THE BATTALION THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1978 Page 9 'amily sport easier, cheaper Cross-country skiing ‘catches’ Wi United Press International IA1BANY, N. — Cross-country ■ng appears headed for its biggest ^■on ever, with many of its newest Mverts downhill skiiers tired of B-hour lift lines and ticket prices Trjng up to $16 a day. ; ‘Ross-country touring centers es- Tite that business has doubled in [past two or three years and no Ldown is evident. jAs one new convert in Albany put fit’s easy, cheap and a good ex- 1 to get outdoors in the winter. ;ost certainly is among the major ;ors in cross country’s growing ularity, especially where families involved. To ski all day on omed cross-country trails costs rally $2 to $3 per person. And many centers have season Passes like those offered by the Be- resford Farms in Altamont, about 20 miles outside Albany. For a family the season pass is $30 — well below what it would cost most families to downhill ski for one day. I he Beresfbrd touring center is on an 800-acre sod farm. Business has doubled every year for the past three years, according to owners Jon and Barbara Beresford. “One reason it’s catching is that it s a real family sport, you can do it as a family unit,” says Beresford, father of five who ought to know. Equipment, too, is much less ex pensive. A good set of skis, poles and boots can be purchased for under $125, and a skier would really have to igh price skiing ay thin crowds United Press International lENVER — The rapidly rising of downhill skiing may force : enthusiastsm of the sport and luse ski areas to rethink their essor j.flices, says a top industry executive, e." Besids [At the start of the 1978-79 season, ties for fontt Mitchell, executive director f( nado Ski Country USA, said e' es no end to the price escala- Imthe fen I thinb i!“Anybody who pays $15 a day de- Hes to, said Mitchell in an inter- IM®. “They haven’t shopped. Damn ban Hhoflt, the people should shop be- He the bargains are there, s, Iget kV I and the Aspen Complex, in write !Ming Aspen Highlands, Aspen ■intain, Buttermilk and Snow- lat it is:*, are charging $ 15 this season for ult toseiBl-day, all-lifts, adult pass. The ■pest ticket in Colorado is $4 at rears as pquistador. 'eratlwtah ski prices range from $12 at hedin firk City and Snowbird to $3 at Blue ars ag( Bintain. Jackson Hole in VVyom- lecause k is charging $15 for the tramway ty, the |ass this year. diningJllhe increasing costs of skiing at- iganyl itted the attention of Sen. Floyd ■kell, D-Colo., who was con- ild be iuBed about the method of granting solelyiraBhikes to ski areas on public land, nysten tost of them in the West, g and oifc bill, passed by the Senate in me free* and 1978 but killed in the n a dectiBse, would have called for greater ■cipation by the public when a ey asawBrea applies for a rate increase. It najority ihlikely the bill will be presented i Bi next year because Haskell was if the nBated in the Nov. 7 election, ard travtBfan area wants to raise rates, it’s anwrifoMially a rubber stamp process,’ ve totiwJimTherell, Haskell’s legislative e one«»tant. “We feel this rubber stamp f Btude has helped promote higher s. o,ith the cost of equipment, mghtlie®sportation, clothing, food and therlani'Ring also going up, some skiers vebeentBeve the industry is pricing itself ern E W ( >f business. jandkltwhchell thinks the industry will etiringi another look at the price struc- heishwTsfci areas see business dvon- koff. :iren»whe cost of skiing is apt to go up, to travfW Mitchell. “The higher it does, ?, thfjsi m °re likely customers are to re- e, with If the number of times they go Pgor give up the sport entirely. pVf 1 f^en, said Mitchell, the industry I\1 • | Start £' v * n S people more choices ^ » ? 0 P tions hi buying tickets. CltMH r ltclle ^ suggested tickets by the I. ora price variety within a given rTerin “abased on slope desirability. ry2 |^°u can take one ride on the Vail 822-S P doia hi the summer so why not in itionft f winterrl he said. “One reason ineyland does so well is because it , f s People options. They pay the fc^^Wjicnce to ride on the good rides, jjitchell said most ski areas al- Py offer a variety of ticket pro- •JM m He said other bargains could l oun ^ through ski shops and ski ll k*j° n ly reason we exist is to lh g discounts to members,” said y Feagin, winter social chairman f pfnamba Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega ’74 | )u w ant the real ®’ no, frozen or Lr • • We call It ® xlc an Food prerDe/* ^ 'ocation: of the Fagowee Ski Club in Denver. “We just don’t do things if we don’t get a discount.” Feagin said the ski clubs get dis counts on tickets, transportation, meals and accomodations. There is buying power by getting groups together,” she said. “We can pugmer package weekends that are a lot lower — 25 percent or more — th an if we did it on our own.” Keystone in the central Colorado Rockies put out an entire pamphlet on ways to save. “We at Keystone believe that the cost of skiing has risen too high today, so we are doing something about it,’ the pamphlet begins. It then lists ticket packages that will be honored when facilities are not full. Pam Stenmark, director of the Copper Mountain, Colo., Ski Insti tute and a cousin of Olympic skier Ingmar Stenmark, said skiers can save money by planning ahead, Ipok- ing for group transportation, review ing terms of special fare programs and not staying in the center of ski areas. Cost savings programs in Utah in clude several multi-day packages. Snow Basin offers a ticket good for 10 rides. The Utah Ski Association sells a Ski Utah Gold Pass for $600 that entitles a buyer to ski at any Utah resort throughout the season. work to spend more than $150, com pared to an average cost of $400 to $500 for downhill essentials. Cross-country enthusiasts also are likely to scorn the “fashion show” atmosphere of many downhill ski re sorts. While both sports can be per formed with clothes pulled from most closets, bright and expensive skisuits are the rule, rather than the exception, on downhill slopes. A good pair of knickers is probably the only clothes investment most cross country skiers make. Time and availability are also big factors. A cross-country skier can snap on his boots for a quick morning spin across a local golf course, get ting in one hour the same amount of exercise it might take all day to get skiing downhill, after a long ride to a ski resort. And, unlike downhill, the basics can be picked up in less than two hours of instruction, for another nifty saving. Many dyed-in-the-wool downhill skiers scoff at comparisons between the two sports. On the ground there is no “thrill” or “gut challenge” in tracking across an open field, even darting among trees following a track. But a growing legion are finding separate pleasures in each, and are combining the two on ski vacations, often skiing downhill on less- crowded workdays and opting for cross-country on the weekends, or putting in one day of each per weekend. Some converts to cross-country have found a new challenge in “Citi zen’s Races” sponsored by major centers, similar to “NASTAR” races for downhillers. Like joggers, true cross-country devotees are condi tioning fanatics. In Stowe, Vt., giants of each sport often share the same clientele. Mt. Mansfield is one of the oldest and most diversified downhill resorts in the East, while the Trapp Family Lodge, with 65 miles of cross country trails not far from the base of Mansfield, was one of the first ski touring centers in the United States when it began in 1969. Business at the Trapp center has doubled in the past three years and the clientele has broken out from the more rugged types, nicknamed the “granola group’’ to include the “beautiful people wearing the latest in downhill fashions — or the “wet look.” The business was launched by Baroness Maria Von Trapp, upon whose life the “Sound of Music” was based, and her son Johannes. Mrs. Von Trapp, 72, still cross-country skis every day during the winter. Many skiers who left the downhill world for the more serene and se cluded joys of cross-country skiing are a little concerned they could end up as jostled and crowded as before, if the cross-country rage persists. However, as cross-country skiers become more expert, they can strike out on their own into virgin territory, enabling them to commune with na ture unperterbed by others. Many ski touring centers are mak ing their trails one-way or setting up dual lanes just like a divided high way, to avoid traffic jams of skiers. The “Adirondack Lodge” in New York’s Adirondacks, not far from Lake Placid, the scene of the 1980 Winter Olympics, offers a chance to really get away from it all. The lodge, run in conjunction with the Adiron dack Mountain Club, maintains 10 miles of trails and charges nothing, except a $1 parking fee. “It’s a different type of thrill than downhill. You’re by yourself, on your own in the high peaks,” ex plained Rick Davis, the wilderness recreation director who often serves as a guide for ski-touring groups. “It requires a much greater degree of self-reliance, there’s no ski patrol behind every bush. 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