You can’t go home if you’re already there
SUZIE HARRISON
I tried to go home for the holidays. I had been fantasizing about
getting back on the slopes and reliving my ski bum years. But a
curious thing happened on my vertical excursion down the mountain --
I got a strong longing for my sun-kissed Laguna abode.
My vacation was at the No. 1 ski resort in North America,
otherwise known as Vail, as ranked by Ski Magazine.
I used to live in Colorado and know skiing the Rockies well. I was
the ski and snowboard writer for the Colorado Daily in Boulder for
four years. Boarding Vail was like being home. Except Laguna Beach is
now my home. It was weird because I missed Laguna Beach; I align
myself here instead of there, though I once thought of myself as a
mountain girl.
Picture a Bavarian village -- Vail is the quintessential winter
wonderland. The perfect peaks were immersed in layers of snow. In the
pedestrian village, horse-drawn carriages, ice sculptures and holiday
lights were lighting up the town, adding to its picture-perfect
seasonal essence.
The main walkway into the village is through the covered bridge --
to get onto Bride Street, one of the main thoroughfares in town.
Though I hadn’t made that trek in years, it felt familiar -- the look
of Gore Creek as it rumbled by with snowy boulders in place. On the
other side was the clock tower and the village, which was filled with
people doing their holiday shopping -- or, like me, heading up to
ride the Vista Bahn chair lift to experience the 5,289 skiable acres.
Last time I skied Vail they had a mere 4,000-plus acres. When some
friends and I lived in Vail right out of college, we chose the route
of being ski bums instead of rushing into the real world thing. Our
days consisted not of 9 to 5, but 11 at 11. That meant meeting up
with everyone at the top of chair 11 at 11 a.m.
Back then I would get in as many hours of vertical each day, as
many days each week. However, things have changed. Perhaps I was
doing a little California dreaming on such a winter’s day, but it was
a lot, lot, lot colder than I recalled. Instead of spending every
waking moment on the slopes, I found I would take a few runs and then
go inside to chill, I mean warm up.
I asked myself, “When did I become this person?” -- kind of
wishing the weather was more like summer and I could be biking up
Vail Mountain instead of snowboarding.
I use to tell anyone who would want to listen that my favorite
thing in the world was snowboarding Vail, doing runs in the chair 11
area. I still had a blast, but though my board was planted on the
mountain, images flashed in my mind of all the fun things I dig in
Laguna, and I missed the beach.
Then the powder started to build under my board -- giving the
feeling of floating on a cloud. But I found that it was kind of hard
to enjoy the best feeling in the world when I was numb from the cold.
I guess I want it all -- the warmth, the sun, Vail and Laguna at the
same time.
Yes, I liked my holidays and that rocky mountain high in Colorado,
but I found it’s a good thing I Iive here. I know Vail isn’t going
anywhere. Though Vail remains my favorite ski destination, Laguna is
the place I like to call home.
* SUZIE HARRISON is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at (949) 494-4321 or
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