Ski Patrol in Colorado
By John B. Cameron and Eric D. Miller
4.5/5
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About this ebook
John B. Cameron
By winter, John B. Cameron is a ski patroller in Colorado, but during the off-season he is a writer and journalist. Eric D. Miller is a flight nurse, member of the Air National Guard, and a volunteer Advanced Life Support provider for a ski patrol in Colorado. Cameron and Miller began swapping stories and sharing old photographs, which ultimately led them to network with fellow patrollers for images and interviews used in this pictorial history.
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Ski Patrol in Colorado - John B. Cameron
Cameron
INTRODUCTION
This book is about the thousands of men and women in Colorado who work to ensure the safety of skiers and snowboarders and other guests at Colorado ski areas. The work of a patroller is nuanced, demanding, and often goes unseen. They arrive around sunrise as the first ones on the mountain and are the last ones off.
Patrollers in Colorado arrive from many directions. Some come with college degrees, abandoning one direction to find themselves fully committing to a life orchestrated by the seasons. They are all professionals.
On the mountain, they are lifesavers. The iconic white cross emblazoned on their worn uniform jackets distinguish them from others on the mountain.
They are trained to the same high standards of emergency medical responders on city streets and can provide that care anywhere on the mountain regardless of terrain or weather.
Patrollers are also ambassadors of the mountain lifestyle. They ski more than almost anyone else during the winter, beginning when there is just barely enough snow to cover the rocks and on through the deepest snowstorms. Ski patrollers in Colorado are frequently in avalanche terrain. The most dangerous part of the job requires skiing onto slopes to dislodge avalanches while carrying explosives intended to be ignited by hand and used to dislodge even bigger avalanches. They move together in small groups and watch out for each other. For that reason, patrollers are a close-knit group.
Patrol headquarters and high mountain outposts where they stop to dry their gloves and slurp bad coffee become steeped with tradition. Often, the walls are covered with photographs, and stories are told and retold regardless of how many times they have been shared.
Stories of ski patrolling in Colorado go back many decades, to when the modern ski industry was just in its infancy. Small alpine ski hills with simple rope tows began to open for business around the state. Howelson Hill near Steamboat Springs, the oldest continuously operated ski area in Colorado, opened in 1914 as a ski-jumping area. Following closely behind were Loveland Ski Area, which opened in 1936, Wolf Creek Ski Area in 1938, and Monarch Mountain in 1939.
The years after World War II saw a boom in recreational skiing. As the industry grew, skiers were offered more services like new lifts and base area amenities. With an increase in visitors came an increased need to be able to respond in case of an emergency.
Since the early days of volunteer patrols, the job of ski patrolling has become ever more demanding as it has moved toward a professional