Clif Taylor, inventor of the Shortee ski and the Graduated Length Method of ski instruction, died in 2005 in Evergreen, Colorado, at age 83. Taylor was a veteran of the 10th Mountain Division, and was wounded during the battle for Riva Ridge.
Taylor, a ski instructor at the Mad River Ski School in Vermont, was intrigued by the efficacy of goon skis, as they were called, in helping beginners get going on skis. The goon skis came in various lengths, and Taylor noted that on the shorter lengths, skiers learned to ski faster. This was a fairly easy observation to make, and many skiers have made it, as well as many instructors. Taylor was the only man to take the observation and make it into a revolution.
In 1955, Taylor moved to Brattleboro, Vermont, and taught skiing there to the members of the local Outing Club. He had a willing audience, for a number of skiers had cut down full length skis to make it easier to ski. Using the Outing Club as a base, Taylor started experimenting with new ski designs of a length shorter than anything used before, with the exception of short European glacier skis, which had been used for special conditions. First he made a five-foot, nearly straight-sided ski that he used in classes to teach beginners, and sold to skiers at Hogback who had already been used to skiing on short skis. Not content with his considerable success there, Taylor next scaled his ski down to a three-footer, a length unheard of previously. The success of his teaching beginners on this ski, at Hogback, led to the founding of Shortee Skis, the first firm dedicated to producing specific teaching skis.
At that time, the Austrian wedel turn had started to capture the imagination of the skiing public. Taylor found he could teach himself to wedel much more easily on his three-footers than on regular length skis, and he tried it on beginners. For the record, during the winter of 1958-59 he developed a "direct parallel" or wedel-like method to learn skiing, so that skiers who had never skied before could go directly to linked short turns, which made progress incomparably easier, simply because the short turn was a turn enabling skiers to brake quickly, and thereby progress to intermediate skiing hills within a few days, a feat reserved for the top one percent of skiers.
The method was refined at Killington, Vermont, with Taylor's help, under Karl Pfeifer, to a five-day ski week method, beginning on three-footers, progressing through four and five footers through the week. The method, whose development was encouraged by SKI Magazine, became known as the Graduated Length Method or GLM.
Not all schools took to the radical new approach immediately, so another method, American Teaching Method, inspired to a great extent by GLM, was developed by PSIA, the Professional Ski Teacher's Association. These two methods predominate in ski teaching today in the U.S. and with modifications in most of the better European schools. The short teaching ski and the easier direct-parallel of GLM and the "wedge" or gliding snowplow of the American Teaching Method owe their existence directly to the original experiments Taylor made with his Shortee Skis. For the first time, an American had changed the ski teaching of the world. In the 1970s, he coached the PSIA GLM Demonstration at the World Congress of Skiers in Garmisch, Germany.
Not only teaching - the regular run of skiers also began using shorter skis. Between 1960 and 1970, the average length of the ski used by skiers in this country dropped nearly twelve inches, to the vast improvement in the ease of skiing for everybody.
Thus, Taylor's influence was not just on ski design, and not just on teaching method, but on the recreational sport as a whole. The skier of today who is using shorter skis inspired by the short ski movement which Taylor sparked is thus in debt to Clif Taylor, who was so intent on making it easier to learn how to ski that he ignored the great resistance of the ski world to his quite unprecedented way of looking at things until his ideas were ascendant. And so they have remained, in the large sense. This is to be considered a milestone in the rise of a "ski week" which nearly guarantees the non-skiing civilian pleasure rather than pain on his introduction to the sport. The results of this in terms of skiers and happier skiers today is almost incalculable.
In addition to producing 20 ski instruction videos, Taylor also wrote three books: Instant Skiing (1961), Ski in a Day (1964), and GLM -The New Way to Ski (1973).
Clif Taylor was elected to the U.S. National Ski Hall of Fame in 1979, the Colorado Ski Hall of Fame in 1999, and the Vermont Ski Hall of Fame in 2003.
Comments
Original wooden Clif Taylor skis
Original Clif Taylor wooden skis made in Brattleboro Vermont with Bindings.What would they be worth ,how much should I sell them for ?
A BIG Thank you to Cliff Taylor
I met Mr Taylor at a Ski show in Minneapolis when I was probably about 10 or 12 years old. He gave me (free) a hardback book with him on the cover skiing on just the shortest, smallest skis I`d ever seen.
Cliff told me follow this book and you`ll be a great skier.
The skis that I had at the time were seven foot wooden hand me downs from a neighbor. I could get down my local hill OK , but I couldn`t turn
I convinced my Dad to cut down my Hickory skis with no metal edges and mount my new cable bindings on the modified skis.
From the begining , I took off like a shot. When I was done with those 3 foot ski`s another kid in the neighborhood used them and then he passed them on ,
Hell , as far as I know they might still be teaching kids in my old neighborhood . I sure hope so.
So thank you Mr. Taylor . You may be gone, but your gift lives on with so many skiers like myself.
In fact , I am going to go skiing this morning (03/26/22) in your honor.
I`ll meet you out there Cliff.
Greg Polski ( Age 72)
GLM method at Mt Snow VT in 1968
I first learned the GL M method while I was working at Mount Snow for the winter of 1968. I read about the shorter skis And I went ahead and cut a foot off by 7 foot skis and relocated the bindings and I ended up having a great pair of skis that I could operate and turn much more easily. Thank you Cliff your your determination of great things that happened and later the more recent changes in ski design. I recently read about Howard Head who designed the oversized tennis racket and metal and plastic laminate skis which also revolutionized two sports that he had trouble learning. Ron
Taught to ski by Cliff in Chicago!
Well not exactly. I was an apple picker with Cliff's daughter in Putney, VT in the early 1980's and was going to hitch hike back to Washington State at the end of the season to finish up college. Cliff was driving to Colorado and offered to take me and a friend along. When we got to Chicago, he wanted to stop and visit a friend of his who had a ski shop downtown. I had skied since I was a kid, but had never mastered my parallel turn. The shop had a carpeted conveyor belt type of ramp that could be set for varying speeds and angles to mimic a ski slope. Cliff got me geared up and onto the slope I went. He gaciously tught me the technique I had been wanting to learn in the middle of the snow free city. He was a wonderful man to spend time with.
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