Saturday, March 3, 2012

Weekend at Snowshoe

This past weekend Trey and I left the girls behind with our parents and joined some friends in Snowshoe, WV for some winter fun.  I was pretty excited to go, not necessarily for the skiing, but also because they offer snowmobiling.  I LOVE snowmobiling, it is something I had the opportunity to do for many years after Christmas with my parents.  It is also something I haven't had the chance to do since having kids.

The weekend before we were to leave on our mini-vacation we searched snowmobile tours to find one we could go ahead and book in advance.  To my disappointment they were no available openings.  Clearly we should have planned further ahead.  I am not going to lie, I was completely bummed.  Snowmobiling was something Trey and I were going to do just the two of us and I am not a skier.  So, Trey suggests that maybe I take a ski lesson and then afterward he and I can ski together.  He really wanted me to learn to ski, especially now that he has Lexie so excited about it.  Not to mention he wants to go on this week long ski trip to Colorado with his family next winter.  I conceded and agreed to the lesson.  All week I was nervous about taking the lesson!

Friday morning, the day of my lesson, we get up and get all our snow gear on.  Planning ahead we picked up my rental equipment the night before so all we have to do that morning is get our lift ticket and head to the lesson.  As we are waiting for a shuttle, in the rain, we hear that the slopes have just been closed due to lightning in the area.  At this point we decide we should ask one of our friends to just drive us down to the lesson, since the shuttles are busy getting people off the mountain, and in case they do re-open and the lesson happens I don't want to be late.



Once we are dropped off we head to the area where the lesson is going to happen and wait for further information.  The instructors let us know that just as soon as the slopes re-open the lesson will begin.  We continue to wait, the rain stops, but then the wind starts.  Now not only are the slopes under a lightning advisory they are now also under a wind advisory, which means the lesson is going to be pushed even further back so the instructors tell us to go home and come back at 1:30.  While on the one hand I am thinking maybe this is a sign that I should just throw in the towel on this whole skiing thing another part of me is grateful that I am finally comfortable moving around in ski boots (it only took 2 hours of waiting), which has to mean once I strap into the skis I won't feel as awkward. 

The slopes re-open and I arrive back at 1:30 slightly less nervous ready to do something besides wait around.  I am kind of relieved to discover that the lesson is with about 8 other girls, who like me have had zero ski experience.  The instructor, whose name I cannot remember, was great.  He was a no nonsense kind of guy who tells you straight up what to expect, what to do, doesn't care to hear excuses all while being encouraging and teaching us the basics of what we need to know.  Straight up skiing is not a sport to be fearful about.  You just have to put your fears aside and go for it, because being fearful will probably be what gets us beginners hurt the quickest.



After learning the basics and practicing using those skills down the training section he sends us up a chairlift.  Now, one of my biggest fears was the chairlift.  I have a huge fear of heights and in my mind I assumed as soon as you got off the chair lift you had to head straight down the mountain with no time to prepare.  The instructor told us exactly what we needed to do to get on the lift and what we needed to do to get off.  You have 6 seconds to get off, don't wait until the 7th second or your going to be in trouble!  The first time was a little less than smooth but not as bad as I had anticipated.  We went up the chair lift at least 4 if not 5 times and each one was easier and easier.  In fact at the end of the day it is the one thing I had the most confidence in myself about.


At the conclusion of the lesson Trey was back, waiting on me, hoping I would be up for some skiing with him.  He was really patient with me and we went down the slope I had been practicing on a few more times before we headed down some other green slopes.  We must have skied together for at least another 2 hours, until the daytime slopes closed.  I had so much more fun than I ever expected to have, and in fact enjoyed myself more than I thought I would.  That's not to say I didn't fall a lot, because I did!  I was exhausted when we returned to the room and I was incredibly sore the next two days, but I am not going to lie...I am looking forward to going again!





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