Spearhead Range, Near Blackcomb Mountain, Whistler, BC
The rotors
slowed their circulating. We had all exited the helicopter according to
protocol but were still ducking our heads while heading to our guide, Danny,
despite being out of range of the heli rotors.
My heart hammered in my
throat. Was I really going to do this? I’m only an intermediate skier; I never
attempt black diamond runs, let alone double blacks. Moguls give me hives. I
can just about manage three to four inches of fresh snow but if it’s any deeper
my skis somehow tangle up. You probably think that’s impossible but my friends
have videos to prove it.
I tried to smile at my
husband, Darren, but he looked back at me with uplifted brows. Not a smile
then, more a grimace.
I’m happy to be here, I keep telling myself. This
will be the best day of my life.
Since Darren is busy
talking to our guide, it looks like he’s no longer worried about me. My smile
worked.
Then I remember the waiver
we all had to sign: “Avalanches occur frequently in the terrain used for
wilderness activities.”
What The F – FREQUENTLY?? Had I read that correctly?
“The terrain used for
wilderness activities may include but are not limited to dangers of cornices,
cliffs, crevasses (why would we go there?) trees, tree stumps, creeks…” Don’t
the guides know where the creeks are? …
“infectious disease contracted through viruses, bacteria, parasites and fungi.” Yuck. I can’t believe we
are paying for this.
In preparation for our heli ski adventure and
before we got into the helicopter, we learned the basics of using a transceiver,
which we’re all required to wear t in a slim harness around our upper body. ‘The
transceiver,” our guide explained, “sends and receives signals and is a
valuable search and rescue tool in case of an avalanche.”
Great.
I said I was terrified of being caught in an
avalanche but was even more terrified that everyone else might get buried and I’d
have to use the transceiver to locate my fellow skiers. We also have a backpack
containing a probe and shovel – the probe to jab into the snow in order to
determine someone’s location and the shovel to dig them out.
I’m sweating now, and we’re all surveying the
terrain. The untracked snowy slope below us narrows into a forest. That means
tree wells for sure. Maybe crevasses. Pine branches to poke me in the eye.
Enough. I turn and head back toward the
helicopter.
Judy Keith is a domestic reverse snowbird, spending her summers in Muskoka and her winters in Whistler, BC. She travels back and forth with her husband and her dog. In the summer, Judy spends her days playing tennis and golf when she is not in the water or relaxing on the dock.
She spends her winter days skiing, snowshoeing and playing bridge.
Thanks to the indoor courts in Whistler,
she can play tennis year round. Dog walking is also a favourite year round
activity. Judy’s been writing off and on but has trouble finishing a piece
before moving on to the next one. Her goal for the next year is to write
consistently and stick with the same story line.
See Brian Henry’s upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.
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