WARREN'S WORLD: Spring Skiing in Yosemite

Yes, the season is over because some dummy somewhere once said, "It is over at Easter," even though Easter can be a different date every year. Easter Sunday can vary by twenty-eight days because it is the first Sunday, after the first full moon, after the Vernal equinox. The Vernal equinox is March 21st and if it falls on a Friday and the full moon is on Saturday, then the 23rd of March is automatically Easter and we can lose twenty-eight days of riding on a chairlift and skiing, because everyone thinks it's time to go sit on the beach in the dense spring fog somewhere.

On the other hand, if the full moon is on Sunday, March 21st, you will have to wait twenty-eight days for Easter. I have no idea why Easter Sunday is scheduled that way, except some religious guys said it was so a very long time ago. My religion and my church has always been out on the side of a hill somewhere.

I remember the spring of 1947 when the lifts were all shut down because of Easter Sunday and the corn snow was beyond fantastic. Ward Baker and I had driven my 1937 Buick and hauled our eight-foot long, four-foot wide, bedroom & kitchen trailer all over the West. We went from Los Angeles to Yosemite, to Alta, to Sun Valley, to Jackson Hole, to Pikes Peak, to Berthoud Pass and Aspen, and then we returned to Alta that was the only place where the chairlift was still running after Easter.

But the wind had recently roared up the canyon, carrying with it large amounts of evaporated salt from the Great Salt Lake. Neither of us could figure out what kind of wax to use on the salty spring snow, so we packed up our gear and the trailer and headed off in search of the last good snow of the season.

Since we had started our ski trip six months earlier in Yosemite, it was no surprise that this is where we eventually ended up. Badger Pass in Yosemite was also shut down due to "The Easter Sunday lack of interest rule," so we drove our car and trailer to the end of the plowed-out road at Glacier Point. Parking between eight-foot snow banks, we shouldered our heavy packs for the long climb into the Ostrander Lake cabin. We were the only people within eight or ten miles of the cabin and the spring skiing was fantastic. We climbed and skied down Horse Ridge as many as six times each day during the next six days. We also shot a lot of 8mm movie footage that just surfaced from somewhere in the attic a few years ago.

The cabin was very deluxe for us and our moldy sleeping bags (they were smelly, but more than comfortable). Each day by about noon, the corn snow had melted into deep slush and so we napped in the afternoon sun and worked on our surfboard riding tans until the shadows got longer.

The memory of one run on Horse Ridge was preserved with my 35mm, black and white, still camera. Ward is standing in the lower left hand side with his seal-skin climbers wrapped professionally around his waist pointing up at the figure eights the two of us had carved on the side of the mountain for no one except us to appreciate.

However, the photo did make it onto some dinner plates a few years ago. Every time my wife and I serve our dinner guests with our special ski photo dinner dish set and I get half way through cleaning my plate from the good food that Laurie has once again prepared, a lot of very pleasant memories come flooding back to me.

I am sure everyone has some pleasant memory of a church service somewhere. I always return to that spring day in Yosemite for my most memorable day in church.

If I could have one wish granted, it would be for some way to teach skiers and snowboarders to save their cold December days of sliding on two inches of man-made ice and trade them for spring snow on a base that can still be twenty feet deep. Why not sell lift tickets for half price the week or so after Easter? Maybe more people would find out about the awesome side of a snow-covered mountain in the late spring. It's a place that I call my church because there is something that is both spiritual and refreshing about it at the same time.

Editor's Note: This is one in a Tahoetopia series written by Warren Miller, legendary ski cinematographer. For other columns by Warren, click on Warren Miller. Also watch Tahoe TV's Get Out! Tahoe on cable. Here are the Channel numbers: North Lake Tahoe: 14; Truckee/W Shore: 66; South Lake Tahoe: 15; Reno: 3; Carson: 18.

Tahoetopia.com: Where the world stays tuned to Lake Tahoe.


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