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Down the Drain Mt. Baker Style
By Lee Crane
Well, I say, I wanted to race, but my entry arrived late and I was put on
a waiting list (number 42 to be exact) so I couldn't get in. It's not a bad
excuse. AZP snowboard shop owner Brian Harper used it. So did Bonfire teamrider
Sarah Trounweiser, and TransWorld Snowboarding's Senior Editor Billy Miller.
They all said they couldn't race because they arrived too late. Craig Kelly
and Grandpa Jeff Fulton, two of Baker's truly legendary riders were in Japan
this year and couldn't make it. Rumor has it Craig was "working on his
snowmobile" last year. I got the feeling everyone was trying to come up with
a reason to not race. After all, Craig probably wants to hang on to the claim
that's he's won every Mt. Baker Banked Slalom he's entered.
Kris Jamieson had the second
fastest time behind Terje Haak-
onsen in run number one. Unfor-
tunately, he couldn't hold on in
run number two and finished 9th overall.
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At least I got on the waiting list. It's just that when I arrived at Mt.
Baker's brand new White Salmon Lodge I saw the registration line and right
behind it a mountain of untracked powder--excuse number two. Really, who
wants to wait around at the top of a race course when miles of powder are
just waiting to be exploited. (This excuse was invented by Canadian snowboard
pioneer Ken Achenbach, who at one point insisted he was still a pro halfpipe
rider even though he never competed. "Hey, it's not my fault there's always
great powder during the contests," he'd say.) Exactly my point.
The Mt. Baker Legendary Banked Slalom is a rare thing in the world of sell-out,
money grubbing, snowboard contests. In spite of it's world-wide popularity
it has remained a soulful event where riders race solely to have fun and
compare themselves against others on one day, at one mountain.
In it's ten year history (eleven if you were in race organizer Gwen Howat's
class at Seahome High School) the Banked Slalom has come to symbolize the
last honest snowboard event in the world. There are no judges. No beer companies
co-opting the groove. In fact, all the prizes are donated by snowboard companies
or individuals who are stoked by the contest. Tradition of this kind can't
be manufactured by MTV. The only way to be a part of the Mt. Baker Banked
Slalom tradition is to drop in and charge the evil bastard like a man. Why
else would world Terje Haakonsen travel all the way to Glacier, Washington
to compete? It's certain not for the prize money. It's just man vs. nature
in a snow filled gully.
RACE REGRET
Sitting in the White Salmon Lodge during an award ceremony that seemed to
give a prize to nearly everyone who made it to the finish line, regret began
inching in on me like rising floodwaters. Not because I saw K2's Luke Edgar
walk away with a Gold Duct Tape Trophy, a free board, and a kickin' Mt. Baker
Legendary Banked Slalom letterman's jacket for being the fastest of the old
men. And not because it would have been one of the few times in my life that
I could say I'd competed in an event with the best snowboarder in the world.
It had more to do with missing out on being a part of tradition.
The lodge was packed to overflowing with people who had put the money down,
challenged the evil serpent to a wrestling match, and kicked ass. I, on the
other hand had done nothing. I might as well have been home in a Barcalounger
watching the Super Bowl with my hands buried in a bag of Cheetos.
Sure, I hiked the Hemispheres and took off down the ridge to get waist deep
first tracks. I toured the mountain with reluctant host Jeff Galbraith, senior
editor of Snowboarder magazine and was reminded again why so many people
claim Mt. Baker as their favorite resort. But I wasn't part of tradition
because I wussed. I cheesed. I flushed tradition down the drain.
But you know what? It won't happen again. Next year when someone asks me
if I raced Baker I won't be forced into making up any silly excuses. Next
time my answer will be simple. It will be three tiny words. And they will
be, "Yeah, I raced."
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