How to prepare for a ski holiday – an alternative guide

This list was doing the rounds many moons ago – it’s not my work – but it does make me smile, hope it tickles you too.

1. Visit your local butcher and pay £30 to sit in the walk-in freezer for half an hour. Afterwards, burn two £50 notes to warm up.

2. Soak your gloves and store them in the freezer after every use.

3. Fasten a small, wide, rubber band around the top half of your head before you go to sleep each night.

4. If you wear glasses, begin wearing them with glue smeared on the lenses.

5. Throw away a hundred-pound note now.

6. Find the nearest ice rink and walk across the ice 20 times in your ski boots carrying two pairs of skis, accessory bag and poles. Pretend you are looking for your car. Sporadically drop things.

7. Place a small but angular pebble in your shoes, line them with crushed ice, and then tighten a C-clamp around your toes.

8. Buy a new pair of gloves and immediately throw one away.

9. Secure one of your ankles to a bed post and ask a friend to run into you at high speed.

10. Go to McDonald’s and insist on paying £8.50 for a hamburger. Be sure you are in the longest line.

11. Clip a lift ticket to the zipper of your jacket and ride a motorcycle fast enough to make the ticket lacerate your face.

12. Drive slowly for five hours – anywhere – as long as it’s in a snowstorm and you’re following an 18-wheeler.

13. Fill a blender with ice, hit the pulse button and let the spray blast your face. Leave the ice on your face until it melts. Let it drip into your clothes.

14. Dress up in as many clothes as you can and then proceed to take them off because you have to go to the bathroom.

15. Slam your thumb in a car door. Don’t go and see a doctor.

16. Repeat all of the above every Saturday and Sunday until it’s time for the real thing.

Source (I think – happy to be corrected): From Clare Martin ‘How to train for ski season’, Denver Post, December 12 1998. I changed the $ to £s.

Author: Jo Gunston

Freelance sportswriter Jo Gunston works for the likes of Olympics.com and also publishes additional content at sportsliberated.com. A favourite personal sporting moment for the former elite gymnast was performing as a 'dancer' in the London 2012 opening ceremony.

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