which--along with his anti-business and anti-America views--explains his failures. Mr. Morici's assessment of O's job performance is perfectly pragmatic and relevant, while your doting worship of the "Agitator-in-Chief" is rather pathetic, as well as being irrelevant.
Maria Giannuzzi May 24, 2013 at 12:40 pm
The author of the article quoted endlessly above is Peter Morici, a Professor of InternationalRead More Business at the University of Maryland. I suppose he is to be forgiven if he sees everything through a business lens, after all it has given him a very comfortable livelihood for decades. But it is still a faulty lens on this topic and he should know better.
Maria Giannuzzi May 24, 2013 at 12:18 pm
The CEO analogy is really dumb. Didn't CEO Jamie Dimon at JP Morgan Chase preside over aRead More multi-billion dollar trading loss last year. Didn't a lot of so-called "good" CEOs look the other way while collecting huge bonuses as their banks became insolvent because of unethical and unwise (and possibly illegal) investments in high-risk securities. These truly were management failures that devastated the U.S. economy But the CEO analogy is understandable given that Mr. Morici and his supporters are so enthralled by the corporate state.