On January 14, 2016

USABA partners with Vermont Adaptive for the ninth annual Winter Ski Festival

KILLINGTON — The United States Association of Blind Athletes (USABA), in partnership with Vermont Adaptive Ski and Sports, will once again host their annual Winter Ski Festival at Pico Mountain in Killington, Feb. 5-8. The event, in its ninth year, is one of the largest annual gatherings in the United States of skiers who are blind and visually impaired.

More than 20 athletes who are blind or visually impaired will ski or race in both Alpine and Nordic skiing in the renowned Green Mountains of Vermont. Athletes will attend the event from throughout the country; among them are seven veterans plus participants from the LEAP program in Burlington.

The weekend includes skiing or snowboarding, Nordic skiing, snowshoeing, biathlon target shooting, all food and lodging, as well as a celebratory banquet on Saturday night.

The festival is open to athletes with visual impairments of all ages, abilities and ski levels. Vermont Adaptive, the largest year-round disabled sports non-profit organization in Vermont, will provide trained guides and equipment. Vermont Adaptive is committed to empowering individuals with disabilities.

This year Vermont Adaptive has acquired an Eko-Aims Rifle and Biathlon Target, made possible by a Veteran’s Administration grant. The laser rifle is designed to help train visually impaired athletes using auditory signals to guide their aim, and it will be used at the USABA Winter Ski Festival this year.

“We are very excited about this piece of equipment because it will also enable us to do more local programming with visually impaired athletes, in particular our veterans from the White River Junction Veterans Administration,” said Vermont Adaptive Senior Program Coordinator Tom Alcorn.

For more information, visit www.usaba.org or contact Tom Alcorn at south@vermontadaptive.org.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Vermont Adaptive Ski and Sports seeks winter volunteer-instructors

October 17, 2024
Instructor training begins in November for skiing, snowboarding and winter sports KILLINGTON — Vermont Adaptive Ski and Sports, the largest year-round disabled sports nonprofit organization in Vermont to offer daily, year-round sports and recreation for people with disabilities, is looking for energetic winter volunteer-instructors who have a dedicated passion for sports and who want to…

Tips to maintaining your bike

September 27, 2024
Staff report So, you bought a mountain bike. Well done! You’ve now got a few epic rides under your belt. Excellent. But now you wonder how to best protect your investment and keep it rolling like new.  While there are many expert bike mechanics around locally that can help, here are a few basic things…

Agency of Trans awards $7.19m in bicycle and pedestrian grants

September 27, 2024
The Vermont Agency of Transportation (AOT) announced Sept. 12 the awards of approximately $7.19 million in grants to municipalities for bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure improvement projects. The combination of construction projects and planning grants will benefit cities and towns statewide with improved transportation connectivity and safety, tangible economic benefits, and additional transportation options for commuters,…

Tour of Pine Hill park: Go clockwise for an extra workout; go counter-clockwise for fun

September 27, 2024
By Shelley Lutz, Pine Hill Partnership board member  Pine Hill Park in Rutland City is one of the original trail networks in Central Vermont and is a must-stop on any mountain biker’s itinerary. The wooded park is 275 acres with 18 miles of mostly singletrack trails dotted with seven unique bridges. If you are an aerobic…