Category: Social Commentary

"Beater" Haters

With the commencement of ski season upon us, I’ve been thinking about the local “core” ski community’s relationship with “beaters,” or in common vernacular, tourists who don’t get the luxury of skiing everyday.  On the one hand, I hear loud voices of discontent with these “beaters” or “gapers” from local riders.  Locals yell when a fatigued skier from out of state stops in the middle of a run or a traverse, and shop employees get annoyed when tourists ask them seemingly stupid questions about ski or snowboard equipment.

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Brant Moles has got it down (including the ski carrying technique).

On the other hand, we have a fascination with these “beaters.”  We have annual days at the resorts where we dress up like them and people ride around the mountain, sometimes after consuming copious amounts of alcohol, and imitate them.  We mimic their jerky movements down the hill.  We try to replicate their outdated methods of clothing themselves in ski wear.  We have even perfected and labeled the “gaper gap,” which is the strip of forehead skin that sticks out when ski goggles and helmet or hat don’t match up.

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Caroline Gleich, Iris Noack, and Michelle Silver on Alta’s Closing day 2008

Beneath all this fascination and parody is an underlying dependence.  We, as local ski bums, are entirely dependent on these “gapers,” these non-locals, to come in and fuel our industry.  We need them to buy day passes at the resorts, pay for lodging and services at the hotels, and rent or buy skis from our shops.  If all of a sudden, the “beaters” stopped going on their annual ski vacation, most of us would be out of luck.

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My gaper gap (the gap between my goggles and helmet is covered by an underlying hat–but you get the idea).

So let’s be fair and realize our true place in the hierarchy.  Next time a fatigued Manhattan resident is pausing on a traverse, catching their breath, give them a break.  Politely say, “on your left,” and pass them without blowing a bunch of cold smoke in their gaper-gap face from the rooster tail on your twin tip skis.  In the shop, do your best to explain to them the difference between reverse camber and regular skis and to answer all their other questions, as ignorant as they may sound.  Instead of spraying the poor soul who just wiped out on the groomer, stop and help her/him pick up their equipment from the yard sale.

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An unidentified Alta skier at closing day 2006

So let’s all respect the beaters.  Besides, it’s good karma.  Let’s do what we can to ensure the future persistence of our way of life–our lifestyle of sofa surfing, beer drinking, and endless days of deep powder freeskiing.

Jim Matheson at the University of Utah

Yesterday, I had a wonderful opportunity to talk to Utah’s 2nd District Congressperson, Jim Matheson.  He came to the Hinckley Institute of Politics on campus at the University of Utah.  After making some opening comments, he opened up the forum to discussion and student questions.

Jim Matheson is on the House Committee for energy and commerce.  Listening to and talking with him gave me new confidence and hope for Utah politics.  He believes we need a rapid transformation in our country, especially in terms of energy use.  He had enlightening responses on questions involving the economy, health care and the housing crisis.

Overall, he spoke to us, a group of University students, with honesty on an eye-to-eye level.  We hear so many politicians that speak at us, instead of to us, and it was refreshing to interact with a real person, whose nose did not keep growing like Pinocchio with each ensuing lie.

Here’s a picture of me with our newly re-elected Congressperson:

Jim Matheson and Caroline Gleich at the Hinckley Institute of Politics

For more information on the Hinckley Institute of Politics, including upcoming forums, check out this site:

http://www.hinckley.utah.edu/

In our country right now, it is so important to have these discussions and talk about taxes, oil, big government bailout bills, health care and everything else.  We are the generation that is going to be paying for this.  We cannot simply ignore these issues.  I have received some comments from readers who want to see more ski pictures and more talk about ski community events.  I promise I will keep those blogs coming.  But please, let’s open up these dialogues and keep them in our minds right now.

On another note, Alta is opening this weekend (Nov. 15 and 16 and then for the season on the 21).  Alta is doing a coat drive to collect warm, winter coats for homeless individuals in Salt Lake City.  If you bring a clean jacket to the Wildcat Ticket Office between 11 am – 4 pm on either Saturday or Sunday, you can get a FREE lift ticket.  So please, go through your closet and see if you have something you aren’t using so that we can keep those less fortunate people warm during our cold, snowy Utah winters.  I can’t wait to see everyone there!

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Photo by Alexa Miller, editing by Chris Pearson.

Quotes for the Day

“Resist much.  Obey little.”       Walt Whitman

“Now.  Or Never.”         Thoreau

“In the mountains, there you feel free.”          T.S. Eliot

“There is no such thing as absolute dirt: it exists in the eye of the beholder.”                  Mary Douglas

And now…the funniest picture from last season.  Iris Noack and I were shooting with Steven Lloyd early in the season at Brighton.  This was the first day of the new Milicent lift being opened and the area was littered with rocks.  Steve and Jason West lined her up off this rock after inspection, and even though I knew I should’ve stayed behind the mound of snow, I had to see if she stuck it.  Every time Iris and I look at my goofy helmet head sticking out, we laugh hysterically.  Enjoy!

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Barack Obama and the Bradley Factor

After a cruel and unusually difficult American National Government exam this morning (after watching a presentation on child labor…more on that later), I had to take advantage of an extra credit opportunity for this class: a lecture about the 2008 election with Kirk Jowers.  Mr. Jowers is the Director of the Hinckley Institute of Politics.  But more importantly for this discussion, he has advised more than 30 Republican congressional candidates and provided legal counsel to George W.’s 2000 presidential campaign on Electoral College issues.  He has worked exclusively in campaign finance, election law and government ethics arena and is the author of several books.

He began the lecture by saying he had a fun job today–to talk about the most exciting election in U.S. history.  And he cut right to the chase and concluded that there is nothing McCain can do to change his trajectory and that unless something totally beyond our imagination occurs, Obama will be our 44th president.

Mr. Jowers continued to discuss the battleground states and how they have shifted in the past month as McCain became more defensive and Obama took the offense.

“As the bottom dropped out of the stock market and as Palin went from ‘who’ to ‘wow’ to ‘woah…’ McCain started to tank along with the economy,” said Jowers enthusiastically, as students audibly laughed.  Obama now has a 17 point lead.

During the Q&A period at the end, I had to ask Mr. Jowers about how much he thought we would see the Bradley effect in this election, among both citizens who have already voted and among those who are still yet to vote.  The Bradley effect is the latent racism still apparent in our country and in politics in general, when voters will say that they will vote for the black candidate when polled because they don’t want to sound racist, but then they change their vote in the secrecy of the booth.  Mr. Jowers thinks that we are evolving and that the Bradley effect might be present in the southern states, but he doubts it will be enough to make a difference in the election.  So that’s good news!

Now, hopefully, it will begin to snow this weekend so we can go from this:

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photo by Michael Kemp

To this:

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photo by Lee Cohen

I had to include some eye candy to reward you for reading until the end of my post.

Sexual Scandals in the US Senate

I have a huge exam for my American National Government class tomorrow at 9:10 am.  We are going to be tested on the legislative, executive, and judicial branches and I have about 30 pages of notes that I’m supposed to have memorized.  On one of my study guides, my professor has a list of names of people on Congress and we have to know why they are important.  Two of them are Larry Craig (R-ID) and David Vitter (R-LA).  The significance here is that these two guys are ultra-conservative, religious Senators who are making laws for us, some of which involve ethical considerations.  But Larry Craig, who voted to support the Federal Marriage Amendment, (which prevents same-sex couples from having the same rights as heterosexual couples) pleaded guilty after getting busted while trying to have sex with a male police officer in the Minneapolis airport.  And Vitter’s name came up on a call list to a prostitution company, which he apparently had used many times.  I just have a hard time understanding why two of these creepy, hypocritical guys have been serving on our US Senate.

I know I can do better.  That’s why I hope you will support me in my quest for a Senate seat in 2016.  Everyone has different viewpoints on these sensitive moral issues, and we do not always agree, but I can promise you that I will not behave in this unethical, offensive way.

Also, to all my friends and family in California, please vote NO on Proposition 8, which would eliminate the right of same-sex couples to marry.  Please help protect the Constitutional rights of all people.

“Like freedom of speech and freedom of religion, the freedom to marry the person you love is an essential part of what it means to realize the promise of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. (ACLU online)”

Thank you.

This message has been approved by the 2016 Caroline Gleich Congressional Campaign.