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1960s Slush Cups

  • silaswild
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16 years 3 weeks ago #190198 by silaswild
1960s Slush Cups was created by silaswild
Found this photo yesterday, modern day Slush Cup has a ways to go to catch up with the 1960s. This one is from Baker, I'm pretty sure there was one at Alpental in the 70s also? Waiting for the historian to report in....maybe there is already a Slush Cups section at alpenglow?

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  • Telemon
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16 years 3 weeks ago #190201 by Telemon
Replied by Telemon on topic Re: 1960s Slush Cups
I am no ski historian, but I know that the "death" of Baker's slush cup had something to do with how "lively" it got in the '70s.

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  • davidG
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16 years 3 weeks ago #190202 by davidG
Replied by davidG on topic Re: 1960s Slush Cups
doesn't this belong in the censorship thread ??   :D   I remember something about Alpental back then - but you know how the 70s were - hard to remember..

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  • Lowell_Skoog
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16 years 3 weeks ago - 16 years 3 weeks ago #190203 by Lowell_Skoog
Replied by Lowell_Skoog on topic Re: 1960s Slush Cups
Hi Silas,

The page you posted is from "The Book of American Skiing" by Ezra Bowen, published in 1963. I have a partial photocopy from the Tacoma Public Library. Here's what the book says about the Mt Baker slush cup:

Wild Finale for a Wonderful Season

When the Heather Cup race brings the season on Mt Baker to its official end, a heavy crowd turns out -- but not for the Heather Cup. They come to watch, and to enter, the kookiest skiing event in the United States, a completely spontaneous mixture of snow, sun, glacier water, and frozen blue bodies called the Slush Cup. At the bottom of Austin Bowl there is a tiny puddle of water called Terminal Lake. By the Fourth of July the sun has melted the icecap over the lake, and a deep, round, green puddle of 33-degree water bubbles up. The game is to climb the side of the bowl and then schuss down onto the lake, hoping you have enough speed to make a dry, stand-up run to the other side. Nobody ever wins the game. The few who actually make it across are rewarded by loud boos. Equipment is optional. Most contestants use regular skis, but some have tried air mattresses, rubber boats, shortie skis, water skis, ski-runner bicycles, and even canoes. They come down singly, in pairs, in trebles, with others riding piggyback, and with screaming girls in their arms. Their costumes range from bathing suits to pajamas, shorts, lederhosen, cut-off jeans, tee shirts, cotton sweat shirts, floppy straw hats, long johns, and rubber wet suits. The greatest variety of all, however, is in the positions of the Slush Cuppers as, one after another, they gallantly fail to escape their icy dip.

(photos by Marshall Lockman)


In the 1970s, some of my brother's friends (Eric Lindahl, who occasionally posts here, was one) found a cliff at Alpental to the side of Chair 1 with a pool at the bottom of it. In spring they used to jump off the cliff and splash-land in the pool. Eric has movies of it. It wasn't the same as the slush cup, and it was very small, but memorable.

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  • Lowell_Skoog
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16 years 3 weeks ago #190204 by Lowell_Skoog
Replied by Lowell_Skoog on topic Re: 1960s Slush Cups
Here's an old thread that mentions the Alpental pool jump:

www.turns-all-year.com/skiing_snowboardi...php?topic=4149.0;all

I thought I once posted memories about the Mt Baker slush cup (Eric Lindahl features prominently on one of the stories) but I didn't find them after a brief search.

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  • Jim Oker
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16 years 3 weeks ago - 16 years 3 weeks ago #190205 by Jim Oker
Replied by Jim Oker on topic Re: 1960s Slush Cups
Perhaps not THE slush cup, but the 1990's cult classic, The Revenge of the Telemarkers , featured some slush cup action from somewhere around Baker. Dickie Hall would undoubtedly know whether it was "Austin Bowl," or near the Railroad Grade, or what (I believe he has run "camps" up by the Easton). I think one or more associates of Silas and maybe Lowell appeared in the Mt Hood part of this video.

Total thread drift, but I have wondered if the narrator in that video was NPR's Martin Costi, who has a very similar vocal quality (but never quite curious enough to send Dickie email to ask)...

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