Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm honestly trying to imagine the situation that would require two days away and unless it's a trip into back country, including an early morning skin up ski down situation, I just can't.
So, this other family might also be confused and wonder if it's a weird flex on your part. So, definitely skip the invite.
I'm an excellent skiier and have spent plenty of my life chilling at the bottom of a run waiting for friends to catch up or taking a different run and meeting at the lift. There's a reason you are making something easy hard and I wouldn't subject this other family to whatever it is.
They are signed up to go in the back country with a guide. It’s something they have planned for a long time since you have to be 16 or older.
I would not invite the friend. It's not even like they'd ski separately bit have lunch together. Your son has a trip with his dad planned. Host the kid another time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm honestly trying to imagine the situation that would require two days away and unless it's a trip into back country, including an early morning skin up ski down situation, I just can't.
So, this other family might also be confused and wonder if it's a weird flex on your part. So, definitely skip the invite.
I'm an excellent skiier and have spent plenty of my life chilling at the bottom of a run waiting for friends to catch up or taking a different run and meeting at the lift. There's a reason you are making something easy hard and I wouldn't subject this other family to whatever it is.
They are signed up to go in the back country with a guide. It’s something they have planned for a long time since you have to be 16 or older.
Anonymous wrote:I'm honestly trying to imagine the situation that would require two days away and unless it's a trip into back country, including an early morning skin up ski down situation, I just can't.
So, this other family might also be confused and wonder if it's a weird flex on your part. So, definitely skip the invite.
I'm an excellent skiier and have spent plenty of my life chilling at the bottom of a run waiting for friends to catch up or taking a different run and meeting at the lift. There's a reason you are making something easy hard and I wouldn't subject this other family to whatever it is.
Anonymous wrote:It's understandable that your son wants to ski the harder slopes with his dad but then don't invite the friend. I think the skill issue is distracting from the real issue, which is how to host a guest. Would you let your kid invite a friend for a week at the beach if he would be spending two days with other relatives and leaving the friend with his siblings? My kids know that if they invite a friend to go skiing, then they stick with the friend even if that means the blues and greens.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a lot of fun. Being upfront is good but not that big a deal if he's a good skier, he'll enjoy skiing with the younger son. Skiing without your BFF is better than not skiing at all. Don't doubt yourself, just ask with the caveat but it doesn't need to be a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would invite him on a different vacation
This will be our only vacation this year.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds too complicated.
Kids at different skill levels on a ski trip is just flat out stupid—especially if you’re inviting the weaker skier. Then when you factor in that this is the day after Christmas and it’s break is barely a week and it’s just terrible.