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Skier Wendy Fisher’s Tips for Families at the Terrain Park

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Stay-at-home-mom (sort of): Wendy at work on the steeps of CB [courtesy Wendy Fisher]

Officially it鈥檚 spring, but here at Rippers, we鈥檙e determined to squeeze every last drop out of winter. In honor of fresh snow in the Northwest, epic powder onslaughts in the Sierra, and a good foot right up the road, I checked in with extreme skier Wendy Fisher for tips on living the life as a ski family and getting your little shredders off the groomers and into the terrain park鈥攕afely.

Fisher spent eight years on the U.S. Ski Team, dominated the extreme skiing circuit in the 90s, won two world titles, and ripped crazy lines on camera in dozens of ski movies. These days she lives with her husband and two sons, Aksel, 6, and Devin, 4, in听, where she works as an . Not that she has settled down, exactly: Fisher logs more days on the slopes now than she did when she was competing鈥攊n part because she鈥檚 chasing her kids all over the mountain but also because she鈥檚 smarter about carving out ski time just for her. Fisher took a break from riding chairlifts to talk about overcoming tragedy and moving past fear鈥攅ven pro skiers get freaked when their four-year-old goes big鈥攁nd spills her secrets for bringing up kids who can bring it in the park.听

Living the dream: Wendy and her ski family in Crested Butte, CO

How has parenthood affected your skiing?
I feel like I鈥檓 a stronger skier now than I was back then. Now that I鈥檓 home a lot, I have a lot more skiing hours and I ski all these hard lines in Crested Butte, and in that way I鈥檝e gained more confidence and am a better skier.

Wow, that鈥檚 encouraging.
Before kids, I backcountry skied a lot. It鈥檚 great exercise, but you get one run, maybe two. Or you go up to Alaska and sit and wait for a perfect day. You get a run or two. Then you to Europe and you travel a lot and you get a few days here and there. It鈥檚 not like you鈥檙e charging everyday. But now I ski almost everyday. With my kids, yes, it鈥檚 slow and I鈥檓 snow plowing, but I鈥檓 making an effort to get out there on my own, too.

How do you find the time?
I鈥檓 very fortunate that my parents move here for the winter, so I can work and then ski for me. My parents have their ski days, which I try not to interfere with, but if something comes up or it鈥檚 a powder day, they鈥檙e there to help or take them skiing. I put Aksel in half-day kindergarten, so I can ski with him everyday. We live one minute from the ski area, so we鈥檙e on the hill between 1 or 1:30. He鈥檚 probably gotten 80-something days in this year so far. My four-year-old has 50-60 days in. It鈥檚 been a really crappy winter for adults, but it鈥檚 great for kids.

When did you teach your boys to ski?
Aksel was 14 months when we first got him on skis. He actually did a snowplow stop at that age, but that was maybe a fluke. Mostly you鈥檙e going through the motions for a good year and a half, where they鈥檙e just standing and you鈥檙e stopping them. They really start turning it on at three. I really believe that the younger they are when they get these skills, the better. It sets them up for life.

Did they take lessons from anyone else?
I taught them to ski until they were three, and then I put them in lessons. I wanted to teach my kids to listen to other people. It鈥檚 important to learn how to ski with a group, with other kids. They can鈥檛 ski with me all the time.

So now they ski in the terrain park a lot?
It鈥檚 all about going to the park. It鈥檚 all they want to do. Being a professional skier, that was the one advantage I did have was that when my kids were two, I started taking them into the park. I鈥檇 go straight with them between my legs, then the jump would come and I鈥檇 fly in the air with them. Aksel just got his 360 down. Devin likes the boxes鈥攈e鈥檚 so comfortable in the air. He鈥檚 doing rainbow boxes, he鈥檚 doing step-down boxes. He鈥檚 still going straight, but he鈥檚 able to air over the gap. It鈥檚 super fun to give them the air awareness.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=SRredIpxXlQ%C2%A0

What are your secrets for teaching them freestyle?
We鈥檝e got a trampoline, and I take them to gymnastics lessons. I think it鈥檚 super important if you鈥檙e a ski family or a snowboard family. We live in the mountains. They watch the X Games. They need to have air awareness because this is their path. Whether or not they keep it up, I want them to have the proper training. It doesn鈥檛 have to be super structured gymnastics, just a tramp, foam pits, and maybe an instructor.

Also, I communicate a lot about the park. I taught them that they have to say 鈥榙ropping鈥 before they start because you can鈥檛 just go and cut people off. You have to have manners out there. I make sure they give each other space. I want to let them know that there is structure. That鈥檚 another thing I do with kids. I shadow them like crazy. If it gets crowded, I鈥檓 constantly playing block. I鈥檓 making sure no one is there that they鈥檙e going to throw off. I teach them about looking uphill, and intersections. It鈥檚 the repetition, over and over.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=a0fxsmZj6ck%C2%A0

Do you travel to ski?
We haven鈥檛 gone anywhere at all. The kids don鈥檛 care. At this age, they are so happy and content going down the same runs. It brings me back to my days at Squaw. We skied the major crap and we loved it. The kids don鈥檛 want to stay on the groomed trails, or at least the kids I know. They want to play in the woods.This is why I fell in love with skiing because it鈥檚 an adventure out there. I still teach them the safety: You have to watch for stumps. Of course, they know when they鈥檙e ready. Kids don鈥檛 really step up until they鈥檙e ready鈥攖hey鈥檙e too scared. It鈥檚 a natural thing. But then when they are ready, that鈥檚 when you have to watch out. They鈥檙e gone.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=T9oSUnpXh8Q%C2%A0

What's your strategy for getting them out on the hill when they're really little?
I didn鈥檛 ask them too much if they wanted to go skiing because kids usually say no, and once they say no and you want to take them skiing, that鈥檚 when you鈥檙e hosed. I was like, 鈥楢llright, this is what we do. This is our routine: Brush your teeth and get ready for skiing.鈥 As they get stronger and get more control of their body and they get that freedom, and the next thing you know, they forget about having hot cocoa in the lodge or going home after two runs. Until that point, I didn鈥檛 want to force my kid to ski all day.

Do you think your kids will start competing?
Yeah, they want to do it. Aksel says he鈥檚 going to be a park skier. But he loves to ski gates, too. He knows I was a racer, but he idolizes the park skiers. If he鈥檚 a pro skier, great. If he鈥檚 not鈥 I don鈥檛 care. It鈥檚 not like I鈥檓 trying to create the next Seth Morrison. I just want us to be a ski family and go to Austria and eat yummy food and go to South America as a family and rip around.

How do you deal with worry as a parent?
I don鈥檛 know. It鈥檚 a double edge sword. Aksel skis all the double blacks. That鈥檚 what scares me the most. Sometimes I ski in front of him to be there in case he falls鈥擨鈥檒l catch him down the chute. Now he鈥檚 at the age I can鈥檛 do that as much. He鈥檒l be going down steep, steep run, and I鈥檒l be crossing my fingers. As a mom it tears you apart to watch it. But he鈥檚 capable of doing it and he鈥檚 at that level. My parents did it with me. I skied the Palisades at 6. One brother carried my skis and the other brother carried my poles up the ladder to the top. I鈥檓 an athlete, and I can鈥檛 help but want my kid to be athletic and the best time to learn is now, so you can鈥檛 let that fear overtake you, even though at times, I鈥檓 panicking. This is how I grew up. Kids can do aggressive sports at a young age, and they are living life to the fullest. My brother died at 13. And I saw him on the hill, at Squaw. So I have this all in my head.

I鈥檓 so sorry. I had no idea.
He loved skiing and it was his life. It sucks that he died, and I hate it and I still think about it. But you want your kid to love life and have fun and I don鈥檛 want him locked up indoors because of my fear. I鈥檓 kind of taking more risks than the average person because of my ski background. But there are amazing little kids ripping around here whose parents aren鈥檛 pushing it as much as I am. All these kids are going to be rippers鈥攖hey鈥檙e going to catch up. I tell my kids that: Don鈥檛 get ahead ahead of yourself.

Do you ever worry about them burning out?
Some people say 鈥業 don鈥檛 want my kids to burn out.鈥 And I think, 鈥榟mm, I never did.鈥 Well, I take that back. I did burn out on the US ski team鈥攖he intensity of competition burns you out. But if you鈥檙e just having lots of fun and feeling the joy of skiing and you鈥檙e good and you鈥檙e loving it, that鈥檚 not going to burn you out. Don鈥檛 worry about it now. Just get the kids out there.

Fisher鈥檚 Top 5 Ski-Family Shortcuts:

1. Get a locker. 鈥淚f you can afford it, it鈥檚 totally worth it. Schlepping all that gear takes a lot of energy. Get your kids dressed at home, but leave their helmet, boots, mittens in the locker.鈥

2. Don鈥檛 force skiiing in the beginning. 鈥淲e鈥檇 get Aksel all geared up, and then he wouldn鈥檛 want to put on his skis. But he鈥檇 play at the base area, trying to step into adult skis. He enjoyed his day at the mountain, even though he didn鈥檛 put on skis. That's what's important.鈥

3. Go big鈥攖ogether. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 need to catch a lot of air鈥攚ell, I catch a lot of air sometimes鈥攜ou just hold them around their waist, under their arms, and go straight off the boxes together. Watchtheir tips so that they鈥檙e landing straight.”

4. Teach air awareness and etiquette. Enroll them in gymnastics classes. Let them practice their tricks while you spot them on a trampoline. Remind them constantly 听to look uphill before they go, don鈥檛 drop in when it鈥檚 not their turn, and watch for stumps and obstacles in the trees.听

5. Let them be kids. If they want to ski the same runs over and over, and hit the park incessantly, let them. “Most kids just do not care about carving corduroy at 9 in the morning.”

;听

鈥擪atie Arnold
@raisingrippers听

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