| If you don't do it, then don't worry about it at this age. I am an avid skier and we ski here and out west. Kids learned in 3 days in ski school around age 5. My DH doesn't ski so it a me and kids activity. Once they learned we spend time on the slopes together. Otherwise it had to be ski school every time they are out there, skids can't just ski on their own. If they want to Keene as teens they will be able to. It's an expensive hobby so why invest if it's not something your family already enjoys. |
I’m the PP. Why force your kids to learn a sport for social pressure? So what if friends ski but they don’t. You don’t need to keep up with the Jones. The right reason is if they like the sport and want to continue learning it. |
The entire Kennedy clan skis. Need I say more? |
| It's a lot of fun for kids. Especially if they get to go with a group of friends. It's worth getting your kids started if they are interested. |
| Don’t do it if you haven’t started yet, waste of money and time sink |
They could end up seriously injured. Or worse. |
Skiing is not without risks. My nephew broke his leg last winter at 5 because my sister took him on the blues when he was not ready and also tired at the end of the day. We know another family who all wanted to learn to ski and their 5 year old son broke his leg skiing. They never skied again after that. So best is lessons to learn and then practicing with parents and skiing with parents who are good skiers. I don’t see how safe it is to put a kid in lessons and then just let them go at it on their own. That is a recipe for disaster IMO. If you don’t ski, you could put your kid in a multi-week developmental program and they might be competent but that is a lot of time, money, and commitment. They will never be great because you really need to ski more challenging terrain and that entails going out west where the real challenge happens, not these small local mountains. |
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These are some weird responses. OP is not looking to get her son into competitive skiing. You guys just want to be snobby about REAL skiing and whether it’s even worth calling it skiing unless it’s “out west.”
OP - I grew up “out west” and my parents drove me up to the mountain and we took one day of lessons with an instructor. We did the rope thing, bunny hill. We stayed overnight and skied again the next day. That’s it. You can do that again later in the season or just do it once a year. Your kid will know enough to not be at the bottom of the ski totem pole. You don’t need to put your kid in ski school for 5 weeks every year and fly o it to Colorado to learn to ski! Sheesh. |
Don’t risk it. |
I am a lifelong (well, since age 5) skier and I'd concur with others that this isn't the sport for your family. Nothing about it seems to work - it is a cold weather sport (although it's rarely that cold in this area), it is physically demanding which sounds like it isn't a good fit for you or your kids, and one of the best things about it is that it is a family activity. We still ski as a family and my kids are adults. Lessons are great, but young kids really should be skiing with adults or buddies. Sending your 2 kids out on their own is not a good idea, even if you are at the base lodge. |
+1 |