"Gladly!"
Because the topic seemed clear. The implications were clear in my mind, and the summer conversations with representatives of the ski manufacturing industry supported my assumptions.
Then the days got shorter, the evenings cooler, the lakes colder, the fingers clammier when climbing and the peaks lonelier. And suddenly it was no longer so clear to me how these new social conditions, which are so life-changing for us as a society, will shape ski touring?
On the surface, it seemed logical to me that skiing would tend to move away from the crowded piste areas and the mosh pits of winter tourism - the apres-ski huts and lift queues. People will proudly rave about the occasion-related "retreat to the essentials", the "breaking out of the hamster wheel", the "confrontation with oneself" and above all "the search for peace and quiet" and can even put a hashtag in front of these reasons, handy.
But will that really be the case?
Yes, of course. The number of ski tourers will increase, as the mountain summer of 2020 has already proven. But before I take a personal look at "Ski touring in the apocalypse winter of 20/21", I thought about why I actually like doing it so much?