this post was submitted on 24 Oct 2023
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Don't let this discourage anyone from trying. Yes it sounds absurd when put that way, and yes the costs are getting out of hand at most major resorts, but it can be an absolutely amazing sport/hobby/passion/lifestyle.
The first few times add up cost wise, hard to get around that, but once you figure out what you're doing and make the decision the sport is for you then it gets better. With a season pass and my own gear I'm <$30cad a day on the hill, and that's at a major BC resort.
Still a big wad of cash for gear and a pass up front, and definitely coming from a privileged lens to say that it's affordable, but lots of people spend way more than that on take out, coffee, booze, streaming services, etc. All about priorities!
Grew up near the mountains, learned skiing in kindergarten, went skiing so frikkin much as a teenager and young adult.
Haven't been skiing in years now, mostly because it's no longer affordable. Used to go skiing in the afternoon, just after getting out of school, but all those little lifts have closed because there's not enough snow any more. Skiing resorts used to be nearby and affordable, but they're no longer an option, either.
There was a scandal a few years ago with one of the bigger resorts because people had bought season passes, but even at higher altitude there were only a couple of weeks of good snow, and the resort refused to refund. They've since put in new water ponds and pumps and snow cannons, and they invested in new snowcats and trail groomers and all that jazz, but ultimately that just means that tickets are now incredibly expensive, while the season is still significantly shorter than it used to be.
That leaves traveling all the way to one of the big resorts high up in the mountains, and that's just not economical. The best option for going there is really going on a ski vacation for a week, buying a week pass, staying in a hotel, maybe getting some combo deal...
But essentially, the proposition has changed from "want to spend 20 bucks and go skiing for a day" to "want to spend 2,000 bucks and go skiing for a week?"
On the flip side, alpine hiking is pretty great, and it's still pretty affordable!
Good points all around. I've personally skiid (skied? Ski'id?) a few times, not my jam, but I can absolutely understand why people like it. Economics of scale quickly dampens the cost of an individual day and if someone likes it, don't let an internet meme discourage you.