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For all you young'uns out there

 
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othripper



Joined: 10 Sep 2006
Posts: 49
Location: mrv

PostPosted: Tue Mar 06, 2012 5:09 pm    Post subject: For all you young'uns out there Reply with quote

I've been meaning to do this for a while, finally got around to it.


THE BACKSIDE OF BEYOND
by Allan Bard



Steve McQueen said, "I'd rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than in any city on earth." Edward Abbey referred to the urban scene as "syphilization". We read between the lines and suspect a cure for the most subtle of modern maladies, the condition caused by the strained nervous sense of urgency that seems to define life in the city.
In my job as a backcountry ski guide I see people arrive at my door step from almost incomprehensibly busy lives in the city, ready to leave all the stress and schedules and meetings and freeway traffic alone for awhile.

They need time to re-create, to recharge the old batteries, to think of nothing and reflect on everything, indeed to put life into perspective. Mostly they need to go skiing on the high and distant horizons. But skiing and mountains are only the medium for this revitalization, not the message. The message we receive is the importance of a quiet mind and satisfied soul.

Suddenly my job description is so much more than expert skier, tireless trail breaker, beast of burden, clever navigator, head chef and avalanche forcaster. In addition, I become confidant, confessor, entertainer, therapist, friend, and perhaps even the Right Reverend Bardini - First Church of the Open Slopes. It is a job with great responsibility and not just those related to hazard evaluation and risk management.

As a ski guide I have the pleasure of bringing people and mountains together to the greater benefit of both. I notice that, when people have been touched by the wild lands they are forever changed, forever more aware. They will never again see snow and mountain peaks and wind sculpted tree trunks, without being affected inside, differently than before they knew of such things, and they will return time and again to get in touch, and be touched. Certainly these are some of the deepest joys of skiing in wild places. It becomes important then, in fact essential, to savor and share these places and feelings. It is interesting that when we travel far afield to ski, what we often find is not just some intoxicatingly remote landscape but the convoluted topography of our own souls.

This is the value of skiing in, and being with, the lofty terrain of the mountains. These are the advantages of taking the high ground. I have been out into the great hinterlands beyond the backside of beyond, and my life is rich because of it. I am a wealthy man who just happens to be broke most of the time, but I'm in good company. John Muir stated simply, “Climb the mountains and get their good tidings." Bill Koch once said, "The world would be a little better place to live if more folks went cross country skiing." I must agree with both of my learned colleagues.

Maybe world peace is just a few telemark turns away? Maybe it's worthy of being a movement? With bumper stickers! TELEMARKING IS PEACE - SKI THE BACKSIDE OF BEYOND. Why not?

I know of little else like a good day in the backcountry that gives me such incredible tranquillity. This is especially true in times when life seems tediously long. But, as we know, life is short. Which reminds me. I saw this rather interesting Sharper Image catalog item. It is a clock of sorts, but this time piece ticks off the time the average person has left to live. Standing and watching it is a little unnerving. A minute goes by and then another and then both are gone forever. Three-hundred and sixty-five days a year we get the opportunity to have a fresh start at life. A new day and fresh powder reminds those of us that slide on snow that skiing is life. Passion and vitality for living are some of the gifts we receive from skiing, particularly skiing in the great beyond.
One need not travel to the North Pole or the Himalaya or the Andes or any of the high hidden places of the world to know these things. Outback might simply mean skiing out back - out in the quiet woods behind the barn or perhaps, skiing through Central Park when the fist of winter grips the city in an icy gridlock. It could be skiing down a New England hillside or across the great expanse of a Heartland cornfield.

You are out on the backside of beyond when you feel the crisp bite of winter air in your lungs and the sting of wind driven snow on your face, and when you realize how insignificant you are in the face of such harsh adversity. That relativity, which comes from knowing the wild places, is essential to our well being and yet we so often stay home, stay inside and insulate ourselves from it. I say, resist the urge to be complacent about experiencing the brutally beautiful joys of the backcountry skiing life. Go my friends. Don't delay. Lose yourself and maybe you'll find yourself- on the backside of beyond.















Mike
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TeleKay



Joined: 16 Mar 2007
Posts: 710
Location: sunny southern california

PostPosted: Tue Mar 06, 2012 7:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Some deep wisdom in that writing! I appreciate your posting it. Thanks!!
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a ship is safe in a harbor, but that is not what it is designed for.
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Sierra Fred



Joined: 07 Dec 2004
Posts: 289
Location: in the moment

PostPosted: Tue Mar 06, 2012 7:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

"We laughed, rejoicing together and alone sharing the freedom of the open slopes."

Wow. Words to live by.

This truly reads like it was written at the height of the post-trip high when everything is right in the world.

Thanks for sharing.
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Heh, I know this place. You know you are on a telemark site when peep's concerns about new gear center on the "downside" that the new gear might make skiing somehow easier or different.
-Cowdog, Sept 8, 2009
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B



Joined: 22 Dec 2005
Posts: 2177
Location: P-town, CA

PostPosted: Tue Mar 06, 2012 7:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for digging out that enjoyable read.
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Sawyer



Joined: 27 Mar 2009
Posts: 916
Location: 802

PostPosted: Tue Mar 06, 2012 8:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nearly OT: I've got a virtually unused pair of the skis on p51 sitting in the next room...
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28 pages of blah, blah, blah. -Grant
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Tele will always be a coveted art form, and a certain segment will always gravitate towards it.-climbhoser
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jonesinski



Joined: 02 Dec 2010
Posts: 933
Location: wandering and wondering

PostPosted: Wed Mar 07, 2012 12:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for sharing.

I think the message applies even more now than it did in '84. Or maybe that's just for me. Free time is rare these days...

Waitsfield, eh? Used to stop by there all the time for great river swimming and pizza. Not to mention it's proximity to MRG. Very cool place to find natural transcendence.
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mr. toad



Joined: 15 Mar 2011
Posts: 226
Location: South Lake Tahoe

PostPosted: Wed Mar 07, 2012 2:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

In the end, the one with the most powder days wins.
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josef



Joined: 12 Jan 2005
Posts: 466
Location: vermont

PostPosted: Wed Mar 07, 2012 2:48 am    Post subject: Allan Bard, for me Reply with quote

I remember that article. I used to have a few years' worth of Couloir back issues on hand. Allan Bard and Tom Carter were inspirational for me in my years transitioning from alpine, thru XCD and tele. As were Ned Gilette, Jan Reynolds, and Galen Rowell.
I hold my respect and kinship.
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mudgirl



Joined: 14 Feb 2011
Posts: 35
Location: Ithaca, NY

PostPosted: Wed Mar 07, 2012 1:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

That. Was. Awesome.
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