Yeah, all this. I skied with my kid on the back age 8 mo to 2.25 years. The little hill I was skiing at (Shames) allowed packs at the time. He had a blast, sleeping on more than one occasion, but usually making happy noises. I went to visit some buddies at Sunpeaks and was told I couldn't ski with him in a pack. So I skinned from the Burfield side of the mountain, over to the Sunpeaks side of the mountain. Got him some gear and we went skiing for the first time. That was it for the pack pretty much. I think he asked to ski in the pack a couple more times when we got back to Shames, but he was a skier after that.
I personally don't think it was a big deal for me, however I've seen some people that should definitely not have been skiing with their kid on their back (and I don't like the kid in front method). So I can see why it's pretty much banned everywhere now.
Pretty happy I did a few days of really mellow touring with the kid on the back (0 avalanche risk, easy untracked pow). The kid enjoyed it immensely and so did I.
“I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around, and don't let anybody tell you different.”
― Kurt Vonnegut, A Man Without a Country
www.mymountaincoop.ca
This is OUR mountain - come join us!
I had every intention of doing this but baby mama said no.... we’re thinking of going to whistler in mid December if snowing so daycare info is appreciated.
Best thing I saw was at craigieburn in NZ. A parent with a baby hanging outside on the deck with a backpack carrier. Use it to haul baby up the rope tow and he/she said they are taking turn skiing and babysitting. They told me that craigieburn allowed it and sell transferable pass for the couple with a baby since only one can ski at any time while other partner babysit.... Does any resort do that in North America? I’m sure they got to enjoy the end of the day ride down to the parking lot with baby.
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When we are talking infants, its important to consider they dont have the physical strength or anatomy to support the weight of their heads. Let alone, counteract the acceleration and deceleration forces associated with skiing. There is also considerably more room in the cranium for their brains to bounce around. Jogging or running with a baby strapped to your back is not supported by any medical establishment that I am aware of.
When you are calculating risk vs benefit for your child, it's important that you don't outweigh the potential risks to the child by countering them with benefits to your self.
Granted, there a lot of risky activities that well intentioned and educated parents expose their children to, for any number of reasons. most of these children turn out just fine. This is a heuristic trap, beware. and consider that not exposing your child to these potential risky scenarios is in no way depriving them of an experience or opportunity.
"Its not the arrow, its the Indian" - M.Pinto
Never skied 'downhill' with our daughter, but we enjoyed lots of xc and meadowskipping tours with her. Depending on where, she was in the ergo on the front, or in the chariot. Last year, the kelty replaced the ergo. I think the coldest day was around -15C or so, but she was in the ergo, and I run very warm. She loved it while awake, or was sleeping soundly. She may use the chariot this season once the snow sticks in the valley bottom, but she is starting to enjoy sliding under her own power now. We haven't spent much time at the resorts the past season but that had little to do with her. So far this year we've been on the sled for an early season braap - fun times!
Tripping on science and accepted Child Development standards
https://blog.ergobaby.com/2011/02/fa...ing-positions/
That article is extremely biased. There is no corroborating external research, or any actual evidence beyond the expert opinion. additionally, there are design limitation with this product, that require the infant to face a certain direction, largely due to ergonomics of the infant. so it's very convenient that this expert opinion, without an supporting documents, supports the design limitations of the product.
"Its not the arrow, its the Indian" - M.Pinto
You're going to be trusting your kid to people you don't know until he's not a kid (and then there's a good chance you'll be trusting him to a bunch of frat boys who will try to make him drink himself to death). Might as well get used to it now. I would have no problem trusting the day care hired through the resort or one of the hotels. They're probably better at baby care than you are.
We hired private day care near Alpine Meadowsn when our eldest was about a year and a half old--her husband was an instructor and came in every afternoon with their two girls. Years later I watched one of those girls in the Olympics. She DNF'd both of her events. The year before we left him with his AZ grandmother--we made the switch in the SLC airport on our way to Alta. Boy did we miss him; it was horrible--for about 30 minutes, then we pretty much forgot about him for a week.
If the parent is a very proficient skier in all conditions, this is the single most important argument for not skiing with a kid in a pack - there's a bunch of hacks out there who can't ski that will hit you at mach chicken. And, as I said before - most resorts don't allow it now anyway.
“I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around, and don't let anybody tell you different.”
― Kurt Vonnegut, A Man Without a Country
www.mymountaincoop.ca
This is OUR mountain - come join us!
That's one of many that I quickly picked. Out of a hundred articles on the subject you'll find 99 that say your child should be facing you. If you don't want to believe science just use common sense. What happens when your baby gets scared they want to tuck your head their head into your chest they can't do that if they're hanging off the front of you like an octopus.
A few people feel the rain. Most people just get wet.
Check out long time Mammoth ripper and business man Steve Klassen out with his daughter. Not exactly a back pack, but a good example of not letting fear mongering take over whatever decision you choose to make. He even takes a mellow lap thru the park with her. You rule Steve!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3GMCJbrMGA
YIKES!!! At the very beginning I was stoked to see the kid getting to feel the ride with dad. I carried my son and my son carried my grand daughter on BC trips. When dad started to show boat and it became all about the dad, I lost respect.
A few people feel the rain. Most people just get wet.
6 months pregnant
4 months
10 months
4 years
SKI THE BABIES!
I didn't believe in reincarnation when I was your age either.
This is a bad idea for so many reasons and I'm honestly surprised so many people are supporting this. But on top of all the risk, it just doesn't sound fun. Hire some childcare; when they're older, get 'em some lessons and then really enjoy the mountain with them.
There's a lot of risk to skiing with your baby and for what? What's the benefit? You save a couple bucks?
It’s super fun!
What could be better than sharing what you love with your child?
I didn't believe in reincarnation when I was your age either.
Yeah, but you can share it with them when they can actually comprehend it. What's the rush?
Again, the benefit is mostly yours: feeling like your sharing something with your child. But the immense risk is shared by both you an your baby and if daddy takes a tumble and bad stuff happens, you may not be sharing anything with your child ever again.
Yeah, your above statement is obviously true, but my wife has her masters in early childhood education and would debate you on this one when specifically speaking about - Alpine skiing with and infant - risk vs reward. Many ways to "engage their kids in the outdoors...".
Regardless, I never did the pack thing, but imo it makes a huge difference on where you intend to ski and what the temp is. Skiing a wrod or almost any busy resort would be asinine and purely selfish. If the focus is on your child then you'd go somewhere for them, not you. I.E. Meadow skipping like the pic Mikey posted.
I got to ride with my baby on my chest. Pick your battles and base your decision on how busy the slopes and the snow conditions.
What I found out was how hard it is to strap in with a baby and probably most dangerous part is at the top and bottom where people congregate. I came to the lift line to unstrap first but later I was far away from the lift line to unstrap and skate to the lift line looking uphill. At top, instead of most logical place to strap in, I would go to spot where no one is strapping in or hanging out.
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