Average Age of Park Skiers...

I feel like since this sport is still relatively new, the average age will go up each year.

When I started riding the park I was 24 and am now 31 and I was old when I started. (Compared to the majority)

Do any of you plan on quitting and just riding elsewhere when your in your thirties, fourties?

Thoughts?

 
21, riding freestyle before the twintip enlightenment

i cant wait to be doing backflips when im a gaper dad with gaper neighbors to impress
 
I think it will go down because a lot of people who are older aren't willing to try stuff in the park. Also people will give up park skiing due to injuries and immobility. kids are usually more willing to try new things that could potentially hurt them. plus they're dumb as shit so lots of companies market to a younger demographic because they're more likely to spend money (parent's money) on stuff based on marketing instead of looking for the best deals or best product.
 
im 31 and started park 2 years ago. I dont give a shit if people think im too old for park skiing, surfing skating or whatever else i do.

now im not dumb so i know my body has limitations even though my brain dont think so
 
I'm 21, I started skiing park when I was 13. As of now I still hit the park a lot, but i definitely don't go big since I destroyed my body in my teens.
 
I 'quit' skiing park when I was 26. I still hit the park the odd time, but I haven't done a full park day in the past two years. Hell, this winter I'm not even buying a seasons pass to any ski hill, so there is absolutely no park skiing to be had by me this year.

I didn't quit because I don't want to ski park anymore, I just really, really like skiing the mountains and I can't seam to find time for park these days. A good park day is an even better touring day. Why spend the day hitting a jump or rail in the park when I can go out and drop cliffs, pillows, etc into pow with friends is the backcountry?
 
Judging from most of the posts on this site I would say, 12. In reality, its getting older with each year. Not may of us mature park skiers are giving it up anytime soon.
 
yeah i was gonna say..I'm 21 and started skiing park when i was 13.. the 10 year 1080 came out when i was 1 i believe which would put me at age 6 if i had owned the first pair of twin tips.

 
This is all based on Geography. If you live out West you will naturally move towards becoming more of a Backcountry skier in time, beacause it is feasible. Also, your body can not take the beating it could at 25. If you live on the East coast/ Midwest you will forever be a park skier because you are more limited by terrain. (DISCLAIMER: not true of everyone, but I have seen this happen to a lot of people)
 
couldn't agree with this more, as an ice coast native who transplanted to the west last winter i can say that i immediately drifted away from hiking park all day.. sure I still lap a couple times but I prefer to spend most of my time in the trees.. as stated above I'm 21 and my body already cant ski the way I was 5 years ago.
 
started at 7, was full on gaper till 13-14 when i started skiing a little park and started skiing park more seriously at 15-16(was too much of a chicken to do a lot of progress tho, was mostly straight airs with ocassional safetys or half-assed mutes).

I'm 19 in 2 weeks
 
id say the average age is 14. turning 25 this year and started to work out alot. it really helps alot to not get injured. i think this way i can continue for another 10 years or so.
 
You have no clue how anything works, do you? The age is going lower and will only ever go lower. The older people quit. Even if the older people didn't quit, the age still wouldn't necessarily go up.
 
I think the sport is more relevant to younger people 13-18, that being said there is no reason why someone in their 30's cant kill it.

I skied a lot growing up, but didn't have the opportunity to ski park until i was 19. I'm 26, and unless I receive a major injury I don't see myself stopping. I've accepted that my rate of progression isn't as high as a 17 year old. But I still get the same level of enjoyment. I started coaching freestyle last year so I can stay involved with the sport when my body no longer allows me to perform at the same level, but for the time being I intend on still learning and having fun, but realistically, I won't ever do a double cork, and I'm cool with that.
 
Explain your logic on that one. Older people don't quit and the average still wont go up? Please I would love to hear how that happens!
 
Okay I'll explain this to you. As people age, they do quit sport. Not because they physiologically have to, but socially they are somewhat expected to. After highschool, you are expected to get a job and give up on the fun and games. So yes, you do have a point in some what.At least that has been the mentality for the older generations, but that is changing. Just like many adults have continued playing video games, people aren't going to quit something fun like skiing park because its 'only for young people....'

But if you look at park, which realistically started in 2001 for many mountains was for the most part done by younger skiers 14-21, because from a motor learning and brain development perspective those are the ideal age and the most likely age to part-take in high skill and high risk activities. In 2001, there was little knowledge or coaching done within the sport.

Now, we have a much more structured approach to the sport. Nearly every hill offers park lessons, allowing older people to safely enter the sport and not feel like an ass with the kids. And those 14-21 year olds who were involved with the sport are still staying involved, many may quit, but not all.

Besides the point that popular culture in general is fixed on the youth, the reason why the sport appears to be young is because the athletes in the videos, competitions and magaizines are young. They were able to benefit from the skills discovered from the older athletes and apply them at a much younger age, with coaching and better/ safe facilities (just compare super park to the JOSS, what do you think was more dangerous?).

Concepts from other sports are now being applied to park skiing, it is no longer an 'extreme sport' as now have a better understanding of the sport. That being said, the sport will go through a plateau, as progression is decreased with the limitations of training techniques (much like gymnastics has done). In 10 years, the average competitive skier will be older, because it will not be about learning a skill, but maximum power output (which favors a 28 year old over an 18 year old). Look at snowboarding, the average age is the x-games is much higher than that of skiing because it is now reaching that point.

Because we understand the science of sport better, older athletes are able to stay involved longer because they understand the basics in technique, not to mention physio therapist now also provide services to stay active in sport that used to only be available to keep working.

From a demographic perspective, it will also get older. Gen Y (in Canada at least) is a much larger cohort than that of the kids these days, elementary school are closing down, while right now getting a job or entering university is extremely competitive. So if you analyze it based on statistics alone, it will get older. Furthermore, the average kid is much more unfit compared to Gen Y, so who has the greatest likelyhood of higher sport participation?

Obviously each generation is better then the one before in performance because knowledge is passed down, but the number will be different. The youth will always have most influence on the progression of the sport but that doesn't mean there isn't a spot got the old guys to have fun.

Go eat your veggies, and stay off my jump son.

 
started at 10 when my dad started taking me into the park for some laps. hes 41 and riding strong. your never too old.
 
started skiing when i was 3, but never really spent much time in the park until i was like 14 or 15
 
At my home mountain, alot of the older and better guys are leaving for college, work reasons etc. They are leaving behind a group of skiers mostly ages 11-16. Im glad some of them are leaving tho. shitty vibe left and right.
 


I started skiing park at 36. Landed my first front flip at 42 and my first back flip at 43. I like to ski with my kids, so I will continue to ski park as long as they do, and when they stop skiing park I will ski park with their kids.
 
I was 3 when I started skiing and started park skiing when I was 8 but I really got into it when I was 11 and I'm 16 now. Today I see kids around 10 years old hitting double kinks and things like that, so skiers are starting to ride park younger.
 
I'm 18, started skiing park at 9, learned a couple things, started skiing freestyle outside of the park at about 13. Something's more fun about 5ing a natural feature than an icy park jump IMHO. I venture back into the park when it gets slushy and when the snows super duper shitty outside of it.

I much prefer gooning around outside of the park, tranny finding on pow skis but there's also something to be said about hiking a rail.
 
Average age of people in the park? I swear it's gotta be about 6.

Average age of park riders doing more than hitting the lips leading to rails? Probably about 15-17.
 
I'm 21, started when I was 15. I'm probably gonna keep going at it until 26ish, then start taking my life a little more seriously to the point where I won't be able to afford missing work from injuries. Probably gonna tone it down a lot even this year. I can't afford to miss jet ski racing season.
 
The key word here is "average". I'd say the average has to be on the order of 16-18, because I see tons of kids aged 10-16 skiing park, but I see just as many people older than 18. Think about all the late HS/college aged kids who are in the park every weekend. I seem to notice the most of these groups at my local mountains, at least.
 
grew up skiing, but didn't really start getting serious until I was 20 and really started trying to hit the park harder. I'm only 22 now, but don't plan to stop...ever.
 
I hope the average age goes up. Right now there are a lot of kids starting off skiing in the park with no knowledge or skill on the rest of the mountain.
 
I'd have to agree that the average age of a park skier will go down as well. I'm 27, been skiing park since 12 y/o. While there are still a bunch of dudes shredding park into their 30's and a few badass dad's ripping into their late 40's wayy more influence of the sport went into the young generation which I'm seeing now. Kids covering east coast parks everywhere.

I ride in a crew of 9 and we are switching east coast mountains after 5 years of riding a lot of park and grasping reality that our bodies cant handle it. Transforming into mountain riders that will probably only slay park in the mornings and sunny soft days. Sad, very sad... And off to my physical therapist i go... That said, I'm going to backflip booters at 50 and 270 out of rails when I'm a grandpa. Live to ski, ski to live.
 
Am 20, started Freeski when I was 13-14. That was like in 2007.Now when I go in parks I generally see more 18-20s, although I have kids at 12-13 who ask me how to 360 which is quite cool I guess.
 
I started when we had to poach the park because it was not open to skiers, circa 1995. Now 18 years later sure kids are getting into it younger but i find more guys my age are still lapping the park. We might not be considered park rats but damn all you whipper snappers give us old timers some respect. Beside, my age might be a little older but I still laugh at poop and fart jokes like the rest of you all.
 
I'm 20 and I've been messing around in the park since I was 7 or 8 hitting the mini park jumps and going straight on boxes. I still love it and like to push it from time to time but I've also gotten more into tree skiing as much as I can skiing the east coast. I think as I've gone along progression has kind of plateaued and I'm much more into doing comfortable trick lines and I don't think that will ever stop.
 
I'm 15 been skiing since I was 10 and have been skiing park for about 2 years and I love when older people ski park I think it's really cool. But in NY the average age is like 14-20
 
I am 25 and I only really committed last season to park. I learned quickly that I dont heal like I use to though so pretty much every day youll find me armored up head to toe because I just cant take those slams like I use to be able to (combined with being a ski instructor, and needing to actually be able to ski, management looks down on you when you have to bail on a shift early because you just hipchecked a rail and can barely stand up). I hope to keep learning park as long as I can, but Ive already told myself I wont be hitting the big jumps ever.
 
It's funny, I'm 33, and seem to be able to take more crashes now, then when i was 26 and started skiing park. When I first got into it, I kept getting hurt, both due to insufficient skill and bad physical form. Now that my skill is tenfolds better and I'm in peak physical condition, I don't seem to get hurt seriously anymore (knock on wood). The age thing doesn't seem to apply as long as you stay smart about it.

My point is, stay physically fit, and you should have no problem charging the park into your 30's and 40's.
 
My dad started skiing park when he was 47 and now he is front 2ing out of boxes at 50. But he refuses to hit rails because they destroy edges. He wants to learn threes, and he dose all of this on telemark skis.
 
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