Park-and-Ride the Olympic WayPark-and-Ride the Olympic Way

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When speaking with skiers who skied Whistler Mountain in the 1960s and 70s, we often hear stories about skiing down to the dump where the Whistler Village sits today. When Whistler Mountain opened in January 1966, the only lifts up the mountain began at the gondola base in today’s Creekside and there were no runs heading down the north side. With the additions of lifts such as the Blue Chair (1966) and Green Chair (1968), new runs were cut leading to the dump area, but no new lifts were installed north of the gondola area; instead, Garibaldi Lifts Ltd. built the Olympic Parking Lot.

The Olympic Parking Lot got its name from the Olympic Run, the “easy way” that skiers could take down to the valley (the Olympic Run still forms part of the ski out today). The Garibaldi Olympic Development Association, which had close ties to the lift company, worked on bids for multiple Olympic Winter Games and the Olympic Run ended at the proposed site for the 1972 and 1976 Olympic Villages. By the 1970s, Garibaldi Lifts was actively promoting the parking lot located there, in part to ease traffic and parking further south down the highway. For skiers, however, skiing down the Olympic Run and using the parking lot required a bit more forethought.

The Olympic Parking Lot eased parking at the gondola base in today’s Creekside. Whistler Mountain Ski Corporation Collection

In 1972, the lift company urged skiers to check the Information Booth for the schedule of the free bus that ran between the bottom of Olympic Run and the gondola base and to “be sure to allow in sufficient time to catch the last Olympic bus” so they were not stranded at the end of the day if the ski out took longer than expected. Garibaldi Lifts also encouraged skiers, particularly those staying or living north of the gondola area, to leave their cars at the Olympic Parking Lot and catch the morning bus to the lifts, thereby avoiding the lineups for the afternoon buses.

Heading down the Olympic Run would have taken skiers to the Olympic Parking Lot before these two lifts (Black and Olympic Chairs) were built. Whistler Mountain Ski Corporation Collection

In the spring of 1974, the lift company again promoted their free Olympic Parking Lot in a letter to their customers published in Garibaldi’s Whistler News. They stated:

At the Olympic Parking Lot, your car will be safe, off the highway and you will avoid problems with the highway authorities. Also, you will not be held responsible for causing traffic jams on the highway, or an accident in the case of illegally parked cars.

Garibaldi’s Whistler News, Spring 1974

From their letter, it would appear that parking around the gondola area had become a problem and the lift company had most likely been contacted by the highway authorities.

While the Olympic Parking Lot was convenient for those skiing on weekends, weekday skiers still had to get themselves to the gondola area as the lift company’s bus only ran on weekends. Janet Love Morrison first visited Whistler Mountain on a class trip in the early 1970s and recalled that Lower Olympic Run was only open on the weekend because of this. She and some classmates decided to rebel by skiing down the run anyways and had to rely on a passing tow truck driver to get them back to their bus by the gondola before it left for Port Coquitlam.

Concrete forms are piled up on the Olympic Parking Lot. Whistler Question Collection, 1979

By the end of the 1970s, the Olympic Parking Lot and the dump had been replaced by the early construction of the Whistler Village. In 1980, Whistler Mountain opened its first lifts going up from the Village, including the Olympic Chair that connected the Village Chair and the Black Chair.

Whistler’s Answers: February 7, 1985Whistler’s Answers: February 7, 1985

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Another year, another year of questions and answers!

In the 1980s the Whistler Question began posing a question to three to six people and publishing their responses under “Whistler’s Answers” (not to be confused with the Whistler Answer).  Each week, we’ll be sharing one question and the answers given back in 1985.  Please note, all names/answers/occupations/neighbourhoods represent information given to the Question at the time of publishing and do not necessarily reflect the person today.

Some context for this week’s question: At a January 1985 council meeting, Whistler council voted 3-1 in favour of a resolution stating “We are concerned about proliferation of nuclear weapons and we would rather that Canada is not part of it.” Though the resolution passed, it led to a debate about nuclear weapons and Whistler’s and Canada’s place in the larger, international debate. The issue came to council as a result of work on Whistler’s Emergency Plan.

Question: Do you think the nuclear proliferation issue is a municipal one?

Max Wing – Skier – Club Cabins

I think Whistler should be very concerned – this would probably be a high attack zone and we should be fully prepared. In fact we should have an emergency alert as soon as possible, and maybe another bomb shelter at Pika’s. There should be a massive bell system so everyone goes directly to the shelter – and I can go around to all the places immediately and drink up the leftover beers.

Delmar Page – Bartender – Function Junction

No, I suppose it’s good we have a shelter (underground parking) but I don’t think we should get involved otherwise. We’re out of our field – council shouldn’t get involved. I imagine there’s a lot of warheads but it’s not something I think about a lot.

Terry Rodgers – Mayor – White Gold

Inasmuch as dripping water will wear away the hardest stone, I think eventually junior levels of government can wear down the bigger one. But what we don’t want to do is have democratic governments induced to unilaterally disarm – if in Japan could drop a bomb on Los Angeles, would the US have bombed Hiroshima? There’s nothing wrong with expressing thought on this matter.

Family Day Weekend Kids Après at the MuseumFamily Day Weekend Kids Après at the Museum

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Kids Après is back (and in-person!) for the BC Family Day Weekend, February 17 – 19 from 2 – 5pm. This is a great chance to bring the whole family by the museum to learn something new about Whistler’s history, enjoy free hot chocolate, add your own colour to archival images, and take home a wintry craft!

Entry to the museum during Kids Après is free.

(Nordic) Ski Racing in 1980(Nordic) Ski Racing in 1980

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While the Alta Lake Sports Club (ALSC) was founded in 1975 to “organize and encourage participation in outdoor sports at all levels of ability in the Whistler area and beyond,” in the winter months the ALSC was all about cross country skiing. Members organized events in Whistler and competed in races with other clubs around the province, although they got off to a rocky start in the winter of 1976/77 when a particularly mild winter forced one event after another to be cancelled or moved to Manning Park. By 1980, however, the ALSC was consistently hosting multiple races each season and the first few months of the year were busy ones for the members.

In January 1980, members of the ALSC travelled to 100 Mile House to take part in the Cariboo Marathon, a 50km race with 1,500 competitors that took place in “extremely cold” and “frigid” temperatures according to the report in the Whistler Question. The ALSC was well represented in the women’s division of the Marathon, with members Joan McGrath, Loreen Barnett and Betty Ann Hopner taking first, second and fourth places. Catherine Gaarder and Jenny Busdon, both ALSC members, provided a picture-perfect finish after meeting at the 15km mark and cross the finish line with their hands together after 5 hours and 10 minutes.

Competitors cross the bridge during the ALSC and Labatt’s annual meet. Whistler Question Collection, 1980

ALSC members did not far so well in the men’s division, where the Finlandia Club from Vancouver swept the first five spots. Some members were out with injuries or working out of the country while others ran into difficulties during the race. Al Fisher, the ALSC coach, ended up in the trees around the 20km mark, was knocked unconscious, broke his nose, recovered, and made it to the finish line in 13th place. Both he and Nello Busdon ended up at the hospital with frostbite.

On February 10, the ALSC and Labatt’s hosted their annual meet on the trails around Lost Lake with a 25km course for racers and a 12km course for tourers and “youngsters.” The ALSC was well represented in both divisions this time, with McGrath again coming first in her category and Dan McDonald placing third in his, behind two members of the Finlandia Club.

Later that month, ALSC members competed at the BC Championship Cross-Country Ski Meet held in Manning Park, where they came second in the 3x5km relay (coming in just behind the Finlandia Club team).

Kauko Puscnius of the Finlandia Club receives his first place medal from Al Fisher as Labatt’s Terry Burns looks on. Whistler Question Collection, 1980

The last big race that year for the ALSC was the 4th Annual Fischer Cup, again held around Lost Lake. The rain and warm weather before the race had some members wondering if the race would go ahead, but according to Jenny Busdon, “We are an optimistic bunch and one thing our Club never does is give up!” The race director Jim Bishop took three days off from his work in the city and spent two days shovelling with other members to build a new course that eliminated previous problem areas that caused “scenes of absolute bedlam” whenever one skier went down. In the end, the 15km course was in “fantastic” condition for the race.

A skier comes down water tower hill in the Fischer Cup. Whistler Question Collection, 1980

At this last race of the season, McDonald took first, finally coming ahead of the “seemingly unbeatable Finns.” The event also included an elementary age race where new ALSC skiers, some of whom had only tried the sport a few times before, got a taste of competition over 5km.

The Fischer Cup was followed by a medals ceremony, prizes from Fischer, Labatt’s, Andres Wine, the Highland Lodge, and Molson, and a dance at the school, where the social aspects of belonging to a club took precedence over the competition.

Through the 1980s, the ALSC hosted fewer skiing events as the newly formed Whistler Nordic Ski Club grew. Last night (Monday, February 5) we had a great time learning about Nordic skiing and the Whistler Nordic Ski Club from Tom Barratt, Keith Bennett and Stephanie Sloan and heard some amazing stories. Thank you to everyone who came out to our first Speaker Series of 2024 and we hope to see you at our next events!