Jumpfest weekend draws impressive crowds

Jumpfest weekend draws impressive crowds
Conditions were excellent for jumping at Satre Hill in Salisbury on Sunday, Feb. 13. About 4,500 people attended the three-day Jumpfest. Photo by Randy O’Rourke

SALISBURY — The Salisbury Winter Sports Association (SWSA) Jumpfest weekend got off to a good start on Friday evening, Feb. 11, as about 800 people made the trek to Satre Hill to watch the target jumping and the popular Human Dogsled Race.

The line for tickets was long on Friday night at 7 p.m. People were good-humored and the line moved steadily.

Despite the moderate temperatures, it was still chilly enough for the traditional bonfires on either side of the ski jump hills.

The warmer weather posed some difficulties for the SWSA crew and for the skiers. Several jumpers had less than ideal landings Friday night. On Saturday, practice jumping was skipped in order to keep the hill in the best possible condition.

Saturday’s continued mild temperatures also meant mud. Lots of mud.

The short walk from the ticket booth to Satre Hill was a sloppy slog, and once there, patrons at the concession area had to negotiate several inches of muddy water.

It didn’t seem to bother anybody. By 2 p.m., Satre Hill was completely packed with spectators.

With the sun out and temperatures exceeding 50 degrees, the organizers didn’t light the bonfires.

Several spectators took advantage of this to use the stacked pallets — normally bonfire fuel — as tables and/or handy seats.

To the right of the ski jumps, a group of small children, occasionally joined by a parent, slid down the modest incline and improvised games.

At about 2:30 p.m. the parking area was full and cars lined both sides of nearby Railroad Street. LaBonne’s grocery store had an employee patrolling its parking lot, shooing away vehicles with spectators.

On Sunday morning the thermometer was back in winter mode, and a couple of inches of fresh snow covered the landscape.

The conditions were improved at Satre Hill, as the colder temperature made the ski jumping surface nice and firm — and allowed for practice jumping.

The crowd was a bit smaller than Saturday’s, but by 2:30 p.m. the parking area was mostly full, and the bonfires were back in business.

SWSA’s Willie Hallihan reported on attendance. The Friday night action drew 800 people, which is roughly double the average Friday night crowd.

The Saturday jumping brought some 2,400 spectators. Hallihan said that figure is “easily one of our biggest Saturday crowds.”

And Sunday saw 1,300 spectators. Halihan said that was “a very good attendance, considering it is Super Bowl Sunday.”

SWSA’s Holly Reid noted, “The past few years have created such a renewal in ski jumping for young local jumpers that we have a new and upcoming group of local jumpers that are jumping K20, named Hewat Hill, and the K30.”

And there was a true “SWSA moment” Saturday, when Seth Gardner, jumper and coach, had an equipment failure during the first round of the Eastern Championship competition. SWSA board members went into action with a new pair of skis and bindings, enabling Gardner to get back to the hill.

In the Human Dogsled Race, Balto’s Bears won the female team competition for the second straight year with a time of 28:98 seconds.

The G-Bears won the men’s team title with a time of 25:81, and the mixed team champ was Rock Sleddy at 22:71. The People’s Choice award went to the Foxy Fliers from Falls Village.

The proceedings were live-streamed with the tecnical assistance of the Salisbury School.

And ski jump fans get another dose of competition when SWSA hosts the Junior Nationals Jumping and Nordic Combined competition at Satre Hill and Mohawk Ski Area starting Thursday, Feb. 24.

Go to www.jumpfest.org for more information.

Photo by Patrick L. Sullivan

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