tips for surviving the season...
Flirting
This is an essential part of working a ski season.
It is accepted that workers should flirt with each other outrageously.
If in doubt, dont forget the flirting stops when
you start taking it seriously.
Sex
Gather together a large number of young people,
away from home, in a holiday atmosphere, mix in lots of alcohol
and the fact that my place and yours
are only round the corner and the result is a phenomenal amount
of sexual activity. Watch out for libidos peaking at
every full moon.
Gossip
Remember that gossip is the life-blood of the
saisonnier's world. Don't expect to have a 'private'
life. You may well imagine it's just the two of you
in on your little secret, but do you really know
who saw you leave together last night or sneak back home this
morning?
Burn-out
At the start of the season it can be tempting
to ski all day and party all night. Doing this on holiday
is hard enough, but try doing it when you've got to get up
at 7am six days a week. Burnout, usually combined with
flu, usually hits after New Year. Avoid by pacing yourself
- a night in early doors saves nine (or something like that!).
Mid-season Blues
Hard as it may be to believe, a routine in the
wonderful world of a ski resort is still a routine.
If you dont do transfers, the only time you get out
of resort may be to the local supermarket. Enthusiasm
can wane and some staff stop skiing and even (shock-horror)
going out. Keep the blues at bay with variety
use your day-off, hitch to the nearest town, try snowshoeing
or telemarking. If still in doubt, look out of the window
it beats office blocks!
Drinking
Expect to drink a lot. Chalet wine is free
and although drinks are not always cheap in bars, what else
have you got to spend your money on? Many chalet girls
become G&T addicts and can be sure to end up with a bulging
drinks cabinet thanks to all the duty-free that gets left
behind. Top tip - crème de cassis makes the chalet white
more drinkable.
Day Off
Theres only one a week, so most staff use
it wisely with either a big ski day or a big sleep day.
The powder-hungry should check the forecast before getting
hammered - this is your one chance to first-lift each week
and you don't want to wake up at 11am to find youve
missed the best powder day of the season.
Changeover day
Theres no real way to prepare you for this.
If youre working for a tour operator theres no
doubt this is the worst day of the week. For reps,
a twenty-hour day is not uncommon: flight delays, lost luggage,
avalanches, traffic jams and lost lift-pass photos all will
feature. Top tip take supplies and something
to read - you may be some time!
Punters
Our jests about Billy
aside, your average punter is generally a decent chap, who
you will have at least skiing in common with. Sure,
this means many dinner conversations start formulaically with
So where did you ski today?, but most Billys have
as many interesting stories tucked away as you if you make
the effort to find them.
While some you will simply tolerate, most you will like, and a few will even become your friends! Generally though, most saisonniers rarely seem to want to mix socially with their guests. You can avoid bumping into them by being vague about where you're going, or be more crafty. Some chalet staff are highly skilled at getting things their own way: Well, of course, I would come to the pub, but I have all this washing up to do!

