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"Raising skiers comes with potential risk, for sure. For us, it鈥檚 about balancing their passion for the sport with a certain amount of responsibility." (Photo: Christian Pondella/Red Bull Cont)

How Chris Davenport Raises Talented, Adventurous, Risk-Savvy Kids

It helps to live in a cool mountain town and be a world-class athlete. But Davenport also uses fundamental tools that train his kids to think for themselves.

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(Photo: Christian Pondella/Red Bull Cont)

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Chris Davenport lives a double life.聽

The 45-year-old World Extreme Skiing champ and X-Games medalist is known for his segments in ski-porn flicks from Matchstick Productions and Warren Miller, as well as ski-mountaineering big mountains like Everest and Denali. He skied all of Colorado鈥檚 fourteeners聽in a single year, and recently finished skiing the Centennials, the 100 tallest mountains in Colorado.

But that鈥檚 Chris Davenport the skier. There鈥檚 also Chris Davenport the dad.聽When he鈥檚 not tackling the next big descent, Davenport is living a relatively normal suburban life in Aspen, Colorado, with his wife and three boys (Stian, 15, Topher, 13, and聽Archer, 8)鈥攁ll of who聽are hard-charging skiers in their own right. Davenport鈥檚 older kids have traveled internationally, heli-skied, and even help coach ski clinics in Chile. Davenport鈥檚 secret to raising adventurous kids? Give them the tools they need to make good decisions. Also, living in Aspen doesn鈥檛 hurt.聽

OUTSIDE: So three boys. What are they into these days?聽
DAVENPORT: The short answer is skiing. The two older ones are ski racing and doing well with it. Right now, I鈥檓 getting my middle son packed up and off to ski camp at A Basin. He鈥檚 on the Rocky Mountain Development Team. And my oldest is at a ski academy in New Hampshire.聽

Is it a foregone conclusion that the Davenport boys will be skiers?聽
We definitely set them on a certain path at a young age by introducing them to skiing. They all seem to be following in the broader Davenport footsteps. My siblings are skiers, their kids are skiers, my parents and grandparents are skiers.聽But my kids developed a love for it on their own. They took ownership of it early on. It鈥檚 their thing now.聽

Was there any hesitation about introducing them to skiing, because of the dangers involved?聽
Skiing is an amazing lifestyle sport that could potentially kill them. I鈥檝e known plenty of skiers who have died. Raising skiers comes with potential risk, for sure. For us, it鈥檚 about balancing their passion for the sport with a certain amount of responsibility. My wife and I have worked hard to make sure the kids have all of the tools they need to make the right decisions in any given scenario.聽

鈥淚 want my kids out there doing stuff. 聽I鈥檓 not going to tell them they can鈥檛 ski a line because it鈥檚 too dangerous.鈥

Talk to me about the different between managing risk and avoiding risk. That鈥檚 something I struggle with as my kids get older.聽
The key is to manage risk, not avoid risk. I often encourage the kids to seek out risky situations as teaching scenarios.聽

I consider what I do professional risk management. I鈥檓 in danger year in, year out. My wife is a 25-year veteran ski patroller on Aspen. We both understand the written and unwritten rules of skiing, in the mountain and the backcountry. We have a lot to teach our kids in that respect.聽

On the mountain we talk about fall zones and exposure, avalanche safety,聽the dangers we can see and the dangers we might not see. Certainly, the teenage brain doesn鈥檛 have the ability to understand consequences like an adult, but our kids are really good at thinking about the consequences that each line entails. They鈥檙e always asking, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the worst case scenario in any given line?鈥 They鈥檙e good at knowing if they blow one line and fall, it鈥檒l be okay. If they blow another line and fall, there鈥檚 a cliff.聽

I鈥檇 imagine your kids are probably some of the safest, most trustworthy skiers on the mountain. Sort of like how kids raised in families that hunt understand gun safety at an early age.聽
That鈥檚 a good analogy. We encourage our kids to go for it, but you鈥檙e right鈥攑eople who are raised with guns are hyper-anal about gun safety. It鈥檚 the same thing. If you have respect and understand consequences, you reduce the chances of something happening.聽

Is it ever difficult relaying that info to your kids? Sometimes, my kids don鈥檛 want to listen to me simply because I鈥檓 their dad.聽
Not my older kids. They鈥檙e very 鈥渢ype A.鈥 They have great minds for talking about skiing and demonstrating how to ski. They鈥檙e good listeners and good coaches too. Our 8 year old is our wild child, though. He鈥檚 kind of a loose cannon. He hauls ass. He鈥檚 good, but he鈥檚 really wild. If I tell him what to do, he鈥檚 like 鈥淒ad, I know what I鈥檓 doing.鈥澛

Do you ever consider dialing it back? Getting a mini van and coaching soccer instead?聽
No. We live in a society where there is a lot of social pressure to be safe and not take risks. It鈥檚 easy to convince yourself that your kids are safer if they stay home and play video games all the time, but life is for living. The world is for experiencing.聽

I want my kids out there doing stuff. 聽I鈥檓 not going to tell them they can鈥檛 ski a line because it鈥檚 too dangerous. At the same time, every family and child-parent relationship is different. I would never judge another person for how they raise their kids. I grew up in a family that told me I could do anything I want as long as I worked hard and respected people. It was a formula that was successful for us, and I think it will be successful for our kids.聽

Did anything change for you when you had kids? Did you start taking fewer risks?聽
I鈥檓 a big mountain skier. This is what I do for a living. It鈥檚 in my DNA. But it forced me to look at situations and be more careful, take more time to make better decisions.聽

If you鈥檙e a NASCAR driver, you don鈥檛 drive slower just because you have kids. You鈥檙e gonna crash. It鈥檚 part of the deal. How do I manage that so I can still be the best skier I can, but also be there for my family? Now I have real responsibility, I can鈥檛 be selfish. I have a lot to live for. So I started being more invested in being a good guide, being a good avalanche forecaster.聽

Is it tough to go back into a domestic role after a big adventure?聽
No. There鈥檚 a separation in my life. We don鈥檛 sit around and watch ski movies. There aren鈥檛 posters of me on the walls. We try to maintain a clear distinction between those two lives.聽

When I鈥檓 home, I try to be the best dad I can be. When I鈥檓 away, I鈥檓 a skier and try to be the best skier I can be. I like having that private home-life to retreat to.聽

What鈥檚 it like raising kids in Aspen?聽
It鈥檚 incredible. I let the kids run around downtown Aspen on their own. It鈥檚 small enough that all the locals know each other. It鈥檚 a town that encourages the best in people, whether it鈥檚 intellectual or athletic. That sort of community breeds a feeling of, 鈥淵es, I can do anything with my life.鈥澛

But there is a dark side of Aspen鈥攁 prevalent drug culture here. It鈥檚 a party town. So those drugs and alcohol conversations are important things to have. But again, it鈥檚 about giving the kids the tools to make good decisions. It doesn鈥檛 matter whether it鈥檚 skiing a difficult line, or if they get asked to smoke a joint in the middle of the day.

Do the kids know what they want to do when they grow up?聽
The older kids are at an age where they don鈥檛 know. They for sure want to ski for the rest of their lives, but I don鈥檛 think they want to be pros like me. I鈥檇 be happy if they didn鈥檛. There鈥檚 so much risk involved with what I do, it鈥檚 tough to watch as a parent. I think about my poor mother鈥攂oth my sisters were world cup racers, I was a pro skier鈥攕he was a basket case all the time because she was so worried about us.聽

How often do you get to ski with your kids?聽
We ski together quite a bit, a good 30 to 40 days a year as a family, but it鈥檚 not enough. They鈥檙e so busy with their own racing. My older kids ski six days a week聽and the eight-year-old skis three days a week. There鈥檚 nothing better than skiing with the family. That鈥檚 the ultimate enjoyment, seeing them shred the mountain.聽

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Lead Photo: Christian Pondella/Red Bull Cont

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