How Do I Become a Ski Patroller?

How Do I Become a Ski Patroller?

Let’s first define the job responsibilities of a Ski Patroller to ensure you understand what you could be signing up for.  Most people perceive that ski patrollers are the “ambulances” of the mountain and that patrollers ski all over the mountain looking for injured people or responding to calls of an injured skier.  While this is their most glamourous responsibility they are also responsible for more mundane and less appealing roles. Their day is job includes activities such as: securing perimeter rope lines; raising or lowering tower pads; creating and installing warning signs; dealing with dangerous skiers and snowboarders.  Here is an excerpt from a recent Ski Patroller post by Sugarbush.


National Ski Patrol

Patrollers perform a wide range of safety activities including: 

  • conducting trail checks

  • marking and removing hazards

  • planning and implementing trail maintenance work

  • openings and closing trails

  • inspecting and maintaining equipment/ropes

  • completing daily paperwork

  • identifying injured lost, out-of-control or reckless skiers/snowboarders

  • responding to first aid calls

Additional duties may include:

  • transporting equipment around the mountain on skis

  • operating snowmobiles

  • engaging in day and night search and rescue

  • evacuating guests from chairlifts

  • employing basic chainsaw work

Emergency response will include providing stabilizing care and transportation of injured guests, completing accident reports, and maybe reviewing/documenting accident scenes. Patrollers will be expected to maintain their training and certifications throughout their employment.

However, in order to be successful ski patroller you need a strong desire to help others, learn emergency care techniques (most patrollers don’t have first aid experience prior to becoming a patroller), improve their skiing and snowboarding skills, and enhance the safety and enjoyment of snow sports for all. In a nutshell, it is much more than just a routine day on the slopes. Although, there are benefits such as being outside (although many of the days will be frigid, very windy, sub zero temperatures and rain and snow)  for the majority of the day, getting fresh tracks when the rope drops, proform discounts, wearing a cool red jacket with a white cross and getting last chair to sweep the slopes.

In order to become a ski patroller you should?

  1. Join the National Ski Patrol (NSP) as an associate membership.  The NSP is the official organization of ski patrols in the United States and provides certifications and classes for its members.  The cost of membership is only $60 per year. Additionally, the membership comes with direct and indirect benefits. The membership will provide you:

  • An annual subscription to Ski Patrol Magazine.

  • The ability to purchase all NSP Online Store items except patrol uniform-specific items.

  • Access to all Pro Deals, excluding Black Diamond and including limited Patagonia discounts.

  • The ability to participate and be credentialed in NSP training or education programs, per the above guidelines.

  • Comprehensive support services.

  • Online resources.

  • Annual updates.

Additionally, many ski companies offer discounts to folks who work in the industry.  For example, JSKIS offers a 20% pro deal discount to individuals who work in the ski industry, including ski patrollers.

2) Enroll in the Outdoor Emergency Care (OEC) class.  The Outdoor Emergency Care class is the signature course offering from the National Ski Patrol and is required by all patrollers.  In fact, the OEC course is considered the “gold standard” training for emergency care in the outdoor environment   The three primary objectives of the OEC course are: 

  • Performing safe and effective stabilization and extrication of injured persons in the outdoor environment

  • Scene safety (identifying hazards to both responders and visitors)

  • Safe and efficient use of outdoor emergency care skills to prevent further injury to visitors

Outdoor Emergency Care

The skills taught are basic emergency skills taught include using airway adjuncts, assisting patients with medications, splinting and bandaging, providing emergency care for environmental illnesses and injuries, using special equipment and techniques particular to non-urban rescuers, and managing prolonged transport.

The fee is $60 and an annual refresher course is required to maintain certification. 

While the National Ski Patrol and resorts offer other training, such as avalanche and mountain rescue, they are not required at most resorts.  The remainder of the training is done on the job such as toboggan training and lift evacuation procedures.

3) Get in Shape!  Ski patrolling is not a cubicle job, it is a job where you are conducting physical activities day in and day out in harsh conditions. Here is another excerpt from the recent Sugarbush job posting.

Patrollers must also be in sound physical and mental condition to perform their job duties. Patrollers must be capable of lifting 100 pounds or more as well as possess strong (expert level) skiing or riding skills- capable of safely skiing/riding all terrain in all conditions including wooded and gladed areas.


Get in Ski Shape

It should be noted that you need to be a strong skier, defined as, being capable of skiing any trail on the mountain.  You will need to be confident that you can get to and evacuate skiers and riders from any trail. Otherwise, stories like this happen… In 2009, a skier hit an unmarked bare spot on Lower Ovation at Killington, fell and slid into some rocks which resulted in a broken leg.  While broken legs are not common anymore in skiing, it was not a noteworthy accident, until the Ski Patrol arrived on the scene. When the injured skier was being transported off the trail the Ski Patrol snowmobile and toboggan flipped over!  The snowmobile accident further injured the skier. The incident did result in a lawsuit, which Killington settled in 2012 for an undisclosed amount of money. 

Lastly, you do ski patrol for the love of helping people, being outdoors and skiing.  If you do get paid (would need to be at a large resort) you will barely make enough money to pay for your gas to get to the mountain.  However, a great way to get your foot in the door is to volunteer at your local mountain and get some experience. If you have a desire to make ski patrolling a career you will need to get as many courses and certifications as you can, including advanced EMT (AEMT) training.  Additionally, it would benefit you to become multilingual, as this would allow you to work at destination resort.

Good luck in your pursuit of becoming a patroller.





Skiing Season Goals

The sport of skiing has brought me a great deal of happiness, satisfaction and achievement over the years.  I believe this is partly due to the fact that I set goals for each ski season. Some of the goals are goofy (slide a rail), some are expensive (take the family to Val d’Isere, France), some are physically demanding (ski La 42 at LeMassif non-stop), some take some time and travel (ski all 5 triple black diamond trails in Eastern North America), others take some skill (become a ski instructor, become a race coach) and others have been life changing (teach my four kids to ski).  Having goals for everything we do, whether big or small, is part of what makes life good. It gives us a sense of meaning and purpose, points us in the direction we want to go and gets us interested and engaged, all of which are good for our overall happiness and in this case our love for skiing. So, without further adieu, here is a list of ideas that may generate a few goals for your 2019/2020 ski season.

  1. Become ski instructor

  2. Become a ski patroller

  3. Win a NASTAR medal

  4. Enter the Bear Mountain Mogul Challenge

  5. Exhaust all the days on your IKON Pass

  6. Exhaust all the days on your EPIC Pass

  7. Ski the steepest trails in NY, VT, NH, ME and Quebec

  8. Teach your kids to ski

  9. Learn to telemark

  10. Skin up a trail

  11. Drop the ledges on Devil’s Fiddle

  12. Ski Upper Liftline at Smugg’s

  13. Ski DJ’s Tramline

  14. Enter a Master’s ski race

  15. Ski the Powder Highway

  16. Ski the Vallee Blanche

  17. Ski Opening Day and Closing Day at Killington

  18. Learn to do a 360

  19. Ski at least 40 days

  20. Start the long journey to become a certified French ski instructor

  21. Go to the World Cup at Killington and cheer for Mikela

  22. Go to Kitzbuhel during Hannekamm week

  23. Ski one or more of the bucket list trails: Corbet's Couloir, Delirium Dive, La Chavanette

  24. Ski the new trails at Magic Mountain and Catamount

  25. Ski every trail at your home mountain

  26. Call in sick on a powder day

  27. Ski the dry slope at Powder Ridge

  28. Go monoskiing

  29. Ski every double black diamond at a big resort (e.g., Stowe, Killington, Sugarloaf)

  30. Throw a bra on a “bra tree”

  31. Participate in a pond skimming contest

  32. Ski all 5 triple black diamonds in Eastern North America (Mont Sutton, Le Massif, Smuggler’s Notch)

  33. Ride the single chair at MRG

  34. Score GNAR points by yelling to someone you are the best skier on the mountain prior to pushing off

  35. Ski Tuckerman’s Ravine

  36. Learn to ski switch

  37. Launch yourself above the coping in a super pipe

  38. Visit Lahout’s in Littleton, NH - the oldest ski shop in America

  39. Learn how to butter on skis

  40. Learn some old school Glen Plake tricks 

  41. Ski 25 laps on Outer Limits or Stein’s Run when bumped up (see Gunbarrel 25

  42. Join a ski club

  43. Learn to snowboard if you ski and learn to ski if you snowboard

  44. Participate in a demo day

  45. Eat maple taffy at the base of Mont Tremblant

  46. Participate in the Sugar Slalom at Stowe, VT

  47. Go cat skiing in the Chic Chocs

  48. Go to a ski area/resort that you have never been to

  49. Go rodeling at Le Massif

  50. Ski the men’s and women’s downhill courses at Whiteface

  51. Ski the Slides at Whiteface

  52. Ski in every month of the year

  53. Go inverted

  54. Ski with your Dad and/or Mom

  55. Create a “sick” season edit

  56. Join R.A.S.T.A. and ski some backcountry lines

  57. Ride a T-Bar or Poma lift

  58. Take a lesson or clinic

  59. Get first chair on a powder day

  60. Enter a skier cross race

  61. Go kite skiing

  62. Go backcountry skiing in the Notch (between Smuggs and Stowe)

  63. Buy a pair of grass skis and ski on your local golf course

  64. Ski the “Front Four” (Stowe, VT)

  65. Feed the chickadees at the Loon Mountain “bird sanctuary”

  66. Become a shareholder at Mad River Glen

  67. Backcountry ski Wright Peak or Mt. Marcy in the Adirondacks

  68. Ski the Bruce Trail to the Matterhorn Bar (Stowe, VT)

  69. Participate in a torch light parade

  70. Buy shares of Vail Resorts (MTN) and become the owner of a ski resort

  71. Scout some tree lines before the season starts

  72. Take an avalanche safety course

  73. Ski Katahdin

  74. Drink a beer at the Wobbly Barn (Killington), The Matterhorn (Stowe) and Le P'tit Caribou (Mont Tremblant)

  75. Learn to tune your own skis

  76. Explore the Brackett Basin sidecountry at Sugarloaf 

  77. Ski without headphones and talk to people on the lifts

  78. Learn to self arrest with a ski pole

  79. Ski 24 hours straight at Ski Venture

  80. Ski and Golf in the same day

  81. Snow ski and waterski on the same day

  82. Ski Paradise at Mad River Glen

  83. Ski all the trails off the Castlerock chair at Sugarbush

  84. Tell someone on the chairlift how great of skier you are and then fall when getting off

  85. For 500 GNAR points, tell one of the World Cup racers at Killington - "I'm so much better than you"

  86. Join the Adirondack Powder Skier Alliance

Best Selling Ski Equipment for 2019

Every year the Snowsports Industries of America works with NPD to determine the bestselling ski equipment for the past year.  So, if you are in the market for skis, boots or bindings this list is a good place to start - after all, millions of people can’t be wrong - can they?

Here is the list:

  • Marker Griffon ID Binding

  • Salomon XPRO, 100, Men’s Boot

  • Blizzard Black Pearl 88 Skis, Women

  • Marker Squire 11 ID Binding

  • Nordica Enforcer 100

  • Salomon XPRO, 120, Men’s Boot (Powder Magazine 2019 Boot of the Year)

  • Marker Griffon Binding

  • Nordica Speedmachine 110 Boot

  • Nordica Enforcer 93 (Powder Magazine 2019 Ski of the Year)

  • Volkl Mantra M5 Ski (Freeskier Magazine 2019 2nd place ski of the Year)

Here are my impressions of the list.

Bindings

  • The Marker ID bindings can accommodate alpine and touring boots which may be a reason why it landed on the top of the list.

  • I find it Interesting the only binding company represented as Marker, especially since there are two Salomon boots on the list

  • Strange that bindings are top of the list, folks must be putting bindings on previously drilled skis.

  • Look bindings are highly reviewed by all the magazines, popular with the park crowd and sold with many of the indie skis, but didn’t make the list.

Skis

  • Shocking that he Blizzard Black Pearl was third overall on the list 

  • Surprising that the Blizzard Black Pearl was the best selling women’s ski., I would have guessed the Nordica Santa Ana, considering that the Enforcer landed on the list twice.

  • Surprised there are no Head skis on the list since they are a favorite among the World Cup racers and the Head Kore 99 is highly rated.

  • No skis fatter than 100 cm, even though the magazines lead you to believe everyone is skiing on skis fat skis.

  • No specialized skis (e.g., powder, race or touring) are on the list

  • No indie skis cracked the top 10 (e.g., Shaggy’s, JSKI, etc.), which is not a surprise

  • All Mountain skis rule the list with rocker/camber/rocker profiles - which leads me to believe most people are a one ski quiver skier.

Boots

  • Best selling boot has a flex of only 100 and there were no boots on the list with a flex of 130

My final comment, is it doesn’t appear all the buyer guides from Powder, Freeskier and SKI magazines have much influence on what people buy since seven of the ten items on the list did not were not on their “best of” lists.

Mont Sainte Anne Review

Mont Sainte Anne is in Beaupré, Quebec, which is approximately 25 miles northeast of the provincial capital of Quebec City.  The mountain is part of the Laurentian mountain chain and has a summit elevation 2,625 ft above sea level with a vertical drop of 2,051 ft.  For comparison the vertical drop is similar to Mad River Glen, Okemo, Jay Peak and is 65 feet less than the more well traveled Mont Tremblant.  Mont Ste. Anne has 71 trails that are dispersed over three sides of the mountain with 19 of the trails available for night skiing. The trail count is similar to Bolton Valley, Attitash and Smuggler’s Notch, although none of those areas offer night skiing.  The trails are 23% beginner, 18% intermediate, 45% advanced and 14% expert with over 80% of the mountain covered by snowmaking that supplements the areas average 190 inches of natural snow. Additionally, the mountain offers mind boggling panoramas of the St. Lawrence River from the summit of the mountain.

The resort boasts enough difficult terrain that it has held numerous World Cup alpine races, with the last one being held in 1989.  At that race Gunther Mader of Austria, who is one of only five men to have won the World Cup races in all five alpine disciplines, won the giant slalom.  Thomas Stangassinger, 1994 Olympic slalom gold medalist, won the slalom. Five-time overall World Cup winner Marc Giradelli came in third.

The area is owned by Resorts of the Canadian Rockies, which also owns Nakiska, Fernie, Kimberly Alpine, Kicking Horse and Stoneham Mountain.  Stoneham is located 1.5 hours from Mont Sainte Anne.

The Trip

We took advantage of Mont Saint Anne’s “Happy Parents” offer, during Presidents’ Day Week (US).  Booking during the President’s Week, for a trip to Quebec avoids all the cluster of crowds in the US, since the Canadian kids do not have that week off from school.  In a nutshell, the Happy Parent Parents offer is, for a minimum stay of three days, kids (up to 17) ski free! On top of that, the deal includes a Ski Québec+ Charlevoix multi-ski area ticket, which means you can ski at Mont Sainte Anne, Stoneham, and Le Massif de Charlevoix (see review here).  This deal, combined with a favorable exchange rate, made for a very reasonably priced ski vacation.

Places to Stay

We stayed at the Chateau Mont Sainte Anne which is a ski-in/ski-out property located at the base of the L’Etoile Filante gondola, which serves up the most difficult terrain on the mountain.  My family of four chose in a Nordik Studio room which had been recently renovated with two queen beds, a fully furnished small kitchenette and a small table for four. We used the kitchenette only for breakfast and ate lunch on the mountain and dinner in the local restaurants. The Chateau has an amazing lobby that was a hub of après ski activity. There is a restaurant, Bistro Nordik, with a bar located just off the lobby and every evening there was an extremely talented individual that would sing and play guitar, while taking requests.  Additionally, there is a two-tiered hot tub out back that was popular with the adults and kids that provided relief to sore muscles.

Chateau Mont-Sainte-Anne.jpg
Chilling in the hot tub!

Chilling in the hot tub!

If you choose not to stay at one of the hotels at Mont Ste Anne, there is a very unique alternative in Quebec City, called the Hôtel de Glace!  The Hôtel de Glace is a work of art and architecture that is entirely built of snow and ice. Every winter, this unique hotel is completely redesigned and rebuilt, offering an unforgettable experience in the only hotel of its kind in North America.  Each room is a cave of ice where you sleep on a block of ice. I am not sure how well you would sleep, but it would be an unbelievable and probably romantic experience.

The Skiing

During our time at Mont Ste Anne the resort received approximately a foot of snow over the three days, so needless to say the conditions were incredible.  However, it was observed that the resort was not eager to groom the powder into neat rows of corduroy, which I applaud, but I did hear gripes from other skiers, especially when skiing on some of the easier slopes.  For the experienced skier there are two trails worth mentioning. The first is the double black diamond La S, it is located off of the gondola and is the steepest trail on the mountain, in fact it is one of only three trails in Quebec that has a sustained pitch over 30 degrees, the others are Alexander Dispatie at Mont Chantecler and the infamous La Dynamite at Mont Tremblant, so it puts La S in good company.  The other trail worth mentioning is La Crete.

La S is an FIS approved race trail, however the only racing you’ll be doing on this steep trail is moguls.  The trail is generally ungroomed and full of “bosses”, the French term for moguls. Given Quebec’s penchant for cranking out world class mogul skiers the bosses on this hill may very well be the skiers. La S has a sustained pitch (steepest section over 300 ft) of 30.38 degrees with a vertical drop of 1154 feet, this is very similar to Sunday River’s signature run, White Heat.  However, White Heat is a very wide trail at 220 feet, where La S is a constricted 64 feet, meaning between the bumps and narrowness of the trail you will be unable to shop for turns.

While La S is the steeper more difficult run, the signature run of the mountain is La Crete.  The piste is a single black diamond, that is accessed via the gondola and then by traversing across the mountain where you will pass a series of very tempting double black diamonds.  This is a flat traverse, so a helpful tip is to wax your skis prior to your trip. Once the traverse ends you will find yourself on an exposed ridge with 2,000 vertical feet in front of you with a jaw dropping panorama of the mighty St. Lawrence River in front of you.  By river, I mean a ten mile wide, super tanker traveling waterway that is littered with mini icebergs. La Crete, which is featured in Patrick Thorne’s book, “Powder: The Greatest Ski Runs on the Planet”, is generally a groomed FIS approved race trail that is free of moguls, which means you can put your boards on edge and head to Trenchtown in a hurry. 

If you want to ski black diamonds, then Mont Sainte Anne has you covered!

If you want to ski black diamonds, then Mont Sainte Anne has you covered!

Beaupre, Quebec

The town of Beaupre is not a particularly scenic town, nor a typical ski town.  However, you will be able to find pizza joints and other restaurants that serve up typical Quebec favorites such as smoked meat sandwiches, poutine and cheese curds.  Additionally, for any Catholics visiting the area on a Sunday the town has the beautiful Basilica of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré.

Basilica_of_Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupre_in_Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupre,_Quebec,_Canada.jpg

PROS

  • Family friendly mountain that offers terrain for all levels and offer cost savings deals coupled with the favorable exchange rate that makes it wallet friendly.

  • Less crowded than its more well known  counterpart

  • Can ski Stoneham, Le Massif and Mont Ste Anne on one lift ticket

  • Multiple options for slopeside lodging

  • The UNESCO World Heritage site of “Old Quebec” is only 25 miles away.

  • Views from the top of the mountain

CONS

  • Slopeside restaurants are few and far between

  • Winds can be strong coming off the St. Lawrence

  • Beaupre is not a vibrant ski town

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