Excerpts from the Foreword for
by Bela G. Vadasz -- Alpine Skills International
When I was young, climbing and skiing were equally important to me. Both activities are more than just sports: they are ways of coming into intense and beautiful relationships with mountains, and that was what I wanted in my life. During this time I kept four books by my bed, books that I would return to again and again to refresh my dreams. ... On many evenings I would pore over the stunning black and white photographs of the pioneers of North American alpinism and the mountains they loved, and I would read the stories of their great feats until I knew them by heart. As my eyes grew heavy I would begin to dream myself into those pictures and stories, and beyond, into the adventures that I hoped I would someday lead.
As I grew, it became more and more clear to me that ski alpinism was the best way to combine my interests and achieve what David Brower has called "mountain blend." I also came to realize that by studying and respecting the history of alpinism, I could better understand where I was and where I was going. In fact, this historical dimension added tremendous fulfillment. ... After all, that's why we give places names: to associate them with stories that help us to understand our relation to them: Tuckerman Ravine, Pyramid Peak, the Sierra Crest.
When I first met Lou Dawson, we instantly understood each other. We both loved ski mountaineering, and we shared a passion for the history of the magnificent places in which we had chosen to live our lives. To me, Lou is one of the few great all-American ski mountaineers. Not only is his experience both wide and deep, in the sense that he has climbed and skied extensively in all over North America, but he also has become the preeminent ski alpinist of his massive home range, the Colorado Rockies. He has also become one of its greatest champions and chroniclers, as Lou has the gift of describing the routes he has skied (and often pioneered) in a way that respects both the mountains and their history. From the first, it was clear to me that the passion of "mountain blend" was ingrained in him too...
But in Wild Snow Lou does far more than write an outstanding guidebook, although it is that too. In this book Lou integrates his practical knowledge with years of historical study. He combines practical information on many of the greatest North American ski mountaineering routes with an unprecedented overview of the sport's surprisingly rich history on this continent. Whether you are contemplating your first peak or have been pursuing the sport for years, this book will inspire, inform, and educate you about the great achievements of glisse alpinism in the United States and Canada...
Bela G. Vadasz
Alpine Skills International