Ski Town USA Nurtures Olympic Medal Winners in Steamboat Springs, Colorado

Stephanie Levin
BATW Travel Stories
7 min readJan 21, 2022
Meeting place for Olympic Heritage Tours (Photo: Stephanie Levin)

Story by Stephanie Levin

Travel is always filled with surprises, especially over beer and conversation on a soft summer night. Per habit in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, also known as Ski Town USA ©, no matter the season, the conversation eventually drifts toward skiing and the town’s Olympian competitors. Someone asked if I had taken the Olympic Tour. When I said no, all heads spun around like tops and in unison said, “It is not to be missed!”

Once an avid downhill skier, admittedly I’ve fond memories of hunkering down in front of the television to watch the Winter Olympic Games — holding my breath as the downhill skiers crouched toward the finish line, racing against time, or as the slalom skiers zigzagged precariously between poles, descending within seconds. I can’t recall which Olympic year I discovered the Norwegians capturing medal after medal, in what I coined the ballet jeté event, as the ski jumpers lifted off from a steep incline, soared airborne, bodies molded into an arc, gathering speed before swooping into a flawless landing. This was the Nordic ski jumping event, perhaps one of the least understood, and in my opinion, one of the most beautiful. Because the Nordic ski jumper speeds down the track or hill before becoming airborne, viewers might think that the Nordic ski jump event is fraught with danger.

Nordic Ski Jump (Photo: Rory Clow)

“And they would be incorrect,” says Olympian Ben Berend of the Olympic Heritage Tour at Howelsen Nordic Center Lodge in Steamboat Springs. “It’s one of the safest.” In 2018, Berend competed in the Olympic Nordic competition in South Korea, one of 17 athletes from Steamboat Springs competing that year.

Ben Berend leading the tour in front of his Olympic flag from 2018 PyeongChang, Korea, Winter Olympics (Photo: Stephanie Levin)

“Steamboat Springs sends more athletes to the Winter Olympics than any city in the United States,” notes Berend. “To understand this phenomenon, one must thumb through the pages of ski history, long before the word Olympian was uttered.”

Run-in or top of the track on Howelsen Hill (Photo: Rory Clow)

Steamboat Springs has an elevation of 6,762 feet or 2,061 meters. Before the interstate arrived, people moved about on skis, the fastest and easiest way to get around in the long winters. In 1895, Norwegian gentleman and avid ski jumper, Carl Howelsen, arrived in the US and joined the Ringling Brother’s Circus, where he dazzled onlookers with ski jumping arial tricks. Nordic ski jumping was and is a way of life in Norway, and Howelsen was a champion ski jumper. He made his way to Steamboat Springs in 1914, left the circus, and set about building a ski jump run and a winter sports club. The Nordic ski jump run and Winter Sports Club is the oldest of its kind in the country, and continues today. Kids interested in the combined Nordic cross-country skiing and ski jumping start as young as 5 years old, just as Berend did.

The world was introduced to ski jumping when it was one of eight sports to enter the first Winter Olympic Games in Chamonix, France in 1924. Formerly, dominated by men, women’s ski jumping didn’t make its Olympian debut until 2014.

Classic V-shape (Photo: Rory Clow)

Viewers tend to focus on the take-off and landing of a ski jumper, yet Nordic ski jumping has a keenly designed anatomy and physics invisible to the novice eye. Ski jumpers rely on both mental acuity and muscle memory from years of practice. The in-run, or top of the track, is where the jumper begins by pushing off, immediately tucking or curling the body in position for speed, arms fixed alongside to his/her sides, skis aligned. An uphill wind is favorable for a jumper; a downhill wind makes the run more challenging. The jumper has little control once he or she is barreling down the curved track. Balance is imperative as the jumper reaches the speed 60-plus miles on the surface of the run-in before the take-off. Skis flatten becoming parallel on the run as the jumpers readies to be airborne. At this point, timing is everything as the jumper calculates the point, known as the critical point or K-point, from the German word kritical, which is the average distance a jumper aims for. The K-point, marked in red on the hill, indicates the hill’s steepest point in meters and is used to calculate the number of points a jump receives. If the jump falls short in meters from the K-point, points are lost. If the jump goes beyond the K-point, points are gained. Within a tenth of a second, the jumper must coordinate gravity, and 1.7 times body weight, to pop from the knees, elevate, and become airborne.

The aerodynamic form is essential for distance, arms fixed to body (Photo: Rory Clow)

Just as each skier or skater is different, so is each jumper, and their flight is highly personalized. Traditionally, the skis are in a classic V-shape and the arms open away from the body to maximize the fluidity and adjust for conditions and stay in the air as long as possible, approximately 10 to 15 feet above the contour of the hill on a 90 to 110-meter jump in preparation for landing.

Landing depends on balance, weight distribution, and wind. The landing is known as a telemark landing, which places one foot ahead of the other while knees and arms are slightly bent as the jumper skis to a stop. The entire jump from start to finish is under 10 seconds. Jumpers are judged on style, distance, and whether the K-point is reached or exceeded. Points are either added or deducted; a perfect jump would receive a maximum of 20 points from each judge.

For all the Olympians nurtured at Ski Town USA, Steamboat Springs has never hosted an Olympic Games, though Denver was chosen in 1971 to host the 1976 Winter Olympics, with Steamboat Springs the chosen site for Nordic events. According to Berend, many in Denver and some surrounding ski areas did not want the cost of construction or the crowds that accompany an Olympic event. Protests erupted, and the ski jump where the Nordic event was to be held in Steamboat Springs mysteriously burned.

Nordic jumpers practice year-round. After watching and talking to young jumpers as they practiced on the track, Berend leads our tour of 12 into Howelsen Lodge and up the stairs to room, the size of a small ballroom, covered with Olympic flags draped from the high-beam ceiling and covering the walls, all with a history honoring the many Steamboat Springs Olympians who participated in the Winter Olympics. As we move through the room, Berend mentions that the Europeans dominated Nordic events for decades until 2010 when the Steamboat Springs Nordic team brought home seven Olympic medals.

The flags represents the country where each Olympic Game was held. Every flag has the name and year of the Olympic athlete. Some Olympians have two or three flags, representing three different Olympic games. Steamboat Springs native and Nordic combined Olympian, Todd Lodwick, competed in five Olympic Games spanning the years 1994 through 2014, with five flags from five different countries. Nordic Olympian — and another Steamboat Springs native — Johnny Spillane won the first gold in the 2003 Nordic World Championship for the US, and three silver medals in his third Olympic Game in 2010. It’s a humbling experience to visualize the history of the Winter Olympics through flags, particularly for those who thrive on winter sports, but it is also a credit to the Ski Town USA© athletes who have spent the better part of their childhood and teen years training to vie for a medal.

Olympian flags as seen in Heritage Tour (photo: Stephanie Levin)

We who view the Olympic Games from our living rooms, or if lucky enough attend the games and sit in the stands, seldom think about what it takes for an individual to qualify to compete in the Olympic Games. It’s a life filled with sacrifice and bonding. Each discipline trains for years, and those who train together become a family unit, eating, sleeping, traveling, and competing together. While Olympians compete in some of the most beautiful areas in the world, they have nary a moment to be a tourist.

“True, there’s a great deal of sacrifice for Olympian hopefuls, but no matter what you compete in, or choose not to compete in, winter sports is a way of life in Steamboat Springs,” notes Berend.

IF YOU INTEND TO FOLLOW THE OLYMPIC GAMES:

The 2022 Winter Olympic Games begin February 4, in Beijing, China.

IF YOU GO TO SKI TOWN USA:

The free Olympic Heritage Tour: Tuesdays: Meet at Howelsen Hill Lodge located at Howelsen Hill Parkway. Phone (970) 879–8499

If you are in Steamboat Springs in February, you’ll arrive just in time to experience Winter Carnival, founded in 1914. Events include night skiing down the hill, ski jumps, horses parading down Main Street, and a bevy of winter events for all ages.

Originally published at https://travelexaminer.net on January 21, 2022.

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Stephanie Levin
BATW Travel Stories

I write about customs, cuisines, environments and solo travel. I’m trilingual and a contributor to www.travelexaminer.com.