From Deseret News archives:
Ski's the limit for centenarian
Skiing is what he enjoys most and does often, even as he moves into his 101st year.
This season, before the snow melts, he will ski more than 100 days. Which, roughly counting, may make Miura not only the oldest active skier in the world but possibly the person who has skied the most runs in a lifetime.
He figures he has skied, on average, at least 110 times a season since he took up the sport 79 years ago. That amounts to about 8,690 ski trips and who knows how many thousands of vertical feet down ski slopes all over the world.
Skiing, he has said, is what helps keep him young ... that and a good diet and rest.
Early Saturday, seven family members representing four generations and a traveling fan club of about 120 people from all over the world joined Miura off Snowbird's Gadzoom high-speed lift and down the Bassackwards run to one of the Utah resort's most popular areas Big Emma.
On Big Emma the group gathered, fell into formation and followed Miura down the final leg of his run to the base.
Miura was born in Aomori, Japan, on Feb. 15, 1904. After graduating from what is now the University of Hokkaido, he went to work for the Aomori forestry bureau and became a member and coach of the local ski club.
He retired at age 51 and has spent the second half of his life skiing.
Of his Saturday experience at Snowbird, he said, through a translator, that he felt good, "enjoyed the skiing and found the snow very good."
Which, said his granddaughter, Emili Miura, fits well into his philosophy about skiing, which is "That every day is amazing to him because every day the snow is different ... that's the wonder of the sport."
Planning for his 100th-year ski run began a year ago after he skied Chamonix's Vallee Blanche glazier on the side of the Alps' Mont Blanc in France.
The family chose Snowbird because of its strong ties with the resort and because Keizo Miura skied it some 20 years ago and loved it.
Miura's son, Yuichiro, best known as the "Man Who Skied Mt. Everest" back in a 1970 film, and last summer, at the age of 70, became the oldest man to summit the world's tallest mountain, has been a longtime personal friend of resort owner Dick Bass, who climbed Mt. Everest in 1985.
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