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Ski jumping for everyone

Ski jumping can be thrilling to watch, but it’s not a sport most people imagine doing themselves. The Local’s Kristen Allen heads to Germany’s picturesque Thuringian Forest to strap on some fat skis and go flying – without fear of death.

Ski jumping for everyone
Photo: Rennsteig Outdoor Center

It doesn’t look the least bit like child’s play, but Heiko Walter says the imposing ramp looming before us was once used to train youths how to ski jump.

Both Walter and his nine-year-old son are avid ski jumpers, and many children in the mountainous parts of Thuringia choose winter sports over more conventional pastimes like football, attending schools that focus on training them for high-level competition.

“This region has the oldest winter sports club in Europe outside of Norway,” the hardy-looking 43-year-old says. “Norwegian engineers who came to build the railroad at the turn of the century brought their skis and since then ski jumping has been part of our tradition.”

Eight years ago, the physical education teacher developed what he says is the world’s first “ski jump for everyone” in the quaint town of Steinach, nestled among the gently rolling slopes of the Thuringian Forest. He calls his contraption, which allows the curious to experience the thrill of the sport without years of training, Skiflyer.

“Everyone should have the chance to know what it feels like,” he says.

Click here for a photo gallery of the Skiflyer.

As we approach the gear hut, champion senior-level ski jumper and Skiflyer employee Jens Greiner-Hiero pops up to inform us that an unidentified mountain predator has left a disembowelled fawn on the steps.

“It’s pretty fresh,” he says, unperturbed.

While I feel safe in the care of the obviously experienced duo, I can’t help but imagine how my own delicate viscera might fare if I don’t stick the landing.

Not to worry, Walter says. Skiflyer, which insures the jumper’s safety with a steel cable and a harness, skips the landing and focuses on the fun part.

Knees knocking

Following detailed instructions and a few practice jumps on safe ground, I find myself helmeted, harnessed and strapped in to a pair of broad skis that I doubt I can control despite growing up skiing Colorado slopes.

“Athletes always do best, particularly those who watch a lot of jumping on television,” Walter says. “About 50 percent manage to hold the correct form.”

With trembling knees I peer at the ground some 45 metres below, repeating Walter’s instructions in my mind: From a crouched position spring forcefully from the ramp’s edge, then lean forward without lifting the heels, arms to the side, and hold on to that pose with every fibre in the body.

Failure to maintain this position could result in the jumper twisting around in their harness, skis flailing in the wind, Walter explains. It’s not dangerous, just not nearly as fun.

The signal to jump turns green, but I’m paralysed by fear, staring nervously at the ramp and the valley below, disastrous thoughts racing. Walter waits patiently, clearly accustomed to witnessing this kind of crisis regularly.

Finally a spasm of pride intervenes and I force myself from the safety of the nest.

After just a few terrifying moments racing down the rollers at high speed, I’m launched from the ramp, having failed to maintain the presence of mind to actually leap. But I’m gritting my teeth, leaning forward and holding my arms down – and sailing through the air with exhilarating speed.

Some eight seconds and 150 metres of euphoria later, I hang awkwardly in my harness and I’m lowered from the cable. My knees are still shaking, but this time from excitement.

A strong jolt of adrenaline is a welcome reminder that I’m still alive, I tell Walter later.

“That feeling is exactly why I do this,” he says.

The details

Partnered with Munich-based adventure company Jochen Schweizer, Skiflyer is just one part of Walter’s larger outfit, the Rennsteig Outdoor Centre, which offers various adventure sport tours along the famous Rennsteig hiking trail and beyond.

Visitors can try Skiflyer year round, and the facility also accommodates large groups, as well as company team-building outings.

Prices start at €36 for a single jump and go up to €146 for three jumps plus a one-day course with a pro ski jumper at a ramp for grown-ups in the neighbouring town of Lauscha.

Single bookings are available on the first Sunday of every month, and group jumps are available with starting with six people. Email inquiries to: [email protected]

Getting there:

The nearest train station is at Saalfeld (Saale), just a two-hour jaunt from Berlin on a high-speed ICE route. There visitors have access to limited bus services, or car rentals at Sixt and Europcar. The drive from Saalfeld takes about 30 minutes.

Southern alternative

Adrenaline junkies in Bavaria can also try out a similar ski jump in Neukirchen, which Die Erlebnis Akademie, or “The Experience Academy,” opened in 2007. But be warned, Skiflyer inventor Walter says the jump velocity is slower than his operation.

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SKIING

Snow report: What’s the latest outlook for French ski resorts this winter?

Good news for skiers in France, as a mild December has given way to a cold blast in early January that's bringing some much-needed snow.

Snow report: What's the latest outlook for French ski resorts this winter?

After a mostly dry and mild December, snow returned to the the Pyrenees on Friday.

Meanwhile most resorts in the Alps have been able to stay open after a promising early start to the ski season, thanks to fresh snowfalls, with more on the way this weekend.

Pyrenees

Snow has returned in the Pyrenees. Some 5cm fell overnight into Friday, January 5th in eastern parts of the mountain range, with forecasts predicting a further 15cm to 20cm to be on the ground 24 hours later. The region had not seen any snow since December 2nd.

In Angles, 20cm of snow had fallen at higher altitudes by mid-morning on Friday.

Further west, numerous resorts in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques département remained closed this week after early December snow had melted in mild conditions that have dominated France in recent weeks, but significant snowfall is expected over the weekend into Monday, and resorts are hoping that they will see enough to open.

One resort, Artouste, has been unable to offer skiing since the start of the season on December 23rd due to a lack of snow. A scenic rail service – usually reserved for warmer months – has kept the resort going. It is set to stop running on Friday, amid expectations of enough snow to finally open the slopes.

READ ALSO Climate crisis: ’90 percent’ of Europe’s ski resorts face critical snow shortages

Alps 

Many ski resorts opened on time, or even a little earlier than scheduled last month, after significant early snow fall, and have enjoyed deposits in the first days of 2024. But, even here, resort managers welcomed the promise of more significant snow this weekend.

Some resorts weren’t so fortunate. Ski areas in Gérardmer, in the Vosges, were still closed in the week leading up to Christmas because of poor snow conditions, but they are hoping for enough snow to finally get started this weekend, while La Bresse-Honeck was using ‘stocked snow’ made by using snow that fell earlier in the winter months to stay open as recently as December 30th.

In the Northern Alps, resorts such as Alpe d’Huez benefited from fresh snowfall on December 22nd, while Val d’Isère had new snow on December 29th. In the Southern Alps, Les Orres’ last pre-New Year snow was on December 8th.

And the French Alps have enjoyed more snow since the start of the year. There’s at least 50cm of fresh snow on the higher slopes of Les Gets and Morzine, for example, a significant improvement on the same time last year, when the resorts were among several that had very little snow to speak of.

In Chamonix, meanwhile, snow has fallen on eight of the last 14 days, with more expected every day between Friday and Monday.

Massif Central

As the post on X / Twitter shows, the Massif Central has not had the best of winters for snow so far. But between 30cm and 50cm is expected in Le Lioran by Monday. 

READ ALSO ‘So many barriers since Brexit’: The French ski businesses no longer willing to hire Brits

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