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Gay Après

Winter sports fanatic Scott Holman loves cold men, slippery slopes, and vacations filled with ups and downs.


I have long been a ski freak, but now that I live in Manhattan I need to ski, to trade in grimy concrete for pristine powder and diesel fumes for the scent of pine. For many years it seemed to me that skiing was an activity that some gay people did, but never collectively; skiing was not a gay activity.

Enter gay ski week. My first was the daddy of them all, Aspen, Colo., over a decade ago. I was crammed into a tiny room with my best friend. We packed ourselves into every event venue with hot gay guys, regal queens drenched in fur, and sporty lesbians who were just as curious as I was to see who would win the downhill (literally and figuratively) drag ski race. I loved it. I booked my next gay ski week -- and many more since then -- immediately after returning home.

In Whistler, British Columbia, I did what all the good gay boys do: I went directly from a day on the mountain to après-ski. We partied at 6,069 feet in the mountaintop Roundhouse Lodge, which was hosting the night’s soiree. By the time I was downing my third martini, a roomful of bundled-up butch guys were wobbling precariously in their ski boots and falling all over each other. But the real fun was on the gondola ride to the lodge, reserved exclusively to transport gay revelers --and thus filled with shivering hotties who, despite the chill, just had to be scantily clad.

In Telluride, Colo., I found my home away from home, and I return each winter to reunite with friends old and new. Tucked into a fold in nearly 14,000-foot mountains, the historic setting couldn’t be more rustic; plus the pace of gay ski week is less harried than at the bigger resorts, the slopes a bit less crowded. I was ready to nest. And recruit.

“No way. Black people don’t ski,” my slope-resistant African-American boyfriend muttered in New York. “It’s in our rule book.” A bit of arm-twisting and a plane ride later, he had strapped on his first pair of skis, taken lessons, and was having a blast…at least until he tackled a trail a diamond above his beginner skill level, in subzero temps and whiteout conditions. We’re still thawing him out.

He is living proof that even nonskiers love gay ski week. (A little too much, perhaps; the giant eagle sculpture made from elk horns that he scoped out in a Telluride gallery -- with a wingspan wider than our tiny Manhattan condo -- appeared to be a fantastic find, until we got it home.) The locals love it too; one White Night party left a pair of resident desperate housewives so overcome by the number of hot men on the dance floor that they grabbed hold of my partner and me and wouldn’t let go. We eventually gave them the slip; we had other plans.

Events With Altitude
The lowdown on the chilly snow circuit from California to Canada

February 1–8
WinterPride

The Whistler, British Columbia, event attracts nearly 3,000 revelers (80% men) to the tidy, swank ski resort about two hours north of gay-popular Vancouver. Plan on the Mr. Gay World Competition, themed dance parties (including some ladies-only nights), zip-line canopy tours, snowmobile trips, a fashion show, and culinary courses.
GayWhistler.com

February 13–16
Winter Explosion

This year is the 15th anniversary of the largest and longest-running African-American LGBT winter event of its kind, with more than 600 attendees converging on New York’s Hudson Valley Resort and Spa (near New Paltz) over Presidents’ Day weekend. It’s OK to come just for the shows (Fantasia performs this year), film festival, charity balls, and indoor beach parties -- only about one quarter of the participants are skiers.
WinterExplosion.com

February 21–28
Telluride Gay Ski Week

More casual and low-key than Aspen’s ski week, Telluride, Colo., draws a young and laid-back crowd of about 1,500 (with a smattering of gay celebs), including a lot of returning devotees for the annual Oscar Night T-Bag party, sleigh ride dinner, torchlight parade, and White Night party.
TellurideGaySkiWeek.com

March 1–8
Lake Tahoe WinterFest

One of the granddaddy ski weeks (since 1996), this no-attitude happening includes access to six ski areas and lodging right on the postcard-perfect Lake Tahoe (California side), drawing in a tight-knit community of friends and newcomers, mostly in their 30s and 40s, for parties, a concert, a paddleboat lake cruise, book signings, and the OutLaugh Festival.
LakeTahoeWinterFest.com
--Matt Link

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Michelle
    Date posted: 1/18/2009 1:23:00 PM
    Hometown: New York

    Comment:

    Perhaps you might consider putting down the bible for a moment and picking up a book on grammar and spelling. And when you are done with that try reading the Constitution and pay particular attention to the parts about freedom. I may lead you to do the polite thing and keep your ideology to yourself.

  • Name: Michelle
    Date posted: 1/18/2009 1:19:00 PM
    Hometown: New York

    Comment:

    Great article! My partner and I are planning a trip to Telluride based purely on your reccomendation. As black lesbians we may be out numbered but it sounds like a great trip! Hope to see you there.

  • Name: Ana
    Date posted: 1/17/2009 11:55:00 AM
    Hometown: New York

    Comment:

    I really did not like skiing the first (and only) time because it was so cold but this article is making me want to try it again! And being surrounded by hot men (even though I'm a straight woman) is definitely an incentive ;)

  • Name: shirley love
    Date posted: 1/10/2009 9:08:00 PM
    Hometown: wichita kansas

    Comment:

    all that's fine you,went you had fun. but you don't see the big picture.god love's his children,all of them that have confessed Romans 10 :9&10The reasons people were in the closest years ago was because,they knew they were wrong.People don't just hide in closet.This story goes way back to the Romans and back to Sodom, and Gamor. men with men doing that witch is unseemly, even women with women. even wit animal & children. any body can be good people,that's not hard to do.It takes a true christian to confess he's wrong ask for forgiveness & healing.We have to answer for what we do,& we know what's.wrong Everybody, knows when there wrong, and when there right .God installed that when he gave us freedom of will we just seem,humans i mean. to wanna play pretend ,when we want to do wrong.better g-e-t it!.



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