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A BRIEF HISTORY OF WATCHUNG'S FIRST YEAR
By
ERLING OMAR OMLAND

  My interest in skiing, first tried and forgotten in 1922 when I was five and slid on pine skis over the potato fields of Long Island, then revisited when I at seven and eight spent two years in Norway where I skied cross country and learned to jump, 
was renewed following the 1932 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid   . I was then living in Roselle and whenever we accumulated a few inches of snow I stepped into my oak skis with Haug bindings (steel toe irons and a strap that clamped around the heel) and toured the open expanse of Warinanco Park.
   Then in 1935 the superintendent of The Union County Park Commission, F. S. Mathewson, inaugurated the first of several annual cross country races held in the Watchung Reservation. He later was the facilitator who, together with Bill Frutchey, Dick Wade, Tom Huitfeldt and others, founded the Watchung Amateur Ski Club on December 8, 1938. As a founding member, active during the first fifteen years of Watchung's history, and deeply involved from Vermont since I moved here in 1952, I have followed the fortunes of our club now into its sixtieth year.
  Much of that history is archived in a my vast file of our club publication HILL ECHOES, which I began editing and publishing in 1939 with the prophetic first words "We begin with a great faith in our future." Other fine references are the special yearbook editions of ECHOES for 1958, '68, '78 and '88. (In my two historically correct but also part fictional novels, also entitled HILL ECHOES, there are nearly a hundred references to WASC with special emphasis on the role of Watchung men who served in the Tenth Mountain Division of WW2.)
    "I think that weekend did more to make the club a unit than anything that happened before or after ..."   However, for this essay, I have chosen to peruse my annual series of narrative photo albums from the first years of our club, emphasizing the ski and social activities therein recorded.
  One of the early pictures shows Mt. Mansfield, the destination of the first club trip only a few weeks after the founding meeting of December 8th. I hitched a ride with Winnie and Irma Starr, enclosed in the rumble seat of their Pontiac convertible for the thirteen hour drive from Elizabeth to Stowe. The Stowe thermometers registered at ten below. The only uphill facility was the rope tow at Turks at the base of the Toll Road where "Hoddy Beazlie and I tried to comply with their requests for instruction." Later and during the next two days we climbed the Toll Road several times.

 

Hoddy Beazlie
Hoddy Beazlie

We used an hour and a half on the two and a half mile trek, on skis well waxed, to reach the Stone Hut at the start of the famed Nose Dive. My return to New Jersey was much more comfortable in the front passengers seat.
    Now I shall quote verbatim from my album about what happened two weeks later. "The weekend in mid January saw Union County with the the Omlands likewise, for we had Pop on skis and he and his brood (Jaxon, Inkie, Betty and Erling) enjoyed the splendor of skiing in sunshine with friends."
   "I think that weekend did more to make the club a unit than anything that happened before or after ...I remember Johnny Kaemphs distinct christy, the way he sent his long legs into the turn and the special American Ski School technique. I still see Fritz's (Lunde) red shirt tearing like a forest fire through the improvised slalom which we set among the trees. Frutchey's and Wade's feather dusters (on their alpine hats) stand out in memory ...Mr. Nydecker, our oldest member at 63, requested lessons in stem turns. I met two noisy girls who turned out to be the Ritters...Veep Huitfeldt was cornered by a plump matron who insisted he teach her to stem ...she promptly forget to stop and knocked him off his feet. Frutchey had procured some makeshift slalom poles and we practiced on the hill north of the Tin Kettle."
  "For the first time in history skiers outnumbered the sleigh riders. Sunday the Fourth Annual Union County Cross Country race was held in the Reservation with Watchung taking the first three places: Omland, Lunde, Beazlie...After the race we skied again at Galloping Hill, staying until long after dark, for we felt it would be sacrilegious to allow such snow to be unused. We were out again Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights always finding club members to ski with."
   "On January 21 we were on skis again ...Seeking more sheltered terrain we drove to the South Mountain (at the deer paddock) arriving in time to see Bill Blanchard (an early WASC member) come zipping down the slope, dig a ski into a sitz‑mark crater and catapult into a spectacular spill. When he got up he had two pieces of a broken ski in his hand. But we consoled him by saying he was lucky it wasn't a broken leg, and that a ski manufacturer (He actually made skis in his construction company warehouse) should have little difficulty in securing another pair."

Here are some interesting entries about equipment.

   "I had graduated from Haug bindings to a cable binding..."

  "All I lacked was steel edges, and I trotted down to Ray Blomquist (the pro and a WASC member) at Bambergers in Newark and purchased the sectional edges and screws. It took me six hours to gouge the ski edges with a special plane that Pop made for me, carefully fit in the short steel edge sections and drive about two hundred small screws into the hard hickory, and to polish the job with steel wool."
   "Watchung invaded the Poconos on January 29. We were over thirty skiers from the club at Buckhill Falls ...I saw Arnie Kirbach (a founding member and now, he at 85 and I 82, my constant ski companion as we cruise the Pico snows) ski and was impressed with his extreme "vorlage"...
   In early February "we left N. J. in dismal rain at two o'clock in the morning" bound for the village of Lake George. (Where Fred Pabst had one of his ubiquitous J‑Stick lifts set up on Scotts Cobble. He later gathered all the J‑Sticks from Canada, New York and New England and installed them at Bromley where they survived until long after chair lifts became the fashion.) This was our introduction to downhill racing as "we climbed the Little Lightning Racing Trail with fourteen others..."
   On February 10, 1939 "we all gathered at Pistors...That was the first time I saw Walter Stocker, who soon became a warm friend ...we were bound for Phoenicia in the Catskills (Where Simpson Slope offered a spacious and wide rolling ski slope with a very long rope tow. It even had a railroad siding at the outrun where snow trains deposited hordes of skiers.)
 

Dick Wade
Dick Wade

At noon "Dick Wade came limping up to us with one ski on and the other, in two splintered pieces, in his hand. His right leg was bloodsoaked and left a red trail where he walked. Someone in the hut went to work on the leg, unceremoniously cutting Dick's long underwear off at the knee (he wore knickers) and painting the gash with iodine. Then he began probing the long cut and said, "There's something in there." To which Dick replied, "You're damn right, and it is my shin bone."...In a few hours Dick was back on the slope on rented skis."
  The next day "we climbed part of the Spit‑Cat‑Spit trail, finding it impossible to ski ...and the Cat gave me a split ski for my troubles ...I confiscated Dick's good ski and found it matched mine in length (7' 3")...it was finished in a natural tone with an Attenhoff binding, whereas mine was dark with a Gerber binding... consequently I spent a great many minutes explaining my queer equipment to the inquisitive Gothamites."

Ted "Schusser" Pistor
Ted "Schusser" Pistor

 "By noon we were more than thirty club members on the hill ...Ted Pistor joined us ...and did a series of cartwheels over the abrupt pitch which begins the lower half. I thought he was dead, but he popped right up and tried it again. I never saw anyone who had less respect for the workings of gravity and the vagaries of ski terrain than Ted ...He earned the name which he bore, and "Schusser Pistor" it shall always be."

First Annual Banquet

   Watchung returned to Lake George's Cobble several times and presently it was March 23 and more than sixty of us gathered at the Winfield Scott Hotel in Elizabeth to inaugurate the First Annual Banquet of the Watchung Amateur Ski Club.
Two weeks later Jim and Doris Spees invited me to join them, and Beazlie and Kirbach, for a long Easter ski vacation in the White Mountains. From Glenwood on the Saco we five ventured into Tuckerman Ravine, an awe inspiring introduction which led to my becoming so addicted that I still venture into that formidable glacial cirque every spring. There are ten wonderful pages covering that extended ski excursion which found us skiing on the Headwall, down the Sherburne and in subsequent days at Intervale, then on Cannon Mountain with its funicular. Finally, late one afternoon, we climbed the Sunset Schuss on Pico Peak (before there were any lifts there) to slither down on breakable crust before satisfying Jim's wish to investigate a new Chinese restaurant in Rutland.

  In this brief history of Watchung's first year you have learned about the equipment we used, the areas we visited and you have met most of the characters who would carry the drama through the crucible of the Second World War.