Snowboarding Soaring Id, Grounded Ego I don’t think it’s until after lunch on the third day that I start to need the patronizing, to … well, not beg, but silently plead for it. I become desperate for the buttery compliments of my coach, Chuck Pearce: the thumbs-up signs, the over-the-shoulder pronouncements of “killer,” “rad,” and most unlikely of all, “lookin’ good, bro!” It’s all Inevitably, so do the 11 other craven souls attending High Cascade’s inaugural summer adult camp, held on the year-round glaciered slopes of Mount Hood, Oregon. For the last nine years, the camp has catered exclusively to less, shall we say, wise boarders those between about 11 and 17 years old. But the 12 of us, ten men and two women, range in years from 21 to 37. Our group is soon split into clusters according to “experience” a kind euphemism for ability with the Three Chiropractors and I, all of very average skill, placed under Chuck’s tutelage. Our daily routine consists of being roused by a knock on our lodge-room door at eight and leaving for the slopes by about 9:15. Breakfast conversations tend to focus on issues With two lifts operating and bald spots multiplying through our weeklong stay, we get freeriding instruction only in the morning. Chuck boards down ahead of us to position himself. “You’re too far forward,” he calls. We practice riding fakie and pulling off proper ollies as he watches. Every few runs, he then plies us with new nuggets. “Jumping,” he says at one point, “just After lunch (the brown-bag variety) we follow Chuck to the camp’s nearby snow park, which consists of several jumps and a half-pipe filled with daredevil, seemingly unkillable teen campers. Watching them, I realize that the learning curve for postpubescents wanting to ride pipe and land jumps is achingly gradual, not to mention painful. It’s also tiring as hell. Each ride means There are, of course, variations. Chuck agrees to quit early on the afternoon that I’m more than usually hopeless and hungover. But most days follow a routine: board, collapse, nap, wait impatiently for dinner, and then sidle up to one of the area’s two bars. (The Three Chiropractors prove especially adept at sidling.) In between, we, as the French say, hang out. That’s an It’s a cogent point, and one that seems particularly noteworthy on an afternoon toward the end of camp. The Three Chiropractors and I are watching what appears to be a toddler land airs in excess of 25 feet. This is not an exaggeration, and it gets us pissed. I naturally argue for disabling the youth in some way so as to not let him mock us further. The Three Chiropractors,
Zev Borow is a contributing editor of Spin. This is his first article for 窪蹋勛圖厙. |
Snowboarding
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