Thursday, May 14, 2015

Skiing at the end of the earth- Chris Fellows

Persistent, low-level uneasiness  has crept into my psyche over the last couple of seasons. I can’t put my finger on the exact reasons for it, but many people I work with are feeling the same thing. The obvious and most popular explanation for our aggregate angst, is that the climate has changed and the consistently inconsistent, sliding surface called snow that we have trusted for years is now drastically changing, literally under our feet. We are truly standing at the edge of the earth. At least it feels that way. As if something we’ve always taken for granted, winter, might disappear like, should I say, melting snow.
The way people talk and the things they say tell a much deeper story about our collective view of the impending future. People are speaking a dialect of uncertainty, as observed by the use of the one-word question at the end of every sentence: Right? Why punctuate the end of a sentence with the word right unless you were subconsciously insecure about what was about to happen next. Its nice to have a little reassurance in unpredictable times, so just add right to everything, someone will agree eventually. 
Every day I hear my fellow West Coast snow sliders say words to the effect: Snow isn't what it used to beAnother pineapple express headed our waySnow line is going to be above 7500 feet … Another big layoff coming up after the holidayWe are in a serious drought for the next  several years. This was just another bad year. Right?
Are we experiencing the symptoms of universal group mental depression, or are we all deeply nostalgic for the old winters? Or, could we, like Plains farmers during the ’30s, be sensing and interpreting signs that presage a dramatic, Dust Bowl-like danger ahead?
It’s ironic that many of the Dust Bowl refugees settled here in the West, and once again mechanism of  climate are causing some folks to look elsewhere to make a living.  A male instructor in his 30s from Snoqualmie Pass in Washington State left the area in January due to the low snowfall and found a job 3,000 miles across the country at Sunday River in Maine. He was happy with the choice, but realized that the bitter, Polar Vortex-induced cold temps and high winds made life as an instructor challenging. It wasn’t the most idyllic snow country environment to teach in. >  
Change has always been a part of our professional work environment. The seasonality of it all adds to the freshness, and the cycle of birth-death-rebirth has always been invigorating —but recently, Mother Nature seems to be cycleing at an alarming rate. The average freezing level—the elevation above sea level at which the temperature reaches 32 degrees F— is rising higher and higher, that's a fact. But how will we respond to the challenges ahead for enjoying our precious lifestyle and making a living in the snow sports industry?
An instructor who works at a resort close to my home says, “The changes in the climate are affecting our livelihoods, Our mountain had a particularly hard year. There wasn't much work for part-timers, which translates to less money in our pockets. It’s been rough. I also rely on my skiing to keep me healthy. I've gained weight due to the lack of snow. It seems like my healthy, skinny ski body was a flash in the pan, one of those things you look back on and say, those were the days."
The rhythms of the West Coast winter have shifted from somewhat predictable deep Sierra Nevada dumps to wild, aberrant  swings in temperature, wind and ever-higher snow lines. Driving into Squaw Valley this winter, one could see a clear white- to- brown line ring the 7,500- foot contour mark around the entire valley. On days when the snow fell above the line, hoards of pent up pass- holders  bottlenecked  the entrance to the Funitel. They lined lined up like lab rats to tapping the bar for their reward for staying in the maze. Others had booked trips out of the area or just chose to drive off the hill to bike and play golf somewhere else in the unseasonably warm temperatures.
But what about the instructors who have committed to a  resort for the season, who were left out at a soggy lineup like laundry left on the line during a rain storm by an in-attentive housekeeper.  Instructors who in frustration would literally say to their students, “ I am not sure what you expect to learn today, the skiing is terrible, and  it’s due to global warming!
I was told this story  by a friend who manages a school in theWest. I asked him how he handled the situation, and he gave me a one- word answer, : REFUND! Thats a cuss word in the modern resort business paradigm.
There is a real sense among our ski instructor ground troops, that we are losing our battle against climate change as it relates to the delicate strip of atmosphere called snow country. A mother who raised her children skiing on the slopes of a low-elevation municipal nonprofit resort feels that she has been trying to out-ski climate change. But, climate change is gaining on her. The situation grates on her psyche, even during the off-season. She says, “I think I could get into another sport, at least I’d physically feel better, but I keep thinking that when the snow goes, the water goes, too, so how long will it be possible to have a life here in the Truckee Meadows that resembles what it was like in the ’70s, ’80s or even ’90s?

The ski industry is trying its best to put on a happy face with promises of bigger better expansions of facilities and  never before offered services, but until we see a drastic shift in the weather patterns we will be funneled into smaller patches of a thinner layer of snow, higher and higher toward the mountain summit until we eventually find ourselves skiing at the edge of the earth., . Right?