Anonymous wrote: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.
+1
Be upfront and let them decide.
Anonymous wrote:That vacation is a bad fit for him. Invite him on the next one. I bet his parents will be relieved.
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.
Wow! I only reached that stage as an adult to wait for people at the bottom of a run. All through my childhood and early 20s I skied hard all day. Waiting was not an option; eating was an annoyance that had to occur..... and I lived in ski country. I can't imagine a teen with 1 ski trip per year not wanting to utilize all available ski time for skiing.
Where do you get one ski trip per year? OP says they ski often.
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.
Wow! I only reached that stage as an adult to wait for people at the bottom of a run. All through my childhood and early 20s I skied hard all day. Waiting was not an option; eating was an annoyance that had to occur..... and I lived in ski country. I can't imagine a teen with 1 ski trip per year not wanting to utilize all available ski time for skiing.
Anonymous wrote:How do you know he doesn’t ski as well as your son?
I think it’s ok to let him know that your son is doing something with his father one day. Skiing is not that difficult. I’m sure he’d be fine to do his own thing or hang with the brother.
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:If the friend was better would you want them skiing together is it like a father -son special thing and you are using the friend’s skill level as an excuse?