Ski On Me - a travel blog

Travelling through a quarter life crisis. From hostel to hotel, plane to pedestrian, backpack to bus stop. First stop Canada, let you know how I go!

Sunday, March 19, 2006

19 March, 2006 (Sunday) Appendum

(Picture courtesy of Sarah - tickets)

Farewell Fair Skating rink
Today we felt the breath of Spring and it melted everything. The roof was dripping, the sun was shining and the ice rink could not take it any longer. The morning was not looking promising, and by midday we were warning guests off. It was un-skateable. Kids were running through leaving footprints, and eager skaters were leaving long furrows on the ice. I gave refunds. I gave apologies.

I was there and I can confirm it as truth - the skating rink is now finished for the season. Gone. Kapput. Closed. The last of the skates have been rented. The last of the liability waivers signed and filed. The last credit card imprint taken. Happy Valley, your time is almost over. I don't know how Jae is going to take it when he returns. He's become a skating fiend.

I was scheduled on for 40+ hours on the rink this week. A few night shifts that I was looking forward to. Skate rentals which I was not. I guess I'm going to have to be redeployed. Thank goodness I have such versatile marketable skills.

There was some hope of keeping her (the rink) for at least another week. It would have been a new Big White record - the longest time we've had the rink open. Ever. Although, we've had to cordon areas off the last week due to holes developing and uneven ice. It was just a matter of time.

Tomorrow it probably won't even exist. Jarrod and Gareth were getting all excited at the thought of running the Cat over it. The Zamboni is already on the road, off to the shop.

Goodbye skating rink. Welcome slush pond.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

18 March, 2006 (Saturday)

The morning after. Paddy’s day. Snowpines party. The evening ends at Sam’s once again.

It was a busy night. After finish work with Kiwi Kate it was first St. Patrick’s day at Happy Valley, having a drink with the ticket tarts (and a short dance with the stuffed bear), before shuttling it to Kelly’s farewell party at Snowpines @ the Penthouse. A venue notorious for it’s early season parties. The theme was the four elements, influenced no doubt by Kelly’s hippy leanings.

By the time I arrived though the party was fizzling. The kitchen reeked like a Dutch oven and there were bottles everywhere. Ash and Stewart were very drunk (and possibly influenced by other substances), and were having a dance off. They started with high legged jigs, then progressed to table sliding. Ash started with a face first dive. Stewie followed with a rail slide, which had the table top flip ontop of his prone floor body, Then everybody wandered out to huddle in their ice cave. Once we’d stopped laughing Skye and I made the 20 minute trek up hill to Sam’s. So glad it wasn’t snowing!

Sam’s was busy for a Saturday. The usual familiar faces. The same bad music mix. It wasn’t long before Kelly and the dregs of the Snowpines party found their way up to join us. 1am rolled around and the bar emptied. Closing time? Have a great trip across Africa Kelly!

Friday, March 17, 2006

17 March, 2006 (Friday - St Patrick's Day)

Hi All,

I'm surviving in the wild wild Canadian West, where the cars are big and the gals are well rounded. Yes, life is swell. No connotations attached.

(Picture: A ticket-tart St Patty's - Tania, Myself, Precious, Kate, Sarah)

Right now I'm sitting here at Happy Valley skating rink and it looks like the St Patty's celebrations are in full swing. At least, the girl in the green top and short short mini skirt / belt leads me to believe that I should leave here early and make my way upstairs. I can hear the call. It's all that Irish blood flowing through my veins. I think Irish-ness is not a regressive gene.

Anyway, it's Friday here and (as usual) the week has blasted past once again in a flurry of snowflakes, chicken wings (with extra sauce), hours staring at the computer screen and episodes involving belligerant customers. I love my jobs.

It's Friday and I'm working back to 10pm. But after that I've been promised a pint of guinness with some of my favouritest ticket tarts (Kate and Precious!) and some of the tastiest Westridge-ians (Lauren and Emily say 'hi!').

Today (Australian time) it was Josh's birthday, so I finally managed to call through. Apparently things are all amok back home. It's emotional turmoil and too many hours on the books (but not on the red). Love lost. Love gained. Love spent on a dozen bottles of good Margaret River Cab Sav. Summer is waning. My presence has been missed. Winter is coming. HAPPY BIRTHDAY JOSHIE! Welcome to Quarter-life crisis country! (Picture: Dancing with the Happy Valley bear)

Brendan had some constructive feedback on my content - less ski hill junk and more on the chicks. "We want to know all the details. We want to see the hotties." He said (or something like it). Well, dearest readers - while I want to cater for your respective tastes, I'm afraid there are no details to confess of. I have been the perfect ski monk. Kate even just commented to me as such. I puffed out my chest.

Anyway, enough of me. Tonight is going to be busy. St Patrick's day drinks then off to the depths of Snowpines to say farewell to Kelly, my hippy co-worker who is going off on a jaunt to Africa. It's my first Snowpines party and i'm not sure what to expect, but the place is called 'The Penthouse' so that at least sounds promising.

What's happening here more generally? More snow on the way. Lots of last week partying and, being Spring break, lots of jailbait and cougars on the prowl. It's a good time to be working here. I think I just need to find more sleep somewhere along the way. But, that's an old complaint. The snow is fine. I'm being cheekier to customers, and I don't think they get my sense of humour. Go figure.


Sunday, March 12, 2006

12 March, 2006 (Sunday)

A brief update
Another week, another 30cm of snow. The season is starting to draw to a close and suddenly I'm 3 and a half months through and I'm wondering how it went so fast. Where it went so fast?

We're getting a strange mix of warm and sunny days, melting the top layer of snow and softening the ice rink, followed by stretches of intense
(but clear) cool. Today it was a balmy -1 degrees. Almost t-shirt weather, at least Jae thought so today (brrr!).

It's Spring Break over the next few weeks so we're expecting it to get busier. Students are on holiday and the snow this season has been the best that it has been for years. We're hitting more than 300cm with more still tumbling down. If the last three days are anything to go by we're in for some steady days, but nothing catastrophic or crazily busy. Not a rehash of Christmas or the New Years period.

Meanwhile, things have been happening in our little household. Josh has a 'friend', Amie staying with us for a bit. Jae is trying to change his hours around a little bit. I've been working on a few pet projects and trying to psyche myself to get the post-season period organised - at least in my own head if nowhere else.
(Picture: Liberated bowling shoes - Cat Shop Shuffle)


Week in review
So, what's been happening? More than a little I guess.
  • Return of Amie: Amie, a friend of ours, has just returned to Canada. She's currently staying with us in our little flat. How long? Not sure. She's here for the rest of the season and looking for a place to stay.
    Amie arrived last Saturday and she's just getting settled. It also seems as though a romance is burgeoning... or perhaps it's in full swing. Josh, you sly dog! Just close the door and try and muffle the noise.
  • 4 weeks to go: There are just over 4 weeks left until the end of the season. Time to start pulling together plans and budgets, and work out where to next. I'm in the midst of working out what I want to do, who is interested in participating in my jaunt, and what kind of transportation I need to get. Once I have the transportation I'm hoping that the rest of it will fall into place.
    Right now I'm checking out used cars. A perilous activity at the best of times. Prices seem to be a fair bit cheaper than back home. I guess that's one of the benefits of North America: having more people - volume discount. At the same time I'm a little afraid of driving on the wrong side of the road... especially after 3 months off. But I guess I have to bite the bullet sometime.
  • My second job: In leiu of the end of the season I've got my act kind of together and lined up a second job. The bubbly Kelly has started training me up on invoicing and dispatch for a hot tub and general maintenance crew that work here on mountain. She's due to fly the coop on the 19th, so just a week away. Apparently the turn-over is pretty high. She's been there almost a month, and is the 4th person in the position. I've signed up until end of season.
    The plan is for me to put in about 3-days a week - around 20 hours. This will help me put a little extra cash away (hopefully) for travelling. My pass is showing around 42 days on-snow, which is pretty respectable. Including days that I wasn't scanned that'll hit around 48+, so I'm close to 50 days for the season.
  • Spring break: Spring has sprung, the ice rink is melting but the snow is still here. I've been hitting upward ofr 40 hours in the last few weeks and I'm rostered on for 6 days a week at tickets. Brutal. But, I think hours are going to ease off once the ice rink melts and they close night skiing (March 25th). Holding my breath.
    Although if I do get a car that could mean a few day trips to local mountains. Apex here I come!

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

07 March, 2006 (Tuesday)

Recollections of a Cat Shop Shuffle
Cat Shop Shuffle: Annual ball held at the Big White Cat Shop, a maintenance facility for the heavy machinery that keeps the ski slopes running. The shuffle is an exclusive event held by management. Tickets are limited to 300, with predominantly mountain businesses invited to attend. Valdy, an aging hippy performer (whose had a few hits), provides the centre stage entertainment. Drinks are relatively cheap, tickets can be hard to come by, the night is generally acknowledged to be one of the bigger nights on-mountain. Some claim it came about as an excuse to clear up the Cat Shop once a year.

Port-a-loos are out back
The night started quietly enough. At 6pm it was mainly old timers with a smattering of over-dressed lifties. Foxie had his 'fro up in all it's frizzy glory and the lift gals had scrounged up ball gowns and wedding dresses for the occasion, their plumage (and breasts) on display. Dave and I stood at the edge for a while, scoping the place out. Port-a-loos at the back. Big work benches converted to buffet tables to the side. Tables sitting centre to the end, surrounding a rectangular stage. The drink taps began to flow.

Dress ranged from the obscene to the ridiculous to the 'turned up but didn't even bother to wear a tie'. Guys were decked out in all manner of attire, from formal suits, to summer suits, to bad shirt and shorts combos, to duct-tape ties. Gals were in everything from strict formal gowns to trashy 80s getup and sequins. Garnishes of all varieties were on display, a grocer's nightmare. Chris (from Sk8ters) started to go out and sample the garnishes - he tasted mushrooms and radishes, capsicums (sorry, bell peppers) and cucumber, celery and garlic. Apparently his foray into tasting a chilli was painful, but he dulled the fire with one of Skye's mini-limes. Ugh!

Shaking VIP beers
By 7pm a fair crowd had gathered and the earlier chill had began to recede. The shop was looking well lit for all of it's cavernous length. White table cloths marked the VIP area. A crowd started develop around the bar area. The buffet opened: cheese squares, fried onions and sauted mushrooms, caesar and potato salad, a range of condiments, roasted beef in huge hunks ready to be sliced and served. Not really a vegetarians kind of do. For dessert it was carrot or black forest cake. The carrot cake with thick white icing and orange icing carrots on top. The black forest cake thick with creme. I ate well with the 306 crowd.

By 8:30pm it felt more like 11. People were starting to look rosy cheeked and well liquored. Tables were cleared and a dance floor appeared. Zia's cherry moonshine made an appearance. Lauren and Precious ate their chocolate coated biscuit. Rachel from Happy Valley introduced herself and promptly forgot my name... which didn't stop her from flirting, very directly. Skye was wearing a gardener's green hat and baggy pants. Lauren was wearing way too much sugar - rasberry liquorish in her hair and sweet necklaces off her belt. Aenne was in a flashy 70s sequined one-piece and Per was in classic golfers garb; long-shorts and high socks. I shook myself awake and decided that I should take a rest from the big cups of beer. Gabbi made me dance, so I twirled her around on the dance floor for a bit.


Cheers to Cherry Moonshine
11pm stamina started to flag. Gabbi disappeared home after an encounter with Zia's cherry moonshine. The area near the bar was packed in close with circles of drinkers. The band played on, alternating between old time hits and then resting while recorded contemporary favourites blasted through the speakers. Precious spotted Matt and Jess - the love triangle resumed. Face of thunder she dragged me to the dance floor. I pulled manic faces. On the way to the loo Hayley bundled by and hit me in the chest. So much for friendly neighbours!

12pm the place started to empty out. The tables on the outskirts held a few solitary souls just watching. The port-a-loos started to fill and Neal was feeding people cake. The dance floor was still going though, with the band banging out tunes. Deb bumped and ground, Steve her pole. Scary. Zia twirled and twisted. Tammy and Kristi just danced.

12:30am I made my way out, jumping on a shuttle which took me straight to Sam's. The party was still going, so I lasted until close chatting to various people and drinking water. Asleep in bed by 1:30am after a dessert of apple strudel and ice cream. Sweet dreams.

Night's post-mortem
The Cat Shop Shuffle was fun, but it was just another big messy night out at Big White. Well, except that it was at a different venue. The dress up was great. The price - well when it costs $30 entry and $20 for drinks you're looking down the barrel of a day's pay. Expensive, especially at this time of year. That said, it was one of those events that you have to attend if you're here for the season. Merely the fact that it was limited edition tickets made it exclusive. It was good to see the gang out, just a pity it was so fragmented. The season rolls on.

Monday, March 06, 2006

6 March, 2006 (Monday)

A brief update
Somehow March has crept up on me and suddenly I'm looking down the barrel of another month. I think I'm having one of those days when I wish that it would all slow down a little, just so I can get my bearings and focus. But then when I'm honest with myself, I enjoy it when things are rolling along at a decent nip.


The past week
has been pretty full-on. From a hazy start last Monday, it slowly picked up speed with lots of time on snow, a few evening shifts and even some time at the ice rink (of all places!). I managed to be on snow Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday with some fantastic snowfall and good skiing to be had. Other than that, no huge
epiphanies or discoveries - it's just life as usual. But hey, this is a travel blog...

(Picture: Sunset from the tubing cabin)


Week in review:
Saturday night at Raakel's: It was a busy night at Raakel's with Manuel (from Germany) DJ-ing and the crowd packed out. On the weekends I think Raakel's is starting to become the staff bar, with many of the Big Whiteans
escaping from the tourist hot-spot of Sam's. In any case it was a good crowd on Saturday, and with my freaky violet contact lenses in I managed to get a few strange looks. The best way to start a weekend... Happy couples were the feature of the night, with excessive alcohol, pool tables and bad dancing. Of course, I was just there to watch and take notes.

Sunday night bowling: The tickets crew went bowling in Kelowna as part of our social budget. We shuttle bus-ed it down straight after shift (thank you Happy Valley for taking over my life!) and were soon stuck into steak sandwiches, draught beer and amusing conversation at Freddy's.


A civilised dinner
Tim was asking Aenne how to pronounce various words in German. It started with an innocent inquiry as to greetings, which soon morphed into words for body parts, before degenerating into insults. Precious meanwhile was updating us on her current boy dramas, while Sarah was doing her utmost best to drink her weight in beer. We got through 11 pitchers worth between about 10 of us. I guess that's a good effort? (Picture: Steak sandwiches at Freddy's - Tim, Carla, Kate, Kristi & Tammy)


Medium-rare steak sandwich, a caesar (clamato juice and vodka with a spicy bean on the side
), and more than a few beers later I was on the bowling alley strutting my stuff. The tickets crew was spread over three lanes and starting to get loud. Kristi was high-fiving like she was about to lose her hands, Tim has changed his name to "Paaaanus" in homage to his earlier conversation with Aenne and Zia was running away from my camera.

The night kind of went from there. We played for two hours without break, with people's names slowly changing as the whim took them (or took me, depending on who you asked).
(Picture: Tickets bowling: Tim, Sarah, Gabbi, Tammy, Deb, Steve and his wife)

Enter Lifts
The lift crew were having their appreciation night on the same evening, although they followed a slightly different route than us.
All 70 of them crammed into 2 buses, and drank their way down to Kelowna. Their first stop was the local Irish pub, which they soon discovered (30 pitchers later) was serving a special of 6 shots for $14 dollars. When they left around 8:30pm they were collectively in good spirits. However, their buses were running a little late. (Picture: Chris & Foxy - partners in crime)

The scene: 70-something mid-20s coming out of a tavern into the main street of Kelowna, more than a couple drunk as skunks. Some bright young thing rushes across the road and throws a snowball. A largescale snowball fight ensues, which attracts the attention of a local police patrol. The patrolman pulls over at the sight of this mob, calling for backup. Some snowballs hit his patrol car.

Identifying one potential assailant the cop goes for the hoon, cuffing him and throwing him in the back of the car. In the muddle that ensues, the cop yelling for the youths to keep their distance and the Big White lift crew realising that one of their number has been arrested, one of them sidles up to the other side of the control car and unlocks it in a bid to free his compatriot.


The cop, notices immediately and arrests the bright spark, screaming that he's going to be charged with obstruction of justice and possibly deported. There are now two grinning lifties in the back of the car, the crowd goes nuts. Another patrol car arrives.

Anyway, to cut the story short they end up being liberated (thanks to some influence from the local money) and get back onto their bus to go bowling. They pour into the bowling alley and Foxy is in my face telling me how he was arrested, then Chris rolls over and starts telling me how he almost freed Foxy from the back of a cop car. It was a riot!

We left the bowling alley to the tender mercy of the lifts crew around 10:30 and made our way back up to Big White.
I slept most of the way, although Sam rudely woke me mid-way with a wet finger in the ear. (Picture: Back at Sam's - Hills, Liz and Fluff)

A long night
Sam's was quiet for a Sunday, although I walked in to discover that it was Liz's farewell. The rentals crew was out in force and before I knew it what was left of tickets (Tim, Precious, Kate and I) were on the dance floor by ourselves. By 12:30 I was ready to pack it in. The bacon and egg sandwich just topped off my night.

Monday at Gem: Monday was at Gem with the Westridge gals. The Gem Lake lift was on stand-by, closed because of high winds. We spent the morning talking about travel plans and friends back home. I did a lot of listening.

Back at the Village by 1pm, I was strapped into my skis by 1:30pm and randomly ran into Josh at the lifts. We skiied trees for most of the afternoon and I had a major fall through a pair of closely grown trees on my way back, ripping a nice new scar into my chin. It was bruised and swollen for 3-days afterwards.


Tuesday 'Freaks & Geeks': Sam's had it's final dress up night on Tuesday, entitled 'Freaks & Geeks'. While there were a few convincing freaks out (Precious does a great goth), the Geeks were a standout. It was another fun night at Sam's, with some good pictures and even a few good chats with random people. (Picture: Freaks & Geeks - Chris, Me, Precious, Josh)

Wednesday icing on the cake: Like mid-week icing on a cake, my first day-off was a great snow day. I spent the day barrelling down the slopes and criss-crossing glades.

I spent the day barrelling down the slopes and criss-crossing glades.

Friday split: Friday was my first split-shift since New Years. The morning was flat out at the Ridge, where I sold around $9000 worth of tickets in my three hours there with Aenne. I spent the afternoon skiing with Josh. We hiked up the back of the Black Forest through knee deep powder, puffing clouds of white through red cheeks. I turtled down the Cliff (sliding about 10 metres down a steep slope on my back), before running straight down Sundance, scaring the daylights out of weekend skiiers and a few snowboarders. (Picture: Freaks & Geeks - big-time geeks)

My first Freaky Friday Night Special shift with Tim was just as busy - another $10,000 in sales with lots of multi-day purchases as well as friday night tickets (pa-ching Big White). Trish came up from Kelowna with her cute blonde friend Sarah, to take advantage of the Friday night deal. When I got off work at 7pm I joined them for a few night runs, showing off a little (I admit) on the iced up runs. Both Sarah and Trish kept up pretty well, especially for people who haven't been on snow this season! We enjoyed a civilised dinner at the Copper Kettle, before the gals begged out on account of tiredness and the long drive back home. They've promised to visit again during Spring Break. Hmm...

Sunday on the rink: After the gals left I of course found myself back at Sam's. It was a quieter night, but I still found myself back there until close, chatting to Chris (Skaters @ Happy Valley), Kym (activities) and Carla (retail).

My Sunday was spent at Happy Valley - during the day it was steady, and after a 10 minute wash and change I was back out trying to play ice hockey. Within the first 2 minutes of the game John (the twin) fell and cut his head open, requiring evacuation and stitches.

The rest of the game passed in a messy melee as rentals literally skated rings around the tickets crew. By the end of the game we had 6 players on ice for tickets and 4 for rentals, and they were still out scoring us. My own mad ice scrambling is improving, but I still have some way to go before I think I'll be capable of coordinating my skating (sketchy at best) with swinging a big hockey stick at a puck.


More reflections of the same pond
Apparently we've only 6-weeks left in the season, but some days it still feels like I just got off the plane. It's a mad blur. A procession of faded evenings similar enough to be the same, broken up by days sliding down the mountain in thigh thick snow and shifts spent manning a battle-worn skating rink.

In the dusk of my season I'm getting more reflective; thinking through my time spent here, gazing at the many happy snaps, mulling through what I thought I'd be in for and making sense of how it has panned out. There's still over a month left, but considering how fast time has already passed, that really doesn't feel like such a long time at all. If one thought can sum it all up so far - no regrets. I've met some great new people, made some firm friends and perhaps I'll even take from the whole experience some pearls of wisdom and a few amusing anecdotes (great for those dinner parties back home - joking).

Yet, at the same time I'm excited. I'm looking forward to moving on, to seeing new places and having new adventures with new people. I'm going to travel for a while I think. Keep my own timetable. See what is beyond this little mountain. Find my way across this country and maybe even indulge in the tourist thing.