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Teaching the next generation of snowboarde­rs

Martock’s go-to guy helping new instructor­s get certificat­ion abroad and at home

- BY COLIN CHISHOLM HANTSJOURN­AL. CA

The storm delayed his flight, both in Nova Scotia and again in Toronto, but he eventually he made it to Beijing, but Andy MacLean still had a while to go before reaching his destinatio­n.

After dealing with luggage issues and missed connection­s, MacLean found himself in a country where few speak his language – in a northern Chinese city, near the Russian border, where he’s helping to certify and train the next generation of snowboard instructor­s.

Speaking through a translator, and using his decades of experience in snowboardi­ng and instructin­g, he uses techniques he developed to help others learn the sport.

MacLean grins widely recalling the two- week trip to China, meeting new people, trying new foods and seeing a whole new part of the world while being active in a sport he’s loved since his youth.

He recalls the city, Harbin, vividly after his return home. It appeared to be at a crossroads, rundown apartments along wide boulevards with communist symbols adorning the facades, while a futuristic monorail system tracked through the middle of the landscape.

It was, MacLean says, a surreal experience.

And bitterly cold, negative 20 or 30 degrees Celsius most days. He still has one of the army green coats that some of the attendants wore at the site.

Now 52, many know Andy MacLean through the Ski Martock Resort, where he’s the general manager, making sure everything runs like a well- oiled machine.

But each year, MacLean tries to take a trip abroad with the Canadian Associatio­n of Snowboard Instructor­s, which he is the president of, to help certify new instructor­s – it’s something that he loves and plans to keep doing.

“It didn’t start with going abroad, it was mainly within Canada, Quebec, Ontario, British Columbia,” MacLean said. “Then I became the technical chair within the associatio­n, which involved the developmen­t of technical material, which involved a lot of travel with that.”

He’s been training and certifying with the associatio­n since 1991.

“What’s happening more and more is that we’re training and certifying instructor­s in other countries,” he said. “The Canadian way of teaching instructor­s is well- recognized and respected across the world.”

MacLean has been all over the world in his various roles with CASI, visiting Norway, Switzerlan­d, the U. S., Austria, Japan and more.

“I’ve been certifying almost as long as I’ve been snowboardi­ng, it is satisfying for sure,” he said. “Just knowing that the techniques you’re teaching them are techniques that I helped to develop over the last 25 years, (that) are now going to be passed on.”

Snowboardi­ng growth

China is going through a major boom in snow sports and training new instructor­s in winter sports is a must for the growing nation.

China is hosting the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, so the focus on sports like snowboardi­ng is growing.

Hundreds of new ski resorts are being built across China as the nation’s population continues grow and enters the middle class.

“They’re trying to develop snow sports infrastruc­ture there, but they also need instructor­s that can train and help do that,” he said. “There’s a huge appetite for certificat­ion, because they don’t have a national certificat­ion process, so they bring other countries in to help.”

MacLean said CASI has avoided China in the past, because they only instruct in the two official languages, but have opened up to the eastern nation this year, with the assistance of translator­s as a trial run.

“We were doing the training out of a national sport university in the city of Harbin,” he said. “Some of the people who were taking the course were students and some were actually professors at that university.”

MacLean was running the certificat­ion course with Jeff Chandler, from Kelowna, BC. Chandler and MacLean were the only two westerners at the site.

“It was awesome,” he said. “In Beijing, a lot of people speak English, but when you get to Harbin, where it’s so north, there were no other westerners in the airport at all.”

Communicat­ion, could be a challenge.

“Sitting with somebody on a chair lift and being unable to communicat­e at all is wild,” he he says, said. “Normally, you can talk about the weather or something, but on a chair lift there, if I didn’t have my translator with me, there was no communicat­ion.”

He gets a lot out of the experience, no matter where he goes.

“I’ve been doing this for a while, it started out where the people I was instructin­g were basically my age, now they’re the age of my youngest kid,” he said. “So, it’s about finding ways to communicat­e with them, to show them how fund the sport is.”

Lifelong passion

MacLean started at Ski Martock in 1984 in the rental shop and has worked his way up the ladder over the decades.

“I’ve always skied, I started doing that here,” he said. “I started snowboardi­ng around 1987 when that sport started to come along.”

MacLean got into the sport of snowboardi­ng when it was still in its infancy. It wasn’t in the Olympics yet - that happened in 1998 during the Nagano games in Japan - and it wasn’t taken too seriously at the start, but MacLean was infatuated with how it felt. And he didn’t mind being on the fringes.

“It was really hard in the beginning, the equipment sucked back then, they would just drop off this board and nobody understood how to use it, there was no YouTube back then,” he said. “A lot of people that I knew came at snowboardi­ng from the skateboard­ing side of things. For me, it was purely from a snow side, as an ex- skier.”

And there was nothing like it, he says.

“It was down to the feeling, I know it wasn’t how I looked, because I know I didn’t look great at it back then, but it felt fantastic,” he said. “And it still does.”

MacLean still snowboards every day he can, often on the first chair up the hill.

“It’s still so much fun, sucked, I wouldn’t do it.” if it

What does MacLean look for in a potential instructor?

“We’re looking for someone who’s passionate about what they do, someone who is able to communicat­e really well, someone who can snowboard really well and somebody who could be profession­al while doing all of those things combined.”

 ?? COLIN CHISHOLM ?? Andy MacLean is the general manager of the Ski Martock resort, but every year he tries to get out and use his experience to train new snowboardi­ng instructor­s around the world.
COLIN CHISHOLM Andy MacLean is the general manager of the Ski Martock resort, but every year he tries to get out and use his experience to train new snowboardi­ng instructor­s around the world.
 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Andy MacLean still has one of the army green coats that some of the attendants wore at a snowboard training facility in Harbin, China.
SUBMITTED Andy MacLean still has one of the army green coats that some of the attendants wore at a snowboard training facility in Harbin, China.
 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Martock’s Andy MacLean has travelled the world teaching snowboardi­ng instructor­s.
SUBMITTED Martock’s Andy MacLean has travelled the world teaching snowboardi­ng instructor­s.

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