I had been planning to put the boys in ski lessons, starting the first Saturday of January.
When I had called the ski club around Christmas time, they said that they had plenty of spots available and that members would be accomodated. I was relieved. It gave me about two weeks to get the money to them. I asked her if I should just book over the phone or do it in person. She said it didn't matter, and so I figured I'd prefer to pay on the spot.
Well, we had some snow storms and I couldn't get in when I wanted to in order to register the boys.
When I finally started calling again (January 1st), and actually got a hold of someone, they said they were booked. Not one single spot for either kid.
I was stunned.
The rug pulled out from beneath me.
Seeing as I couldn't get anywhere with the lady on the phone, I thought we'd just show up early to the morning class and see if my dad or Brad (who is so much better at being squeaky than me) could get through.
They were still booked. The only class they had spots left in was the Sr. Kinderski . . . way too advanced for Jackson (who was granted early admission to the Jr. Kinderski program because of a great private lesson the week before), and perhaps a little too novice for the likes of Jayden.
But, I figured that once they got in, they would have a ski off and put them in with skiers of their same ability . . . for Jackson that would mean that they would have to bump him down to jr . . . and move a jr up if need be.
I was desperate. So, I became one of those horrible mothers that stop at nothing to get their kids into a program.
We had about 15 minutes to get the boys suited up and on the hill . . . and I didn't want to be late and make more of a scene than we already had.
Ski boots, helmets, goggles, mitts . . . mitts?? We had somehow forgot mitts. And it was minus 10 degrees.
My dad searched the lost and found for something to borrow, Brad hopped into the car to try and find some on sale at the pro shop, and I got "creative."
Jackson got to wear Avery's pink and white striped mittens, and Jayden wore my (way too large for him) white and pink gloves. They looked ridiculous. I just hoped that everyone would somehow look away from them and try to forget it, like I was trying to do.
I lead them out to the chaotic ski hill and finally got them into their Sr. class. Jayden went for a ski off; I was a little more concerned for Jackson. He could just barely stop . . . sometimes. And they were making them go through a kiddie race course.
He did get through it, fairly well, with me running beside him telling him when to turn and he nly fell about three times. I helped him back up on the lift and once at the top while I was looking for an instructor to tell him where to go, he took off!
He went straight down the bunny hill. No turns, just speed. And lots of it . . . He was headed straight for the little plastic fence . . . and the forest of trees!
Unable to do anything else at that point, I did what any other parent would do. I shut my eyes. Fortunately, though, he managed to stop--just in time.
Even when Jackson was placed in the Jr. program, I watched as his poor instructor had to lift him back onto his skis every few moments. And when she wasn't doing that, she was chasing after him as he bombed down the hill out of control.
We hadn't laid as low as I had hoped.
It was definitely a rocky start to the ski season, and a stressful way to start 2009, but I'd have to say it worked out in the end.
The head instructor seems to be happier with me (a $10 donut shop gift card might have helped), Jayden is in an advanced class, and Jackson is doing extremely well in his class. (He is even staying in control most of the time and following his instructor on occassion.)