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Sports commentary: Winter: It's all down hill fun from here

by Jordan Dawson
| December 15, 2010 1:15 AM

 

It was 5:45 a.m. Dec. 4 and I had just

woken up pre-alarm.

I waited a few minutes, then grabbed my

phone to call my friend who asked me to call when I woke up, at

what I hoped would be around 6 a.m. when my alarm went off. He

answered in shock, unsure how it was possible that I was up, and

chipper, at such a time.

The older I get the better I am at

getting up early, but when I tell people that I believe that there

are only three reasons to wake up before the sun is out, I’m am far

from joking. If I’m not heading to the airport, going fishing or on

my way to go snowboarding, I am virtually incapable of motivating

in the morning — with the slight exception of production days here

at the Eagle.

However, that fact didn’t stop my

friend from being taken aback by my morning call, so I reminded him

of my rule of three.

“Good to see you have your priorities

straight,” he said.

I merely thanked him and jumped out of

bed to get dressed, for it was opening day at Big Mountain and the

powder had been building up for weeks.

On my way up to the mountain, my friend

who is a skier called and we shared our excitement with each other

about the big day ahead. She was already in Whitefish getting ready

to head up with her husband and brother-in-law from his house.

Their energy was palpable even over the phone.

“Opening day is like Christmas day for

grown ups,” she said.

I was a little nervous about the lines

that could be about to get in the way of my magical holiday,

though. I needed to pick up my season pass from the lodge, and I

was sure that I wasn’t the only person with too chaotic of a

schedule to get up there the past few months. However, as I entered

the base lodge, I was pleasantly surprised to see a fairly short

line and I was even more happy to find most of the people in that

line far more pleasant than those one would find in the line at a

toy store or even waiting for Santa Claus.

“Don’t worry. It’s not as good as it

looks,” said a Whitefish Resort employee from the back of the line

as he walked by to check on things. “Wait, I haven’t had enough

coffee this morning. I mean it’s not as bad as it looks.”

And, it wasn’t. Despite a few

inconsiderate teenagers deciding to push their way in with their

friends, the line moved swiftly and I was able to meet the masses

at the bottom of Chair 1 before it opened.

The line was definitely long, and wide,

but I guess there’s something about the anticipation of a rare

powder opening day that just chills everyone out to a point where

waiting is less of a burden.

Then it happened.

9:30 a.m.

The first group of skiers and boarders

sat down on the first chair from Chair 1 and began their ascent to

the top of Big Mountain.

The crowd went wild. Literally.

“Why are they cheering,” said a young

boy who was about 8 or 9 years old.

“For first chair,” his dad

answered.

It was a scene right of “The Polar

Express.” I could just see Santa Claus standing up and shouting:

“The first toy of Christmas.”

From there the lines moved swiftly as

children of all ages made their way to the top of the mountain. It

was my first opening day morning trip in over a decade, and, as I

made my way up on the lift, I realized how happy I was to be a part

of this particular one.

“Look at that inversion,” a teenage boy

sitting on the chair next to me said. “Oh and there’s a rainbow.

It’s a snow rainbow in the middle of the inversion on opening day.

How sweet is that?”

It was pretty sweet indeed, and so was

the vibe of excitement that encircled every aspect of the mountain

and made even the little things something to smile about.

“We got the 95th chair,” said a friend

of the other teenage boy on our chair. “That’s almost as good as

first chair. I can’t wait to tell our friends.”

I didn’t have the heart to tell him

that they likely didn’t start with the chair numbered one and so

the fact that our chair had a sticker that said 95 didn’t

necessarily mean we were the 95th ones to go up. It was not my

place to ruin anyone else’s holiday, especially when mine was going

so well.

As I cut through the light-powdery snow

on my first run down the mountain, it was apparent that Christmas

had indeed arrived early. When I got to the bottom of the chair

lift, I saw that I was not alone in this revelation as adults

sported smiles bigger than a child who had just received his or her

first bicycle, or maybe even a pony.

“Everyone should go home and write down

in their journals what an epic opening day it was Dec. 4, 2010,” a

lady said on my first chair ride back up. “This is definitely one

to remember.”

The best part was that we were just

getting started — with the season and with the openings. The

following day brought more great weather and still solid

conditions.

Then on Friday, Dec. 10, it was time to

do it all over again. A massive dump of snow had fallen on Big

Mountain of 15 plus inches, and Blacktail Ski Area in Lakeside was

opening for its first day with more than 5 inches of new snow on

top of their untouched accumulation.

I headed to the West Shore to cover the

event. As I climbed out of my car, I looked around to see a sea of

smiles first in the parking lot, then the lodge and finally on the

hill. Crowds were smaller as it was a work/school day for those

that couldn’t finagle their way out of such responsibilities. But,

for those who could, it was a powder play day worth whatever makeup

duties awaited them in the days to come.

Although this week has brought us warm

temperatures that have led to rain and melting of the snow, I trust

that there is more to come and that we still have reason to go to

bed early on the weekends and get up before our alarms go off. What

a wonderful gift Mother Nature has given us. We must have been very

good this year, or perhaps she feels bad for taking our summer

away.

Either way, I plan to enjoy it while it

lasts and just not ask questions.