"I started Beijing SnowBoarders because I didn't have anyone to
go to the mountain with," Lee Hee Su says, thinking very hard.
"There weren't many Chinese snowboarders at the time, so I decided
to find some other Koreans who wanted to go." Lee founded Beijing
SnowBoarders (BSB) in 2003 and in the first year had 100 members.
Today, there are more than 2,000.
The group was originally called "Beijing SnowBoarders Team
Korea," but this year they want to break out of that. "This is not
Korea, this is a foreign country," Lee says looking down, thinking
to herself. "We want to act like we're in a foreign country. We
want to meet different kinds of people. Probably the different
languages are our biggest problem and that's why we stuck to
Koreans."
The language is certainly a problem. Lee often pauses when
talking, paining over what to say next. These language difficulties
make it hard for many foreigners to break into other foreigner
communities and are what give Lee her pensive look. She's actually
very exuberant. Like most of the people in BSB, which now includes
Japanese, Laotians, Filipinos, and some Westerners, she loves to
make new friends. "We're all snowboarders. We can have fun
together," Lee puts in. She smiles big.
Lee always smiles when she's understood, when there's some
common point of interest. "Do you drink?" she asks as we leave
Lush. She points across the street to the izakaya (Japanese
drinking place) above KFC. "You ever go there?" she asks. I tell
her I haven't been for a while. "Yeah?" she says. She lights up.
She's beaming. "You have to come next time."
That's the point of BSB: Snowboarding is made up of many
wonderful solitary experiences. The wind whistling by your ear and
the spray and crunch of hitting the ground are things you
experience by yourself. But riding chairlifts, telling jokes, and
drinking afterwards weren't meant to be done alone.
Beijing SnowBoarders
Tel: 133-6660-6544 (English)
Web: cafe.daum.net/chinasnowboard
How: A bus Saturday and Sunday at 7am in front of the KFC near the
Wudaokou subway station; and 7:30am at Wangjing 3 Qu west gate.
They organize trips to different ski mountains each week.
(City Weekend January 17, 2008)