Vic's Past Ski Venue List
I grew up in Stoney Creek, Ontario and went to the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College (CMCC) in
Toronto. I was into Keel-boat racing at the Royal Hamilton Yacht Club, right away after graduation. Started
sailing (not racing) in 1969.
After graduating from CMCC in 1973 I got myself into Sail
boat racing, Skiing, Tennis, Cycling and Squash pretty much right away and all at the same time. I was
already into Scuba Diving as I was a lifeguard and still involved with teaching and examining swimming.
I received my National Lifeguard Service certification while still in High School so was into the water
sports early. My dad taught me water skiing at about 8 years old and I was a pretty good slalom water skier
but, my dad did not want to pay the fees for me to compete.
There was no Rollerblading or Snowboarding in those days as they
had not been invented yet, and I picked up Racquet Ball, Ping Pong, and Badminton as I had that
equipment already. I dabbled in Ice Boating in the 1970's and some water skiing in Caledonia with people
from the Rosedale Tennis Club but, was too preoccupied with the new practice, academics and
learning sail boat racing theory and strategies to want to invest in Ice Boating or water skiing. When I
got sort of burned out from racing keelboats (I raced keel boats Tuesday and Thursdays AND DaySailers
[Hobbycat and Albacore dinghy classes ] Monday and Wednesdays] and sailed some nights and on
weekends in the Yacht Club racing schedule. I did that for two full summers then dropped the dinghy
classes. I was also into teaching and Examining Red Cross First Aid and got involved with the new CPR program
in the mid 1970's at the Basic rescuer level, instructor level and examiner level, when the Hamilton Red
Cross Society asked me to get trained in CPR and teach the nurses at the Red Cross Centre. Understandably I
got burned out. But I did learn to juggle many things at the same time. I do have a more complete profile
history elsewhere on the internet.
I dabbled into Sailplaning (Gliding, Soaring) and took my two
children up when they were 5 and 6. They loved it. No fear at all with heights in those little
kids. They went up with a gliding instructor not with me. When I was considering dropping sailboat
racing I considered sailplaning but was going through a divorce then (nothing to do with my activities)
and took on a Master of Science Biology Nutrition course and then a three year sports injury course so
never really got into the flying thing. Anyway back to the story of skiing.
Skiing
Some of the places I have skied. Let's start way back in the 1970's but not in chronological order as I don't
remember that order now. At the Yacht Club they
said everyone skied so, I figured I should too. Hamilton was the closest place to ski. I rented at Chedoke
Ski hill and tried the hill out. I liked it.
Then I bought a set of Eaton's Department Store Hickory skis with
cable bindings and screws in the underside of the metal ski edges. LOL Deb knows what I mean.
LOL. I did not want to invest a lot until I knew if I really liked it. Also, I was in debt from
college too, so was careful with money.
Hamilton had two ski hills in the 1970's, Chedoke, in the West end
and Kings Forest in the East end. They were closed down decades ago. This web link discusses Chedoke a
bit.
I bought my first set of real skis at McMaster Sports on Main St.
in Hamilton across from McMaster University. Ron Weston owned that shop. I took my skis into a scuba
diving shop on Kenilworth St. in Hamilton as I also was into scuba diving in those days and the scuba shop
sold, repaired and tuned up skis too.
https://skicanadamag.com/last-run-chedoke-ski-area/
Chedoke had some of those
infamous T-bar lifts and when you go two people per T-bar it was a bit tricky to get them both coordinated to sit
on that bar at the same time. They also had those round ones that would take only one person at a time, Poma lift I
think they called it.
King Forest (now-days its the Golf Club)
had one chair lift. It was a great tobogganing
place. A little farther afield was Glen Eden, still pretty small.
https://gleneden.on.ca/
And I got into a bit of Cross
Country skiing too. Still have the equipment but it is really old now, and I mean really old. Can't figure our why
I keep it. There were some trails around Hamilton in those days. Did a few dates Cross Country skiing but it never
took hold.... the dates or the skiing. LOL Maybe I was to intense in those days. Have mellowed a bit. Did a lot of
camping back in the younger days too. Had a Trillium Trailer that slept 4. The kids and I camped a different city
every summer for a while and biked the cities, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec City, (Mountain Biked Mont St.
Anne with the kids on that trip.) Windsor, Niagara Falls.
Ski
Central https://skicentral.com/maps.html Lists some ski resorts close enough to drive too and some you have to
fly to.
The Ski Venue List
Will list
Canada first on my list of places I have skied.
- Chedoke (Closed Down 2003)
- Kings Forest (Closed Down)
- Glen Eden,
ON
- One other place that starts with a T just a bit north of
Hamilton. Went there to get advice on skiing once. Some supposed expert.
He couldn't help. Later I got on a Canting Testing machine and concluded I needed cants. So, I canted under my
bindings for years then found a set of boots that would allow canting inside the boot. Thus, I can used the
bindings normally and that is much safer. Been with those Salomon boots ever since.
LOL That was many years ago now. Here is a link to get you
started on understand ski boot canting.
https://liveabout.com/what-is-ski-boot-canting-3009312
- Blue
Mountain, ON The main place I used and I have stayed slopeside many
times sometimes with a lady, sometimes without. Just a bit of Trivia now, I had my last marriage (2nd)
ceremony at Blue Mountain in December 2010. My wife told me not to go skiing LOL. Understandable since I
broke my leg on my first Honeymoon. okay.
- Craigleith
Ski Club, ON A private club but skied it with ski clubs several times.
- Horseshoe Valley,
ON Smaller and not exciting.
- Mont St. Louis Moonstone,
ON
I taught myself to
snowboard at Mont St. Louis in 2000 and after two half days was doing the Blue Square hills. The
second year I thought I could just go out and board like I could ski, and tore my abdomen muscles and then fell
back on my head at the end of the day, just about knocked myself out, and that was enough boarding for me.
Took me three weeks to recover the abdomen pain. LOL Went back to skiing and bought a ski helmet too. LOL It
shook some sense into me.
Farther
afield in Canada that I have skied.
- Lake Louise,
AB Broke my leg here on day two of a 10 day
honeymoon. The story gets better. It was New Years Eve December 31, 1982, a Friday
afternoon. They had no X-Ray facility in Lake Louise, and they diagnosed it as a sprain against my
protests. They had no casting facilities anyway. I danced New Years Eve on crutches with the
broken leg, yes I knew it was broken, then the power went out and I had to up three flights
of stairs at the Chateau Lake Louise in the dark. The following Monday we bussed to Banff and
they X-rayed and casted the broken Fibula. I asked for a waterproof cast as I had already skied on
one leg once at Kissing Bridge when I hurt my right leg there and could not put a ski boot
on, and I slalom Water ski on my left leg anyway so no problem. Doctors wouldn't buy
that so I played Pac Man for 7 days at the Banff Springs hotel while my wife skied
Sunshine. I see they call the Banff Springs Hotel
the Fairmont Banff Springs now days.
- Panorama,
BC Skied it
but can` t remember much. Trying to figure out why.
LOL
- Revelstoke,
BC 2015 they had the worst snow in recorded
history, No powder. They had more snow back here in Ontario. LOL But, I clocked myself at 86 km per
hour on a ski app called Ski Tracks.
- Sunshine,
AB Was there, playing Pack Man. Does that count
for any points? LOL Nice swimming pool in the
Banff Springs Hotel. That was where I played Pac Man. So, I never really did see
Sunshine.
- Whistler,
BC Great time great snow, great hot tub parties. I
took the ski tour with the instructor and she took us outside the rail gait into powder to your
knees. Just a short trip a few hundred feet along the fence. But you know, I am hard of hearing right
so, did not hear much of what she said. The second to last day of the trip I went out to that spot
and went off trail to ski there and skied the powder to my knees ALL AFTERNOON, probably a dozen runs
or more over the whole hill. Great time. Went in for the apré ski drinks and boasted about the only
place with powder because they groomed everything else. You had to pay for Heli-skiing to get powder
you see. Someone asked me this question. "Do you know why that area is out of bounds?" I said
no, it's a great area. They said "BECAUSE IT IS IN AN AVALANCHE ZONE. The ski patrol does not check
it. If you had fallen and gotten buried they would have found you next spring." LOL Okay, lesson
learned. Stay on trail. But boy, was that great skiing. Never fell once. See, I am still
here.
Quebec
- Camp
Fortune With my
Nephew in law Matt. He was a great boarder and much faster than me, and I am a fast skier too. He just blew me away.
- Mont Tremblant,
QC Great place.
Been there many times both before and after IntraWest bought
it.
- Ste-Anne,
QC Beautiful ski place. Took my 6 and 7 year old kids
Mountain biking there in the summer once I think the summer of
1991.
- Le
Massif
- Mont
Blanc
- Mont
Orford
- Mont
Saint-Sauveur Pretty small, Not really worth going
to.
- Mont
Ste-Marie
- Mont
Sutton
- Owl's
Head -19
degrees I remember that for sure. Not fun. Icecream head pain in temples every few hundred feet. LOL Could not ski fast at
all.
Maine
- Sugarloaf
- Sunday
River First
time I skied in the rain all day on New Years day once with the
ski club. It was my first introduction to rain Ski Ponchos. I
skied all day, LOL.
Vermont
- Jay
Peak
- Killington
- Smugglers
Notch (First time I did the Scandinave Spa routine after three days of hard
skiing. 10 -15 minutes in hot, 1-2 minute in cold, 5 minutes
rest and drink fluids. We did that for about 90 minutes. Felt Great the next day for sure. Skied
four more hard days after that.)
- Stratton
- Stowe
- Probably some places I have
missed. One losses track after a
while.
New
York
- Bristol
Mountain skied
it several times. Big All (71 or so) broke his leg there on a very gentle slope and had no travel insurance to the US so elected to stay in bed for three days until the bus drove home. He toughed it out. That's got to have been a
tough weekend.
- Holiday
Valley, Ellicottville. Skied it so many times I cannot
count.
- HoliMont, Ellicottville. A private club. Probably skied it a
dozen times or more.
- Kissing
Bridge Many,
many times, Hurt my right keg there once near the beginning of the day so rented the ski pole Outriggers
they called them (ski Poles with a little ski on the tip for amputee's). Skied the
rest of the day on one ski. LOL It taught me to get my weight forward. I was better on one than on two. LOL.
- Whiteface
Mountain
- Lake Placid,
NY Skied there too. It's on the Us side of Cornwall. Went
with a club president to test out the hill. Skied for free. LOL
Michigan
- Boyne
Mountain December 11 some long past year. Took ski lessons all morning and afternoon for two days.
Learned how to Ski in
Tandem where everyone in the group (eight of us) make all turns
in unison (that means at exactly the same time) and stay in the V line. One needs to know how to CARVE to
slow and control speed for that technique.
California
- Heavenly It snowed 7 feet in four days. All
roads were shut down so could not ski Sugarbowl or Squaw Valley. Did not see the Lake Tahoe from the top of
the hill (from anywhere actually) until the Thursday. I kept asking "Why is it called LAKE Tahoe.... there
is no lake." LOL Took Powder lessons every day for 5
days. Went with a Blind-Date, but I did meet her a
month or so before. That's all another story for another day. LOL There were two different techniques I
learned to ski powder depending on its depth, the bicycle technique and the boxing technique. It's very
different skiing deep powder.
Colorado
- Telluride Ski
Resort Great views, great snow, great
people. Top of mountain was at 11,000 feet. Some folks had breathing problems with hyperventilation at that
height. This was one of the more memorable trips I made with the ski club. Great view of the
box Canyon. Great views of the Sunset off the Canyon. I probably have picks somewhere of it. It is said that
Butch Cassidy and Sundance Kid robbed their first bank there in Telluride.
Next, Photos 2020
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