One Good Turn Deserves Another - Heinsian Downhill Skiing by Gary Heins - HTML preview

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ing down the mountain. That's not always their own fault though,

as most ski schools haven't done them justice, and the best ski-rac-

ing coaches don't have time for them let alone the plan they need.

Gary shows compassion for all ski students, especially the discour-

aged ones. Racing coaches insulate themselves with only the most-

gifted hard-core athletes who already know how to ski, and yet

there is still a lot of heart-ache and injury, so the general public has

never needed them. Gary has taught thousands of advanced and

expert skiers, mostly in the old week-long Ski Meisters class of

Jackson Hole; he's taught thousands more than his share of first-

day beginners; and he's taught thousands of intermediates, whom

he has perhaps more affection for in his old age: "Intermediates are

not the chore that beginners are, but they are still more of a mold-

able piece of clay than the advanced skiers---and it isn't long before

they can start thinking of skiing like an expert." (Finding great ski

lessons was rare enough back in 1979 when Gary first started

teaching; but it's become harder and harder over the years, as many

of today's instructors can barely ski themselves as a result of recent

ski-school politics and the record turnover of instructors, as well as

the record number of undedicated part-timers. The few life-long

Foreword --- 17

instructors at the top usually reserve the right to ski with advanced

and expert students only; and some of them are exempt from hav-

ing to ski with the over-charged persnickety general public.) Real-

ize you've got probably the greatest plan for mastering recreational

skiing in your hands right now; but reading this book is one thing,

and applying it is yet another: One Good Turn of each page . . . De-

serves Another thousand good turns out on the mountain. Not only

will it help you reach your full potential as a skier, it may also help

you be one of the greatest of instructors, not only in skiing but in

some other activity as well.

(Since 1979, Gary has always strived to be the best most-inter-

esting ski instructor he could be. He's done thousands upon thou-

sands of ski students justice on no less than seven different ski

schools from Montana to Arizona---this has helped him see the big

picture perhaps better than anyone else. Other instructors who

move around a lot tend to stay in one part of the country, or they

move among mountains that have similar characteristics---Gary has

witnessed first-hand the even greater dysfunction that goes on at

smaller mountains, and it adds up to do a lot of damage that big-

mountain administrators don't care to notice or help turn around.

But, despite his knack and diligence and vast experience as a great

teacher, he continues to be unable to find a job on any ski school

where he can make even close to a decent living, while other less-

skilled instructors are sitting pretty---however, this book and his

others hope to change that. In his book The PROHIBITION of Snow-

Boarding, Gary plays the role of U.S. Ski Teacher and threatens to

become a Ski-Turner-At-Law; . . . in this manual, with things laid

out a little more cut-n-dried, you students and more-caring in-

structors can take heart as he plays the role of U.S. SKI-TURNER

GENERAL. ---Mountain Managers, Ski-School Directors, Instructor

Trainers, Olympic Gold Medalists, World Champion Extreme Ski-

ers, . . . and anybody playing the role of Ski Instructor . . . might

want to keep this in mind. This manual has been brewing for dec-

ades; and, when it is finally unleashed, it will be like a hundred-

year rogue avalanche coming down hard on anyone and everyone

who's been irresponsible in the ski industry.)

---Jane Dantz

18 --- Heinsian DOWNHILL SKIING

And now . . . A Word From Our Sponsor:

Ski-Teaching Like Ranch Horse-Training --- 19

Ski-Teaching

Like

Ranch Horse-Training

"Nobody can train a good horse in a hurry, and anybody can

spoil him," hackamore reinsman Ed Connell use to tell us wran-

glers; and, likewise, a ski student will learn the bad just as quick as

the good technique, the wrong just as quick as the right attitude,

and the weak just as quick as the strong desire. Learning to ski is

not just a physical how-to deal; it involves the heart, mind, and

body, and it requires relaxed concentration, which means going to

a new slope . . . when it's time, checking a new snow condition . . .

when it's time, or trying a new kind of ski turn . . . when it's time,

not before. Skiing well takes effort, but not struggle: all too often, I

witness friends teaching friends, which often leads to stagnation,

struggle, divorce, even a higher chance of injury. Good ski in-

structors spend much of their time just correcting many of the same

old mistakes before they can get on to new business, and usually by

then the student's ski trip is over. It takes awhile sometimes for the

student to begin to trust the instructor, and it takes an instructor a

little while to assess where the student is at---heck, if teaching ski-

ing were easy, I wouldn't have to make my living writing books

about it. I started skiing at the ripe old age of 18, and it took me

awhile to become an expert; but I believe, after skiing down in the

trenches with thousands of students for many years, I have come

up with a system or schedule where the student may always be

ready, interested, and eager---no one needs to get bucked off or

run-away-with as much as I was. The dangerous trend in Ameri-

can Society is for instant gratification---if you think you can master

skiing in a weekend, you'd better ride a gentle pair of skis on a

gentle slope with an easy snow condition. All you have to do to

ruin a skier's progress . . . is go too sharp, too steep, or too deep too

soon----nobody can train a good skier in a hurry, and anybody can

spoil him.

20 --- Heinsian DOWNHILL SKIING

In other words, good ski-teaching is like fine ranch horse-train-

ing; but, of course, that doesn't mean anything to you either if you

don't know what fine ranch horse-training is, not that even every

rancher knows. Fine ranch horsemanship is usually a bit different

from the formal training you might see at some very expensive

stables, where the horses and riders get harrassed with all kinds of

unfun rules and drills all day long; and it's not the stupid blood-n-

guts JW approach either; fine ranch horsemanship is more subtle,

where the cowboy or wrangler just keeps adding on comfortably to

the horse's day-to-day experience over any number of days, weeks,

months, or even years. Don't get me wrong: good ranch cowboys

and wranglers are far from winging it---we have a definite plan or

system, when the ranch ownership and management allow us to

take the time to use it. When you need a certain piece of equip-

ment, you get it; when you need to take a horse to a certain envi-

ronment, you go there; but a good cowboy or wrangler is con-

stantly thinking of what he may be able to add-on or not add-on

next to a horse under his saddle or jurisdiction, whether it be doing

the first-saddling and first-ride, or adding a flapping rain-slicker to

the mix, or teaching him to stay calm and quiet at the Fourth-of-

July Parade & Rodeo. The worst thing you can do to a horse or

skier . . . is force them into the wrong environment too soon . . . and

then expound all-day on "how-to-do" something they have very

little business trying to do yet---and, sadly, this happens all the

time with horses and ski students. The common denominator

between good ski-boys and good cowboys, besides knowing what

they are doing: both of these characters care about their students. --

-All you have to do sometimes to make a horse or fellow wrangler

miserable and not perform well . . . is not stop for a five-minute

pee-break when they can use it. Whether it's horsemanship or ski-

manship, the better you treat your horses or wranglers or ski stu-

dents, the more they will be willing and able to follow you through

fire.

Granted, good ski lessons are hard to come by. Young teachers

often-times are kids just beginning to escape a dysfunctional up-

bringing---they move to a fun but expensive ski-town like Aspen or

Park City or Jackson Hole, hoping to carve out a good living as a

'professional' ski instructor, in a society that sees them as bums---

heck, more than half of them see themselves as bums. The young

ski teacher has high rent to worry about, and then there's the ski-

school pecking order, while trying to win the attention and respect

of their students; meanwhile, many students are middle-aged pro-

Ski-Teaching Like Ranch Horse-Training --- 21

fessionals who've learned to throw their weight around in the busi-

ness world, often intimidating the young ski teacher in a subliminal

way. It takes awhile for a ski teacher to learn his trade and to pay

his dues; but, more often than not, about the time he gets to be any

good at ski teaching, and bonding with his students, economics and

ski-school politics and pecking orders drive him out into a 'real

career' . . . as a real-estate agent (---some ski towns have more real-

estate agents than houses for sale). The ski teacher you get, or at

least what you learn from him, bad or good, is often a reflection of

yourself and society. For me, skiing is a definite vocation, as is

writing; for most students, and young teachers, skiing is nothing

more than an avocation---it still bothers me a bit when someone

paying lots of money to ski with me . . . thinks I'm just some kid

taking time off from college (1990 observation). But, anyway, I

have been teaching skiing a long time (over ten years full-time by

1990, almost triple that by 2009); and, without jumping off any

cliffs, without winning any World Cup events, and without doing

any inverted aerials (or any 'sex changes' in a terrain park), I am

determined to show as many of you as I can . . . how easy it is, not

how hard it is, . . . in the shortest amount of time and for a mini-

mal amount of money---I don't have a realtor's license, and I

shouldn't have to feel like I need one. (A note about Realtors: a few

are okay and necessary; I just don't think everyone needs to become

one searching for that easy quick inflated million dollars. And look

what's happened in the American Economy with the Bursting of

the Housing Bubble in 2008-09.)

As Jane Dantz mentioned in the Foreword, the thing that

makes me gentler, more confident, and more efficient than most ski

teachers . . . is I teach skiing a lot like I would handle young horses.

I understand that skiers are scared all too easily, which can make

them tense and unable to think straight; and, being human, they

can get embarrassed easily, which can put a damper on their desire

to try new things; and, when their desire and proactive thinking is

stifled, their body goes into defensive fright-or-flight mode, and

they might even lash out at you with their ski poles.

Priorities: Safety, Fun, & Learning---

So we need some common sense priorities in skiing, just as in

anything else, like raising kids or breaking horses. Heart, Mind,

and Body are my priorities for any activity: even with my rough-n-

tumble ski-boy background, I learned to ski well because I had the

desire, and I put my mind to it, regardless of who my teachers

22 --- Heinsian DOWNHILL SKIING

were---writing about skiing obviously helps me work smarter, not

harder, clearing my mind for reaching more students sooner. Ski-

ing is definitely physical, much like something else I can think of,

but this is not the only side: the heart and mind must work together

in order for the body to be safe, as a troubled body is usually the

sign of a troubled mind or heart---but don't let your strong desire

get the best of you by skiing a slope or snow or a technique you're

not ready for (---practicing safe skiing is a lot like practicing safe

sex).

Safety First---this begins with the mind, and it means taking

responsibility---Safety is no accident. You've got to have discipline

within yourself before you can have it with your horse or students

or your skis or maybe even your instructor. Besides your ski

equipment being right (which we'll discuss), your own body

should be right for the job through proper eating, exercise, stretch-

ing, and rest---a quick resilient slalom racing ski won't make your

body any more quick or resilient. Basically, the safe ski-learning

process means doing your homework on gentle hard-pack first, . . .

before taking it too steep or too deep or too sharp; and this keeping

track of the environment and skill-level slowly-but-surely can be-

come the student's responsibility just as much or more than the

instructor's. It is the student's job to keep the instructor honest:

just like a young horse, you have every right to question anything

your instructor wants to subject you to---and, the more time you

spend on the slopes, the easier this becomes. I am here to "sack

you skiers out," as it were, like an apprehensive young horse, get

you used to real life up on the mountain, get your skis used to us

humans in such a way that you'll feel relaxed and confident any-

where you ski---that's a safe horse to ride. As you'll see, I do this by

monitoring the three variables that make up a skier's comfort zone:

slope, snow, and task----I try to never make more than one of them

at a time new-n-different.

But I don't know a good well-meaning seasoned ski instructor

who hasn't taken a few students inadvertently too steep or too deep

too soon, especially with large group lessons, but also with some

privates; and I don't know any great colt breakers who haven't been

bucked off but good---it's not always possible to tell what negative

neuro-associations lurk in a ski student's mind. In the rare event

that you find yourself on something too steep or too deep, there is

always a safe way out, whether it be simple traversing or side-

stepping or calling for assistance from the Ski Patrol, whatever it

takes---a slight miscalculation does not always make an instructor

Ski-Teaching Like Ranch Horse-Training --- 23

guilty of manslaughter. Sometimes, if you accidentally make two

of the three variables new-n-different, you can make up for it by

making the third variable double-easy. (That reminds me of what

desperate ole Ed Begley says proactively in Hang 'Em High, con-

cerning all the mistakes he's been making with rough-tough Clint

Eastwood: "So, . . . that's three mistakes we've made: the bribe

money, we hung an innocent man, and we didn't finish the job. We

can't correct the first two, . . . but we can still finish the job." It's a

good thing Ed Begley wasn't a ski instructor.) If an instructor

makes an honest mistake, and he admits it, it's not a bad idea to try

to help him correct it; if you panic prematurely and scream bloody

murder before exploring all your options, it could cause him to

mishandle the whole situation even worse, not unlike big strong

half-witted Lenny in Of Mice and Men.

In group-lesson ski school, sometimes you see a process

known as a Doing a Split---with a large number of students and

classes, this can be too time-consuming: the Sender sends the stu-

dents down one after the other to the Splitter, and he splits them

into the various class levels. For a several-week series or several-

days of lessons, this is a good idea; but, to do a formal split for

every two-hour lesson, it can take up a big chunk of the lesson

time----and some returning customers get irritated when they have

to go through a split every time they sign up. And sometimes, with

several aggressive but less-experienced instructors, too many chiefs

and not enough Indians, even they won't agree on who goes where-

--and the split may end up pretty disorganized, a stampede split

"Texas style." I often finagle an informal split by telling the herd to

head for the chair-lift and meet at a point at the top: the strong ones

will get there first, and the weak ones tend to get there last---and

there's you're natural split, and it's not at all difficult to make a

switch of a student or two a few minutes later if need be. Many of

today's ski schools have wised up to a system of letting the stu-

dents pick their own level of ski lesson, and it seems to work better

than anyone ever dreamed. No matter which way the students are

split into classes, each instructor should know what class is above

his and which is below, in case you need to trade a student or two.

A good instructor can often work around a split, giving the

stronger students more difficult tasks than the weaker ones, as

you'll see, while keeping the whole class on slopes and in snow

conditions easy enough for the weakest student. The saddest and

most dangerous split you can have . . . is when there's a split and

there's only one student in the whole class. . . . I personally will go

24 --- Heinsian DOWNHILL SKIING

anywhere my students take me, as everyone should try to be re-

sponsible for their own face-plants, and there are tough students

who demand to go steeper and deeper than they are really ready

for---it's more of a possible crime when the instructor is the reason

for the miscalculation . . . and doesn't take steps to fix it. In the

olden days, you didn't ski down much of anything until you were

able to climb up it first---that was not such a bad rule.

Of course, we should mention the Skier's Responsibility Code

to help reduce the risks in skiing----these are the basic traffic laws

of any ski area in the country: (1) Ski under control and in such a

manner you can stop or avoid other skiers or objects; (2) when ski-

ing downhill or overtaking other skiers, you must Avoid skiers

below you; (3) Do not stop where you obstruct the trail or are not

visible from above; (4) when entering another trail or starting

downhill, Yield to other skiers who have the right of way; (5) all

skiers shall Use ski-brake devices or retentions straps to help pre-

vent runaway skis; (6) you shall Keep off closed trails, and Obey

all posted signs; (7) before riding any ski-lifts, Learn and be obser-

vant of ski-lift procedures and safety. (Of course, since the advent

of snow-boarding along side skiers in the 1980s, ski areas have had

to finagle the 'snow-boarding' words in there. But, as I point out

extensively in one of my other books, snow-boarders have brought

about a whole set of new problems.) There. Obey the Code, or lose

your lift ticket, maybe your life, and raise insurance premiums and

lift-ticket prices. If you don't quite memorize the Skier's Responsi-

bility Code, it's pretty much common sense, and all ski area maps

that I've ever seen have it listed too.

I might point out, though, that each ski area has its own

personality, and some, in my opinion, have gone overboard in the

name of safety: I personally think that too much snow grooming

and obstacle marking and too many chair-lift safety-bars make ski-

ers complacent, and complacency has always been one of our big-

gest killers. For instance, if you ski mostly at a place like posh-n-

pampering Deer Valley for a couple of seasons, then one day you

take a trip to The Big One, notorious frontier-justice Jackson Hole,

you could ski off a five-hundred-foot cliff if you haven't learned to

pay attention. There will always be natural rocks and stumps and

logs just under the snow on big mountains, especially early in the

season, and it's impossible to clean them all up. We learn by ex-

perience, and you can only shelter someone with technology and

extra signs for so long before the real world gets them.

We tend to take avalanche safety for granted in-bounds at ski

Ski-Teaching Like Ranch Horse-Training --- 25

areas---this is the Ski Patrol's responsibility, but Nature could pos-

sibly fool them on rare occasions. Then there are rare scenarios that

could arise: for instance, when an advanced skier falls upside-down

in a powdery tree-well and suffocates, that's just one of the poten-

tial hazards of powder skiing---and I'll try to give you a safe plan to

handle that situation later in the book. Self-arrest during a fall on

the steepest of slopes is another advanced/expert phenomenon

we'll cover later---although sometimes I notice (jokingly) that some

first-day beginners could just about use the same advice when I see

them sliding down the bunny-hill on their butt on the tails of their

skis.

Perhaps ever