2012-2013: A Season Retrospective

November 7th Earned Turns at Jay

The 2012-2013 season was characterized by manic swings between frustration and satisfaction. Constant near misses were offset by frequent micro events that satisfied by never electrified. Natural snow was generally good but never epic. A look through my reports yields many really good days but no lifetime moments. If not for those reports, in hindsight I might give this season an irreverent “meh”. But I had many really good days despite no incredible ones. While I feel that the season fell short of average, my documentation might suggest otherwise. I feel less satisfied about the season than my reports might suggest.

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Top Five Days of the Season: 2012-2013

These days may or may not have been THE best ski days of the season. But they were MY best ski days of the season. These are the days that filled me with the most emotional connection. The powder surely wasn’t the deepest of the season on any of these days, but the smiles were the biggest. Rereading the reports and viewing the pictures gives me goosebumps and vivid remembrances. These days meant something special — each was far more important than just another powder day.

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Tuckerman Ravine: Because I Love It

Headwall & Snow Patch

I’ve skied Tuckerman Ravine in June and July many times. Sometimes because it was there. And other times because it was still there. But this year, I didn’t do it just because it was there. I did it because I Love It.

For three out of four runs, I was the only person in Tuckerman Ravine. I had one of New England’s finest natural areas all to myself. I was the only person in the eastern United States that was skiing. The only one. My own paradise for my own turns, experiencing something that no other person was experiencing at that moment.

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Killington: King of Spring

May Superstar

I’ve enjoyed beating up on Killington over the years, especially my anti-capitalist anti-consumerism post-college-angst years (if aren’t a socialist in your 20s you have no heart, if you’re still a socialist in your 30s you have no brain). But in recent memory, I’ve always had good early and late season days there. Killington came at this season with a completely different attitude. There has been a void in New England skiing for a long time and it is nice to have that void finally refilled.

As Sugarloaf and Sugarbush both close, Killington is not just still open but talking about June. Maybe they will get there, maybe they won’t. But the talk is hardly hypothetical marketing bluster, it is absolutely doable.

Unlike in past years when “The Beast” announced an earlier than planned April closing despite ample snow just before a massive storm that they would not reopen for, Killington is honestly playing for keeps this season. And it is about time. All hail Killington, undisputed King of Spring with the earliest opening, latest closing, and longest season. Thank you.

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The Highway to the Highway

Mount Washington Summit from the Top of Hillman's

“This is going to hurt.”

Foreboding feelings of pain were strong going into this weekend. I am in the worst shape of my life. An honest self assessment suggested I could get the job done but only at the cost of several days of pain. But even in the worst shape of my life, I’m still more capable than I give myself credit for and I’ll need to remember that as I start rebuilding my body and, perhaps more importantly, the rest of my life.

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