Friday, 26 February 2016


The 2016 Carter Classic
 

18 Teams signed up for fun and racing in support of Silver Star Adaptive Snow Sports and as nearly always seems to be the case... for a bluebird day on the mountain race course.
 
 
 
The event raised OVER $17,000.00 in support of SSASS!
It was a very exciting day.  It lived up to its logo, a tremendously successful FUNdrai$er!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



The "Bear Essentials" pose for a last picture.  Watch that bear, someone might decide to chase him down the mountain!
 


Moving up to the gates.  Watch that sit skier, Blake Harper, he's going to shred powder and flap those gates!


 
"Edison's Swashbucklers" wait for the first run
 

And won first prize for team costume!

Energizer Bunny races tot he finish!
All abilities and all ages!



 

Thanks so much to all of the many participants, sponsors and organizers to again made this SSASS day at Silver Star and who supported our efforts and providing snowsports experiences "without barriers" for local, regional and students from afar who visit the star.

Thursday, 25 February 2016



Meg's Story: How SSASS Set her Free
 

Meg McIntrye skiing in this year's Carter Classic
The first time I saw Meg McIntrye ski, I was surprised to learn she was a student with SSASS (Silver Star Adaptive Snow Sports).  She’s your quintessential Aussie: energetic and friendly, with a sunshine smile, and a twinkle in her eye.  A multi-coloured tuft of hair extends out from the front of her helmet.  And she is a very good skier, with that smooth style of someone who grew up with skis on her feet.

Meg started skiing at age 7.  He father had been a pioneer in the early days of skiing in Australia.  He and his buddies had built a back country lodge in 1950/51, in the Perisher Valley, located in the Snowy Mountains, a major ski area today.

The family loaded up the 5 kids with their wooden skis and hand-made jumpers and mittens and made the 8 hour journey from Sydney to the lodge every opportunity they had.  This made for an idyllic childhood and resulted in Meg developing a deep passion for skiing which has never waned.

 She was an athletic kid taking up track and field, cricket and field hockey.  At age 10 a sport injury introduced her to the world of sport medicine.  This experience gave her the inspiration to become and Physiotherapist.  During Uni, she only accepted student placements in the south so she could ski as much as possible but then, after graduation she accepted a ‘short-term’ position up in Port Macquarie Base Hospital in northern New South Wales where she morphed from a big city girl to a small-centre country girl.  This transition involved participation in local sports.  And soon she was both a participant and the official (or unofficial) team physio.  To this day she calls Port Macquarie home.

Her skill both at sport and as a physio became noticed and soon she was participating at a state level.  When she was asked to become the Physio for the Australian women’s cricket team she decided she needed more knowledge and returned to school in Perth to take sports physio.  Not long after she expanded her role, becoming the physio for the Women’s National Australian field hockey team.  That role took her to the Atlanta Olympics in 1996 where the Australian National ‘Hockeyroos’ won gold.

After the Atlanta Olympics, she returned to University to obtain a Master’s degree.   Around this time she was asked to become the Deputy Director of the Physiotherapy Centre for the 2000 Olympics/Para Olympics in Sydney.  While continuing her job in Port Macquarie, she took on this huge new challenge which encompassed ensuring physiotherapy services were available for all sports, training venues and for every participating country.

“My involvement in sport has taught me important lessons for life”, she tells me.  “You need to learn to work within the rules and with a team and to work under pressure.  You need to learn to win and to lose”. Life has presented Meg with many challenges and she’s needed all these life skills.

 The hectic pace continued until the end of the Commonwealth Games held in Melbourne in 2002.  Then she settled back into life in Port Macquarie and a full time private practice.  She also had to come to grips with the annoying and bizarre symptoms she had been experiencing for some time: occasionally losing sight in one eye, tingling hands and numbness in herlegs.   The diagnosis was Multiple Sclerosis.

Meg a few years ago with SSASS Instructor Colette Laplante, and outriggers
 
The hot weather of Australia is not tolerated well by persons with MS.  So when Meg heard that one of her clients was going off to BC to ski all summer (winter in BC) and she discovered the unique relationship of house swapping between Port Macquarie and Vernon/Silver Star, she and her partner Judi were over here by the next ski season.

That was 9 years ago and they have returned every year since.  The first couple years Met felt so well that her skiing improved despite her diagnosis.  But MS being the erratic and progressive condition that it is, presented more challenges with the passing of time. 

When she arrived here 4 years ago, she was unwell and very discouraged.  She worried that she did not have the strength to stand long enough to do one run.  Someone mentioned SSASS to her, maybe they could help…
 
“It was not easy to show up at SSASS and ask for help”, she tells me.  But she found her initial visit and conversation with SSASS instructor Colette LaPlante to be encouraging.  She learned to use outriggers (essentially ski-poles with little ski-blades on the bottom).  She found they took a huge load off her legs, and she could get down the mountain with less effort.  But most of her SSASS training has focused on technique, to make her a more efficient skier. She has joined the SSASS race team to work on her technique and says that on good days she actually skis better now. But all days are not good and she has to cope with her MS symptoms which bother her much more when she is not on skis.   “Skiing has always given me a sense of freedom and SSASS has set me free again”

Meg, proud member of the SSASS Race Team

Meg is a huge supporter of the Carter Classic Memorial Dual Slalom, SSASS’s annual FUNdrai$er.  Most years she mobilizes several teams to participate as well as participating herself in the recreational race which is open to skiers/boarders of all ages and abilities.  This year’s Carter Classic was held last  Saturday Feb 20 and Meg was busy enjoying the special comradery of getting local and visiting, old and young, able bodies and disabled skiers together. This year, in conjunction with the Carter Classic, SSASS held  a ‘disAbility Awareness Day’ in the Village where the public could see and try out some of the equipment SSASS uses with its clients.  The day with finished with the draw for the No Barriers raffle.   For more info:  www.ssass.bc.ca

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, 3 February 2016

Best Ski Day of 2016
 
A month ago yesterday, January 2, was our BEST ski day for the whole year.  Regardless of what  will happen over the next couple months up at Silver Star Mountain Resort nothing can compare with the thrill of January 2.  That was the day Jen went skiing.

 
Its not every day that we get a visitor who has taken an all-day flight from Halifax to Edmonton, followed by an 11 hour road trip just to ski at our mountain.  But then there is not a lot that is  ordinary or conventional about Jen.
We've known Jen since she was twelve. We moved in across the street from her family in a small Alberta town and soon she was our go-to baby sitter for our girls who were five and two years old.  We've been friends ever since. 
She was bright, precocious and talented and we instinctively knew she would be someone who would have a full life, someone who would make a difference.  Her early teen years were busy with piano lessons, ballet and Ukrainian dancing.  She was on the school basketball team and a top academic student.  After high school she registered at U of A, took a year of Physiotherapy.  Then, due to personal circumstances, she transferred to King's University College.  After completing a degree in social sciences, it was time to leave her comfort zone and head off by herself to the other side of the country to complete a journalism degree at The University of King's College in Halifax. After a short stint back in Alberta, Jen moved back to Halifax and, to this day, she calls Halifax home.  
She held positions at a couple social agencies but realized that she could not engineer the social changes she wanted.  So she returned to school and completed a Master's degree in Urban Planning. She then worked for the Ecology Action Centre in Halifax for five years first as the sustainable transportation coordinator and then started the Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) Alliance, a network of community groups from rural  and urban parts of the municipality working to make Halifax more sustainable.

Jen and her boyfriend Tom enjoying a horse-drawn sleigh ride early New Year's Eve at Silver Star Mountain Resort
In recent years she has completed her Masters degree in Fine Arts and has written a book, a memoir about her experience with Multiple Sclerosis. 
At age 15 Jen was diagnosed with MS. Now at 38, due to the extreme aggressiveness of this disease, she has advanced to full quadriplegia.  However the progression of the disease has not stopped her from living a vital and productive life or having a wicked sense of humour!  Currently she continues as a member for  the Halifax Community Health Board and the President of Rainbow Refugee Association of Nova Scotia

Jen surrounded by a wreath of bras  Photo credit Jordan Blackburn at The Coast 

When she discovered that there were opportunities for persons with disabilities to ski she was more than interested.  She found two small local hills but wanted to try skiing on the 'real' thing, at a Western Canadian mountain resort. So she jumped at the chance to visit Silver Star Mountain Resort and go out with a couple of  'stage-coachers' with SSASS (Silver Star Adaptive Snow Sports)

Jen and Tom New Year's Eve 2015 at Brewers Pond, silver Star Mountain Resort
Early on Sunday January 2, we drove up to the Star, through the dull valley cloud into a bright sunny day.  The spruce and pine were laden with fresh snow and the ski runs were laid with smooth corduroy.  It was -5 degrees.  A perfect ski day!

 
 Jen's 'ski team': stage-coachers Paul Lawson and Rob Vat, physio Marnie Melnyk and photographer Richie Leslie met Jen outside  the NATC building to help pull/push her 370 pound wheelchair into the SSASS room.  There they transferred her into a MountainMan sit-ski.  This involved harnesses, a neck brace, multiple pieces of foam, a sleeping bag, a helmet with mini-bungee cords to connect it to the frame of the sit-ski and a bit of duct tape.  After a spin around the Village and a couple trial runs on the Magic Carpet the team was off to catch a ride on the Comet Chair.
The snow was butter-smooth and the crowds were sparse.  Jen gave the okay to speed things up and we streaked down the mountain shredding powder. Four  times up the Comet chair, twice up Silver Fox chair and once up Silver Queen chair.  Then down the mountain at exhilarating speed.   It was awesome. A smile was glued to her face for the whole two and 1/2 hours. 
Hands down the best ski day ever!

Celebrating a successful ski trip with lunch at Sparkling Hill on Jan 3

Jen's home now in Nova Scotia and on a mission to find an adaptive ski program closer to home.  If she comes up with no options, she's invited back to SSASS to do it again!

Jen has a blog; check it out at :    www.jlpowley.com

Here's a short video clip from Jan 2...  https://www.dropbox.com/s/8jdb9b426clgjpf/Jen%20SSASS%20Jan%202016%20v2.mp4?dl=0