Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you all for your sharing. It’s really helpful. I have no intention to make it a sport for her at this age, but rather have her on snow for longer time ( for 2020 winter, she was on snow for 10 days) . She likes skiing, so I initially thought joining a team would make it a regular activity, and make our life easier ( we are bad skiers) .
Thank you everyone.
Glad you came back to add more info. Take her skiing a lot, sign her up for kids lessons/groups sometimes so she can be around other little skiers. Take some lessons yourself. She will quickly outgrow your skiing ability but you can still ski together and have fun.
-Race parent
Anonymous wrote:Seasonal programs are great. The kids really get to know each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Out west we have Saturday or Sunday ski programs for kids starting at age 4, then over time the kids get into a more formal racing program. No parent riders required. I don't have any advice but I understand why OP asked the question, as it's really nice to have a weekend day to spend with your spouse while your child is out skiing with the same couple kids and instructor every week. Good luck.
Agree these programs are great. Whitetail in Pennsylvania does this. My kids did it for two years and can ski most trails comfortably now. It’s a great program but hard to get into - you have to call way in advance and there is usually a waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:Out west we have Saturday or Sunday ski programs for kids starting at age 4, then over time the kids get into a more formal racing program. No parent riders required. I don't have any advice but I understand why OP asked the question, as it's really nice to have a weekend day to spend with your spouse while your child is out skiing with the same couple kids and instructor every week. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you all for your sharing. It’s really helpful. I have no intention to make it a sport for her at this age, but rather have her on snow for longer time ( for 2020 winter, she was on snow for 10 days) . She likes skiing, so I initially thought joining a team would make it a regular activity, and make our life easier ( we are bad skiers) .
Thank you everyone.
Anonymous wrote:If your child is interested in ski racing or you have a particular interest and think your child might be a good fit, ski a lot. Until they hit the age where race programs start (and even after) just take them skiing all over the mountain. Travel to other mountains, have lots of fun and spend good quality time outside. Skiing is such a technical sport where success comes in large part from time on snow, if you can get them more of that now and they still love to be out there, then they may like a race program. Once they start racing you will spend less time with them outside so soak it up now and keep finding opportunities to do it with them.
-signed a ski race parent of 10 years
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you all for your sharing. It’s really helpful. I have no intention to make it a sport for her at this age, but rather have her on snow for longer time ( for 2020 winter, she was on snow for 10 days) . She likes skiing, so I initially thought joining a team would make it a regular activity, and make our life easier ( we are bad skiers) .
Thank you everyone.
Thank you for resurrecting a dead thread
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you all for your sharing. It’s really helpful. I have no intention to make it a sport for her at this age, but rather have her on snow for longer time ( for 2020 winter, she was on snow for 10 days) . She likes skiing, so I initially thought joining a team would make it a regular activity, and make our life easier ( we are bad skiers) .
Thank you everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Hi guys, any ski team / program recommendation for five year old? She can do blue trail and very easy black trails. Love skiing.
We live in McLean. Ideally 2 hour drive or less.
Thank you very much.