The Adventure Guys
We admit it. We've got great jobs. How many people get told by their bosses to go out and play? We write about those experiences each Thursday in The News Tribune’s Adventure section. But there's always more to the story. Here, Craig Hill and Jeffrey P. Mayor will share the inside stories on their adventures - including their misadventures - plus post news and answer your questions.

CRAIG HILL

Craig Hill is The News Tribune’s injury-prone Adventure writer. After eight years covering college football and basketball, he started writing about  adventure sports in 2004. He writes about everything from mountaineering and cycling to skiing and camping. You can reach him at craig.hill@thenewstribune.com

JEFFREY P. MAYOR

Jeffrey P. Mayor has been The News Tribune’s Adventure editor since 2003, and oversees our weekly Adventure section. His coverage focuses on fishing, hunting, Mount Rainier and the state Department of Fish and Wildlife. You can reach him at jeff.mayor@thenewstribune.com

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The inside story on outside recreation for South Puget Sound and beyond
Saturday, February 9th, 2008
Posted by Craig Hill @ 08:01:23 am

This weekend marks the two-year countdown to the Vancouver Olympics. A World Cup freestyle event will be held at Cypress Mountain today and tomorrow.

John Kircher of Bellevue operates Cypress along with Crystal Mountain and the Summit at Snoqualmie. We'd hoped to run a feature on Kircher yesterday but the story had to be moved to Monday.

Here's another story about Kircher to tide you over until then.

Big Sky Resort manager Taylor Middleton has seen John Kircher stiff-arm death before.
In the early 1990s, the men were researching one of Kircher’s ideas. Kircher wanted to run a tram to the top of 11,166-foot Lone Peak, the highest point at Big Sky Resort. Today, the tram is one of the United States’ most famous lifts, but on the day a helicopter dropped Kircher and Middleton off on the peak Middleton wasn’t so sure.
After Middleton and some ski patrol directors skied the mountain’s steep upper slopes, it was Kircher’s turn.
“John jumped in and kicked off this huge avalanche,” Middleton said. “He’s a great skier and he was able to ski out of it just before it would have taken him over a cliff.”