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Skiing: It's never too late to learn

Have the joys of skiing passed you by for ever? Roger Mills says it ain't necessarily so

Saturday 30 January 1999 01:00 GMT
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SKIING USED to seem to me a bit like playing a musical instrument. If you wanted to do it you had to start young. Having reached the second half ofmy thirties without having got going, it never occurred to me to think about trying. Then, at the ripe old age of 38, I married someone who could skirather well, and a year later I was heading for Passo Rolle, a small resort in the Italian Dolomites.

SKIING USED to seem to me a bit like playing a musical instrument. If you wanted to do it you had to start young. Having reached the second half ofmy thirties without having got going, it never occurred to me to think about trying. Then, at the ripe old age of 38, I married someone who could skirather well, and a year later I was heading for Passo Rolle, a small resort in the Italian Dolomites.

I had heard that ski resorts were full of distressingly able five-year- olds and, even though there was a handful of other anxious-looking oldie beginnerson the slopes, sharing the discomfort didn't seem likely to make the self-consciousness any easier. But within half an hour, the problems of stayingupright were taking up all the mental capacity I had available.

What I wasn't expecting was how fundamentally unnatural the physical experience of skiing would seem at first. Take turning corners. Like mostpeople, my feelings about cornering were based on being on a bicycle, where, if you lean to the left, you go to the left. Nothing so simple for the skiworld. On skis, when you lean to the left you go to the right.

Then there is the question of what to do on a steep slope. Faced with a slope, my instinct was to lean back. But if you lean away from the slope whenyou are on skis, your legs shoot from under you. Making yourself lean forward is the trick, instantly producing a sense of stability. But try gettingyour body to do that on day one.

"Adults think too much," says Fiona Coats, an instructor who runs one of the ski schools at Aviemore. "Teaching children is easy because they justcopy what you do without really realising it. With older people you can see them concentrating too hard, trying to grasp the technique intellectually."

Chilling out is all very well, but skiing, at the very beginning, can be quite alarming. The abiding image I have of my first day is of standing at the top ofthe nursery slope feeling both distinctly uneasy, and that I was rather pathetic to be feeling distinctly uneasy.

So when, exactly, does the fun start? It didn't take long to acquire a degree of competence. Unless you are critically lacking in co-ordination, almostanyone, however old, is getting down the nursery slopes comfortably after four or five days. Another week and you're weaving past stricken beginnersand wondering if it's time you went back to the hire shop to get your equipment upgraded.

"Getting fit before you start helps enormously," says Fiona Coats. "Many people come here having done no exercise at all, thinking that skiing is justeffortlessly gliding downhill."

Coats recommends running, cycling or any exercise that gets the legs moving. Another, personal tip, is going for one-to-one tuition in the early days. Itmay be more expensive but it will have you on your feet (and staying on them) much sooner.

If you are wondering how many years you'll get out of it if you start at 40, remember that in their downhill racing competitions, the Norwegians have anover-80s category.

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