
Story Produced by the Concord Monitor, a Member of
RELATED STORY โ People flocking to XC skiing, snowshoeing during pandemic
You can add another activity to the list of those complicated by COVID-19: Climbing mountains in winter so you can ski back down.
โThe segment that is hurting the most is A.T.,โ said Tim Farmer, owner of venerable Concord ski store S&W Sports, using the abbreviation for โalpine touringโ or backcountry skiing and snowboarding. The specialized bindings and skis for this activity are proving hard to find due to lower supply colliding with higher demand.
This once-obscure pastime was growing even before the pandemic, as reflected by the U.S. Forest Serviceโs 2018 decision to allow backcountry ski trails to be cut in the woods on Bartlett and Baldface mountains in the North Country. Now, however, it is besieged by people seeking outdoor fun that doesnโt require sharing chairlifts with strangers.
โEverybody wants to be outside, staying healthy. Talk about socially distancing yourself!โ Farmer commented.

Adding to the backlog is an October fire at a massive factory in Ukraine owned by Fischer, Europeโs largest manufacturer of backcountry ski equipment. โThey lost all the equipment that makes the skis โ presses, all that stuff,โ said Farmer. It wonโt be up and running for a year, at least.
The result is similar to the bottleneck felt by the bicycling business in the spring, when being stuck indoors all day caused people to embrace two-wheeled recreation. Bicycle shops pretty much sold everything they had and that includes S&W Sports, for which bicycling is about 75 percent of the annual business.
The bike boom is continuing into winter, said Farmer, as reflected by โfat bikes,โ which have extra-wide tires that can travel over snow.
โWeโre having a stellar year with fat biking. As soon as it comes in, itโs gone. I have a feeling weโre going to run out of that stuff, too,โ he said.
These activities are the latest that have been surging by the pandemicโs ability to instantly change consumer habits, starting with the overnight disappearance of toilet paper and flour from grocery shelves.ย Long manufacturing lead times for items such as ski equipment make it hard for industries to adjust quickly.
โSo much is built in Asia, and a lot of them were shut down firstโ when the pandemic began. โOrders that I ordered to have shipped in September Iโm just barely getting now, a good 60 days behind,โ Farmer said.
The worsening pandemic is complicating future plans, as well.

โIn normal years, in December I go to a show for next yearโs clothing and place orders by January. In January, I go to a different show for hard equipment and place orders in March,โ he said. But the areas used in Providence and Worcester, Mass., for these shows โhave been turned into emergency hospitalsโ and who knows whether gatherings were even be allowed early next year.
โAll the shows have been canceled.ย Itโs going to be really interesting figuring out how to order next yearโs stuff. โฆ You can see it online but you canโt touch and feel stuff, you canโt sit with the reps,โ Farmer said.
S&W Sports has been around for 40 years, including 13 years at its current location which with 10,000 square feet has room for storage and assembly as well as sales.ย
As for skiing, Farmer said heโs ready to empty house as needed. โWe cleaned out every nook and cranny and storage container โ have a lot of rentals and demos and stuff that we can sell off if the demand continues.โ
And even if the pandemic leads to another retail shutdown there is plenty to do in preparation for 2021.ย
โSkiing is not essential but biking is. I can keep essential workers busy just assembling for next year. We need to build 300 bikes because weโre so far behind,โ he said.ย
These articles are being shared by partners in The Granite State News Collaborative. For more information visit collaborativenh.org.ย