Huff Hills has been around for 28 years, which is pretty crazy when you think about it. Lots of people impact a ski area over that many years, and a few make a bigger impression than others. We have watched riders grow up here, and then leave and work at other ski area across the globe. Others rode here for years, and now are bringing their kids out to learn to love skiing and riding, and watching this 2nd generation of rippers is one of our favorite things to do.
We wanted to take a minute as we get closer to 30 years of operation to look back at some of these people and the marks they have left on Huff Hills. Sometimes, once someone rides for years at an area, they can get a little legendary, and the gear can get a little dirty, so we call this series Crusty Locals. Enjoy.
Crusty Locals Episode 1
The ski industry is a pretty tight industry. Working at a ski area, you can develop connections to others in the industry pretty quickly. It's a small fraternity of people that choose this lifestyle, and decide to make a career out of it. There have been a ton of people that impacted Huff and we will profile a few that made a career out of the ski industry, even if only temporarily.
Sometime, people that get a taste of the ski industry life at a place like Huff Hills then move on to chase that life at a larger area. Sometimes, they even go and grab a college degree in ski area management. Yeah, that's actually something you can go to college for, at a number of different colleges (most of which have ski areas either on campus, or adjacent to campus). While you get over the fact that you didn't see that option when you were deciding what you wanted to be when you grew up, we will profile a couple people that started at Huff, and followed that exact path.
Jason "Goose" Gusaas
When Huff Hills opened in January of 1993, it was the culmination of a herculean effort to over come weather and construction delays. The previous 18 months involved some pretty awesome people, and one of them caught the ski industry bug, and had no intention of being cured. Jason Gusaas was a hockey player and snowboarder that found a job helping pour concrete, pound nails, and building lifts as Huff Hills became a reality. "I was Huff Hills' first employee ever, and I'm pretty proud of that." Said Jason.
Building a ski area is an experience that not too many people have the opportunity to do. This effort also included a one month road trip to Brian Head, UT to take down and haul back the Green Lift. Turns out, tearing a chairlift down and hauling it to ND, and reassembling it is a great way to learn about lifts. Jason's early experience ended up being a pre-college prep school of sorts prior to traveling to Gogebic Community College in Ironwood, MI. Jason learned the nuances of ski area operations, and took an internship with Copper Mountain, Colorado in the grooming department. Jason spent 10 years line grooming, and it turns out that grooming questionable snow conditions in the Midwest makes you a really good cat operator. Jason continued to create awesome snow conditions all winter at night, while doing construction in the summer, and was eventually was promoted to Terrain Parks and Half Pipes Foreman. Goose built parks for 11 years at Copper and was Colorado Ski Country USA's first Terrain Master of the Year in 2002.
Jason then left CO to work with with Planet Snow Design building terrain parks and race courses at ski areas across the US, including the Vail Honda Sessions and the Swatch Boarder Cross World Tour. The student then became the instructor when, in 2009, Jason joined the faculty in Colorado Mountain College in Leadville as an Assistant Professor of Ski Area Operations. Jason now spends his days teaching the next generation of people entering the ski industry, completing the circle and making even more connections in this tiny snow globe we all work in.