RUN RATING: ALL MATTER OF OPINION.Byline: Brett Pauly Daily News Staff Writer As many skiers have found out the hard way, rating runs is a subjective matter that is decided by the resort's management and can result in some questionable calls. The toughest runs at Snowcrest, for example, are flagged by single black diamonds - for advanced skiers - but in all likelihood should be considered double black diamonds - experts only. Over at Snow Summit, some double blacks might actually be blue squares - for intermediates. ``It's a relative scale. It recognizes the relative difficulty of trails at the resort you're visiting at that particular time,'' said Michael Berry Sir Michael Victor Berry, FRS FRSE (born 14 March 1941), is a mathematical physicist at the University of Bristol. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1982 and knighted in 1996. , president of the Denver-based National Ski Areas Association, a trade group for the resort industry. And it's a marketing tool, as one local resort manager pointed out: ``If you advertise tougher runs, you attract higher-caliber skiers.'' Why isn't there a uniform scale? Too many variables, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Berry. Vertical drop divided by the run's length provides a crude formula, but throw in obstacles, regional variations and snow-surface conditions - moguls vs. flat, ice vs. groomed groom n. 1. A person employed to take care of horses or a stable. 2. A bridegroom. 3. One of several officers in an English royal household. 4. Archaic a. A man. b. - and the mix becomes too great to rate. ``It probably is an impossibility Impossibility See also Unattainability. belling the cat mouse’s proposal for warning of cat’s approach; application fatal. [Gk. Lit. ,'' Berry said. ``What may be a blue trail on Monday could be a black trail on Tuesday.'' In lieu of Instead of; in place of; in substitution of. It does not mean in addition to. a national measure, resorts warn patrons of the hazards by way of skier and snowboarder snow·board n. A board resembling a small surfboard and equipped with bindings, used for descending snow-covered slopes on one's feet but without ski poles. intr.v. responsibility codes. ``What we sell is excitement,'' Berry said. ``In our sport there are elements of risk, and we don't hesitate to tell people that.'' |
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