1000 day of consecutive skiing

No it's not, it says in the article he started on november 1st 2003, whether or not it's three years though that's insanity, dude must have legs of steel by now
 
ive beat u

mines like 2 days in a row possibly 3 but i dont remeber it was at mt snow and it rained the last day
 
yea the article was in todays boston globe and the guy is only in his late forties and does not have a job and lives out of his tent, but skiing that much is pretty sweet
 
in summer he keeps up the racing course at hood and in winter works the groomers at some colorado mtn
 
He recalled some kids saying, “Oh, I'll beat that.”

His response: “Go right ahead, buddy!”

Kids: "Okay I will, Gaylord"
 
i've ridden up the chair with him at timberline last summer, hes a neat guy, so many crazy stories
 
,000 consecutive days of skiing sets Guinness record

By TODD JOHNSTON

The Associated Press

ARTICLE BODY TEXT

BODY TEXT

Rainer Hertrich loves what he does so much that he hasn't taken a day off since Nov. 1, 2003.

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No sick days. No vacation days. He doesn't need them.

After

all, Hertrich is not stuck in an office or making sales calls. He's

crisscrossing down another ski slope to keep his world-record streak

alive.

Hertrich reached the milestone of 1,000 consecutive days

of skiing when he barreled down Oregon's Timberline Ski area July 27.

Though he surpassed the next-longest streak long ago and already holds

a place in the Guinness Book of World Records, there's no sign the

ultimate ski bum plans to stop.

“To me, it's flat-out fun,” said

Hertrich, a 45-year-old telemark skier. “I don't know of any other

sport where you can go that fast on your feet.”

The previous

record was held by the British skier Arnie Wilson, who skied 365

consecutive days in 1994. Hertrich surpassed Wilson's mark in 2004 and

kept going.

Hertrich follows winter by traveling from Oregon and

Colorado to Chile and Argentina, zigzagging the Americas to ski

year-round. When it's winter in the U.S., he'll be here. And when

summer comes, he ventures to the Andes for South America's winter.

It's there he finds the right conditions for the other world record Hertrich set in his marathon: vertical feet skied.

He

has already skied 34 million vertical feet. To put that into

perspective, on an average day he skis 33,000 vertical feet. That is

higher than Mount Everest.

“I'm going to South America for the

adventure and keeping up the vertical feet,” he said. “The adventure

part is really my reward to myself.”

In a telephone interview

from Oregon, Hertrich sounds like a man of few worries. He is not

married and has no children. There is no one to question his

freewheeling ways.

His drive seems more for the adventure of the

next great downhill or a visit to a new locale to meet skiing friends

than it is to set a world record. Yet setting records is certainly on

his mind.

“When I passed the first year mark, that was a big

mark,” he said. “When I passed 500 days, that was a big mark to me at

the time.”

And while he's having way too much fun to contemplate

the accomplishment for too long, there was more than the usual

exuberance in his online diary following the day when he set the

record: “Great day, snow, and fun!!! I think I'll have to wake up alive

one more time and ski tomorrow.”

Hertrich lives and breathes the

cold environment. His day-to-day job as a snow groomer, manicuring and

maintaining the very slopes that he skis, suits his passion perfectly.

In the winter months, he works on Colorado's Copper Mountain, and in

the summer he helps maintain Mount Hood in Oregon during the race camp

season.

Hertrich grew up in Boulder, Colo., learning to ski at

an early age. A typical career path was not in his future. He dreamed

of things beyond the confines of a classroom or an office cubicle.

“I didn't want to go to college. I thought about the outdoors while in class,” he recalled.

His

thoughts have not changed since he was young. The best part about

skiing is “the freedom, being up on the mountain, and the scenery.”

In

2003, his skiing endeavor began when he discovered an elite club at

Jackson, Wyo. — for those who had skied 6 million vertical feet in a

year.

Hertrich was up for the challenge, and he soon surpassed that mark, skiing more than 7 million vertical feet.

“You have to ski every day,” he said, “and you have to ski a lot every day.”

With

all of this skiing, he began to wonder if he was near any record. He

was, and that's when his test of endurance against Mother Nature and

himself truly began.

He began logging his vertical elevation with a sophisticated altimeter watch. Skiing daily was an easier calculation to compute.

Hertrich

has weathered brutal conditions along the way. But he's continued to

ski — through bitter cold, frostbite, rain and illness.

“The worst days were when I'm camping in my tent, it's raining and I know I have to go,” he said.

There

have been close calls, too. Before flying to South America, for

example, he's learned to take pre-dawn runs on Mount Hood before going

to the airport on a travel day.

One time in Chile, he rented a

car at the airport and got lost in Santiago. He almost did not make it

to the slopes before the day was over. Another time, he hopped a bus to

the mountain not realizing it was the scenic route.

Perhaps the

most bizarre, though, was when he hiked up an active volcano since it

had more snow to ski down than neighboring mountains during a dry spell

in Chile's winter.

Hertrich generally welcomes such obstacles

with open arms. “The adventure's great and I look forward to where it's

not all you expected it to be,” he said.

Hertrich realizes he's setting a marker for other skiers, and he encourages anyone who wants to take up the challenge.

He recalled some kids saying, “Oh, I'll beat that.”

His response: “Go right ahead, buddy!”

So

what about tomorrow's run? He paused and, without worry, said, “I'll be

happy if I can go out and ski tomorrow, since I'm 40 miles away from

the slopes.”
 
i DONT understand how he can travel in one day from here in the us or ca to south america then ski in the same day? like what does he constitute as a day of skiing like 1 hour before darK?
 
My best is probably a few months. I was in Courchevel for 5 months last winter, but I'm sure there were some days when I wasn't skiing.
 
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