Wednesday, 30 November 2011 16:53

Talking With Nancy Greene Raine

Rate this item
(1 Vote)

Mountain checks in with Canada's female athlete of the century.

 

Dim lights Embed Embed this video on your site

 

Skiing is the story of Nancy Greene Raine's life. At three years old, she stepped into skis at Red Mountain, a resort in British Columbia where her parents helped to build the first chairlift. She competed at Olympics in Squaw Valley, Innsbruck, and Grenoble—bringing home gold and silver medals in alpine skiing from France. On a trip home to Red in 1968, Greene Raine won her second World Cup championship (she won the inaugural World Cup in 1967).

 

Retirement from ski racing meant a second career in ski resort development, at Whistler Blackcomb until the mid-1990s, and now at Sun Peaks Resort. Awards and titles didn't stop after racing, either. Greene Raine was named Canada's female athlete of the century in 1999, and appointed to Canada's Senate in 2009. Now in her 60s, when Greene Raine isn't in Ottawa, the first place to look for her is still on the slopes. Mountain caught up with Greene Raine this fall to get a look at her hardware and talk skiing in BC.  —Olivia Dwyer


Last modified on Wednesday, 30 November 2011 14:51
Login to post comments

tabletfacebooktwittersubscribe

Swami won't take offense if you mount tele/touring skis with AT bindings, but the easy flex makes tele-turning most joyful.
Time for Swami to trade in his String Cheese Incident rucksack and acquire a modern pack with adjustable straps, back vents, and such.
When seeking frontside skis, look for damp skis with ungodly edge penetration.
For all-mountain skis you seeketh a balance of powder flotation and hard-snow guts.
Big Mountain ski buyers: Meditate on tip rocker if you crave the pow. Ex racers go traditional.
Using AT boots? Swami sees 90 to 100 millimeter crossover skis in your future Facebook postings.
Swami sayeth: Choose a mountain bike with a blend of climbing and descending performance for the exigencies of the mountain trail near you.
What's with all the skiers passing us in the powder, you snowboarders ask? Rocker lets you float without effort. It's pay-to-play Zen.