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Women of Winter inspires the downhill rush that uplifts – and diversifies

Raised in Hawaii by an Austrian father and Filipino mother, Chris Walch learned to ski in her 20s in Austria. With long black hair and brown skin, she stood out, and, as a new skier, it made her uncomfortable.

“I felt like I had a lot of eyes on me,” she says. “But I really wanted to ski, and if that’s the cost that came with it, that’s the cost that came with it. … [It’s] not the cost that I want anyone else to have to pay.”

Why We Wrote This

Catching air on the slopes is often a white male realm. But Women of Winter is training snow-sports instructors to help diversify the slopes.

Ms. Walch went on to careers in law and high-tech but decided to help diversify ski slopes dominated by white men. Her nonprofit, Women of Winter (WoW), trains women of color to teach snow sports and be models for other women not often represented on the slopes.

In early March in Big Sky, Montana, she trained 32 women of color from around the country to be snow-sports instructors. 

“Immediately I felt a sense of belonging, which is something I’ve never really experienced on the mountain before,” says Yolanda Carlton, a WoW graduate who instructs at Liberty Mountain in Pennsylvania.  “[It] opened my mind to all the possibilities and opportunities. This, right here, is my retirement plan.”

On a recent snowy weekday afternoon, Chris Walch shuffles her skis in a lift line at Big Sky Resort – she’s multitasking to the max. Founder of a high-tech business, she texts for work on her smartphone while, in her other role as the founder of Women of Winter (WoW), she’s guiding a group of women of color, like her, up to a black diamond bowl at 9,500 feet.

She’s one of several snow-sports instructors training women to pursue outdoor adventures and become models for other women not significantly represented on the slopes. Today, she’s on one of several runs with this group of Black, Hispanic, and Asian women who’ve come here from around the country to train for a Professional Ski Instructors Association (PSIA) exam.

The course is meant to produce women ski instructors of color who can take teaching skills back to their local ski hills. For many, the class provides a sense of inclusion on the slopes they’ve rarely felt.

Why We Wrote This

Catching air on the slopes is often a white male realm. But Women of Winter is training snow-sports instructors to help diversify the slopes.

WoW instills a sense of belonging in the snow-sports environment that has been “predominantly pale and male,” says Peggy Hiller, PSIA chief executive officer. “There’s a huge opportunity to grow our instructor base to represent our entire population, which includes women and people of color.”

Ms. Walch, who grew up in Hawaii, the child of an Austrian father and Filipino mother, learned to ski on the Austrian slopes in her 20s. She stayed in the Tyrol region to teach. With long, midnight black hair and brown skin, she stood out and was easily spotted on the mountain. And, as a new skier, this made her uncomfortable. She says she was considered “exotic,” with students often requesting “the Hawaiian instructor.”

JODI HAUSEN

Chris Walch (at center in light blue jacket), teaches women at Montana’s Big Sky resort who will take the knowledge back to slopes near their homes.

“I felt like I had a lot of eyes on me no matter what I did,” she says. “But I really wanted to ski, and if that’s the cost that came with it, that’s the cost that came with it … [it’s] not the cost that I want anyone else to have to pay.”

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