In 1937, when Dad was five-years-old, he learned to ski in his hometown, Partenkirchen, Germany. His first pair of skis were handmade.
Years
later when he started racing, he crashed while training and broke his femur. He
said it was hours before ski patrollers found him because he’d flown off the course
and into the trees.
While
he was in the hospital, with his leg in traction and strapped to a sky hook,
bombs shook the building. Nurses ran through the ward shouting for patients to
get under their beds. Dad laughs when he tells the story and says all he could
do was put a pillow over his head.
Dad has skied all his life but took a two-year hiatus when he was 88 years old so he could have a long-over-due knee replacement. After the surgery, he exercised. He walked. He exercised some more. He was determined to ski again.
On
January 10, 2023, we arrived at the Mt. Norquay ski resort, outside of Banff, well before the lifts opened. I
forced myself to slow down - my walking, my talking (I can be a chatterbox). I wanted to focus on Dad and be helpful without him asking.
Boots
on, skis on, poles in hand, we headed to the beginner hill. I stayed beside
him as he tested out sliding and then climbing up the slope. Each time he climbed
a bit higher.
Snow
plow turns first. Then the stem christie maneuver. The parallel turns proved to be trickier. Dad’s new knee worked just fine and the leg slid nicely into place. But
the old knee, which was used to being in charge for decades, was pushy and uncooperative.
It rushed ahead of the uphill ski and Dad would have to stop to reposition
himself.
After a few equipment adjustments and more practice, Dad was ready to go up the lift.
“Can you ask the liftie to slow it down?” he said as we got our tickets scanned at the Cascade chairlift.
I took a breath and gave a silent prayer to whomever was listening.
“Can
you please slow it down,” I said to the lift operator. “He’s ninety. Testing
out his new knee.”
“No
problem,” the Aussie accented girl replied. “Just wave to the operator at the top and
he’ll slow it down again for you to get off.”
“Perfect.”
The
chair swung around and scooped us up. Dad scanned the run. He was quiet. So was
I. As we got to the last tower I waved at the guy in the hut. He flagged a
thumbs up. I nodded.
“I
don’t know if I can stand,” Dad said.
I
moved right next to him and squeezed his bicep. “I’ll just shuck you off if you
can’t get up.”
He
laughed. “You would, wouldn’t you?”
It
took a few runs but soon his perfect parallel turns, quiet body and graceful
carving cut across and down the slope.
The
smile on his face, the sweat dripping down his cheeks and the twinkle in his
eyes made all my fears and angst melt away.
He did it. Dad skied again.
Watch Dad ski again: Dad Skiing Again - 90 years young - YouTube
You
can contact me at: bbaker.write@gmail.com
Summer
of Lies: Baker, Barbara:9780228615774: Books - Amazon.ca
What
About Me?: Sequel to Summer of Lies : Baker, Barbara: Amazon.ca: Books
What a great story. Congrats to your dad. May he enjoy his skis for along time
ReplyDeleteThank you. He's my super hero.
DeleteWhat a wonderful story of recovery and determination. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI hope to be that determined when I'm ninety. Thanks for reading my post.
Delete