Outdoor Central Oregon Issue 10 | March/April 2019 | Page 10

10 MAR/APR 2019 CHRIS COSTIGAN GET2KNOW| SKI/BOARD TUNE TECHS SARA JOLICOEUR ing a beat up pair of skis look new again, everyday has a challenge and I love a good challenge. Shop: Mt. Bachelor Tune Shop Years Tuning: 17 Hometown: Greene, Maine Years in Bend: 7 3. Tuning skis/boards looks very labor intensive. How do you feel at the end of a busy day? What do you do to kick back and relax? Busy days can be exhausting. A cold beer or two is a favorite way to relax after a long day at work. Fishing and woodworking are some of my other favorite downtime activi- ties. 1. How did you become a tuning tech, who taught you the ropes? In college, I started working at the rental/ repair shop at Stowe. There I started to learn how to tune, there were many experienced techs that showed me the way. 2. The tuning area of a ski/board shop usually has its own micro-culture. Is it different from say the retail part of a shop? What is the most fun part of your job? The tune shop is definitely a different kind of place. Being slope side we see some interesting challenges every day. From go- ing out on the snow to pry someone’s failed snowboard buckle from their boot to mak- DAVID SWORD Shop: Crow’s Feet Commons Years Tuning: 38....yikes Hometown: Mt. Hood 1. How did you become a tuning tech, who taught you the ropes? My mother managed the rental shop at Mt. Hood Meadows and I pretty much grew up skiing and working there. I have worked in shops, for equipment manufacturers, race teams and everything in between. My early ski mentors were Steve Bratt and Ron Kipp, both of whom where sticklers for equip- ment being in the best shape. Through their guidance I was immersed in all things skiing, reading everything I could, asking questions, listening in on tech conversations and gener- ally being an information sponge. Living on Mt. Hood also proved valuable, as summer skiing on the Palmer glacier attracted the best athletes and mechanics from around the world. As many World Cup tech’s spent some (or most) of their Summer’s on Mt. Hood, I had plenty of opportunity to learn from the best. 2. The tuning area of a ski/board shop usually has its own micro culture. Is it different from say the retail part of a shop. What is the most fun part of your job? The “back of the house” is certainly an inter- esting place, and as many can attest, some- times crazy things happen that should just remain as memories. Most shops, however, are very professional with the technicians integrating with the sales staff, often lending a hand out front. The best part of the job is helping people get their gear back in shape. New Ski Day is always celebrated, because we are all skiers/riders and know what its like to get new gear. When we can get a dif- ficult job done, like repairing a serious “core shot” on someones base, or simple one 4. Working in a tuning shop, do you get much ski/ride time on the mountain. Do you always go out with a fresh wax? Fortunately my shop window looks out at Pine Marten lift and there is an opportunity to ski most days. I get on the hill a few times a week. Always with a fresh wax. 5. Tuning is seasonal, do you have another fun and interesting job on the offseason? Having a seasonal job has allowed me to work in several different lines of work throughout the years. Currently gardening is my offseason gig. like cleaning up rust and putting sharpness back on an overworked edge, we know the customer experience on the hill will be so much better. We take great pride in what we do, and hopefully that shows with the quality of work and face to face interaction we have with customer. 3. Tuning skis/boards looks very labor intensive. How do you feel at the end of a busy day. What do you do to kick back and relax? At the end of a busy shop day, everyone is tired but strangely satisfied. When you love what you do, working hard each day is easy. A beer or whisky and then end of a day is common, as is getting our personal gear ready for a day on the mountain. 4. Working in a tuning shop, do you get much ski/ride time on the mountain. Do you always go out with a fresh wax? Our staff probably average 3-4 ski days a week. 1 or 2 days riding the lifts and the others on early morning “dawn patrol” missions up Tumalo or The Cone. We pride ourselves in making sure our personal equip- ment is dialed as well, so we totally nerd out in the waxing world for sure. 5. What advice would you give someone interested in tuning skis/boards in a shop? Get a basic tuning kit, attend clinics, practice on your own equipment. Ask lots of ques- tions. Go down the internet rabbit hole and learn as much as you can. Look into an internship with a shop or race team. 6. Tuning is seasonal, do you have another fun and interesting job on the off season? We ski and bike year around. When skiing becomes sparse, the Gravel and Mountain bikes come out. I apply the same focus and excitement towards bikes as I do skis and snowboards. Shop: Powder House Years Tuning: 20 Hometown: Ballston Lake, New York Years in Bend: 17 1. How did you become a tuning tech, who taught you the ropes? I wrangled a job at the Jay Peak rental shop that started at 7:30 in the morning the day after I graduated from SUNY Plattsburgh. At some point that winter I started shooting skis out of the back of an old Grindrite machine. The ski/board bum thing was supposed to be the year off before getting serious and big with grad school. 20 years in, I’m finally calling this a career. I really learned how to tune skis when I moved to Bend and got hired on at the Pow- der House. I’ve learned from various clinics and every new hire that joins the team. I’ve even learned from a few customers. There isn’t much room for arrogance in our shop. Everyone has a special angle.....even our in- house Viking and his edge assaulting “Park tune”. I don’t get it, but the park kids do. 2. The tuning area of a ski/board shop usually has its own micro culture. Is it different from say the retail part of a shop. What is the most fun part of your job? We all wear multiple hats: twist DIN, sell product, grind, drill, wax, buff. There are days where I don’t see any of my boot fit- ters, but those guys are tuners and rental techs as well. So they have to deal with feet, and then come back to the shop and join the ten hour rental push party—they are commerce warriors. It’s the Powder House ladies that are the unsung heroes of the winter campaign. They have to sell the soft goods, manage the rental line, and herd the guys, who occasionally have the piss and vinegar of alley tomcats. 11 The most fun part of the job is watching the crew behave like family. 3. Tuning skis/boards looks very labor intensive. How do you feel at the end of a busy day. What do you do to kick back and relax? I’m not running off to any sort of gym after a work push. The kick back and relax thing is sometimes accomplished by putting on some headphones and taking my pooch, Norm, for a walk. Night walks are the best. And there is the projector at my lady’s place. Watching Netflix on that thing is all time. There is usually a beer or three mixed in there somewhere. 4. Working in a tuning shop, do you get much ski/ride time on the mountain. Do you always go out with a fresh wax? I get to ride two days a week, which is enough-ish. I wax constantly but I’m quick and dirty about it. 5. What advice would you give someone interested in tuning skis/boards in a shop? Secure an undergraduate degree in some- thing meaningless and love the hell out of winter. 6. Tuning is seasonal, do you have another fun and interesting job on the off season? Next time you’re at the hill take stock of all the Powder House Season Lease stickers you see on equipment. There is nothing seasonal about my job. I do a little guiding for Cog Wild just to mix it up. GUNNAR BARRETT Shop: Skjersaa’s Years Tuning: A bunch Hometown: Bend Years in Bend: My whole life 1. How did you become a tuning tech, who taught you the ropes? I became a tuning tech because my good buddy Gary said he could get me a job tun- ing skis in the winter. Drew Barber taught me most of what I know today between techniques and how to maintenance the machines. 2. The tuning area of a ski/board shop usually has its own micro culture. Is it different from say the retail part of a shop? What is the most fun part of your job? The back of the shop is different than out on the floor, it’s a little less social in the back because it’s loud and a tight space. The most fun part of my job is making a pair of skis look new again and ski well, it gets me stoked when tunes come out nicely. 3. Tuning skis/boards looks very labor intensive. How do you feel at the end of a busy day. What do you do to kick back and relax? Tuning skis and boards is definitely labor intensive, at the end of the night I feel pretty exhausted, scraping lots of skis gets tiring quick. To kick back and relax I like to sit on the chairlift between runs then ski. 4. Working in a tuning shop, do you get much ski/ride time on the mountain. Do you always go out with a fresh wax? Working in a tuning shop I get lots of ride time! My ski and work schedule work with each other allowing me to ski just about whenever. I don’t always go out with a fresh wax, only when one is needed! 5. What advice would you give someone interested in tuning skis/boards in a shop? I would say to someone interested in tuning in a shop, a sharp scraper can make the world of a difference. 6. Tuning is seasonal, do you have another fun and interesting job on the off season? In the summer I work in maintenance on the J-J youth services property and throw pottery. Dani Whitehead | P: Austin White