All right, the sting is real, no overlooking it. A long, cold, windy chair ride can be miserable. Windslab is frightening. Too much wind destroys the delicate crystalline structure of snowflakes, turning what might have been a powder day into a fruitless hunt for light and dry. Pockets of wind-transported and wind-loaded snow–avalanches waiting to happen–are one of the biggest risks to the backcountry skier. Cornices, so beautifully sculpted by the wind slicing over a ridge, are often fragile and waiting for the unwary to venture too close to the edge before breaking off. And, though not life-threatening, is there anything more aggravating than a blow-down day, when gale-force gusts close the trams and chairs and your only access to the mountain is through the lodge window or maybe, if you’re lucky, some sheltered, low-angle beginner run?
And yet, is there a better feeling than to be at home in the storm, hatches battened down, hard shell snugged tight, every chink in the armor plugged? Or to gain the knowledge that lets you travel safely in the backcountry, away from hair-trigger pockets and hanging cornices? Wind’s crankiness is easily subverted, circumvented, its advantage turned