Nate Nadler awoke in the middle of the night this past聽October 31聽to four inches of snow covering his sleeping bag. Nadler, 41, was camped underneath the bullwheel of the River Run Gondola at Colorado鈥檚 Keystone Resort. It wasn鈥檛 the cold that interrupted his fitful sleep, but the drunken reveler clad in a motorcycle helmet blasting 鈥淏aby Shark鈥 and dancing the night away.
In mid-October, some skiers and snowboarders will drive up to Keystone or nearby Arapahoe Basin in the middle of the night, hoping to snag the very first chair of ski season. Some of these hearty winter enthusiasts come straight from the bars, believing聽the booze will keep them warm against the frigid night.
Every year, a few buzzed aspirants are disappointed to find Nate 鈥淒ogggg鈥 Nadler, and 鈥淭railer鈥 Tom Miller, 46, already waiting in line. For the last 31 years running they have outfoxed and outmaneuvered any challenger and beaten them to get in line at the base of the chair . On October 29, after Arapahoe Basin announced an early opening, they nabbed the very first chairlift of the season yet again. Two days later they camped out at Keystone to ride that resort鈥檚 first chair, too.
鈥淯ntil I鈥檓 riding that first chair, I鈥檓 a ball of anxiety,鈥 says Nadler. 鈥淭hen, it鈥檚 nothing but joy. Every year has a great story.鈥
The ski areas of Summit County are some of the highest in America, and reliably experience early season snowmaking temperatures as well as autumn squalls that blanket the region in snow. Keystone Resort, Arapahoe Basin, Breckenridge, and Loveland Ski Area are usually the first to open their lifts for the season. But the high altitude also means the resorts are prone to terrible weather in the fall. Nadler and Miller have braved horrific conditions in pursuit of the very first turns of winter. 鈥淚 remember this one year, powerful winds blew and dropped the temperature to 90 below with the windchill,鈥 said Miller.
In addition to the cold, Nadler and Miller occasionally face late-night confrontations with grumpy skiers who had hoped to be first in line. The Baby Shark enthusiast was one鈥擭adler said the costumed man yelled at him. 鈥淚 tried arguing with him but he was too wasted and wouldn鈥檛 listen to reason,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he joke鈥檚 on him鈥攚e鈥檇 had the spot staked out for a week.鈥 The man with the shiny metallic helmet was eighth in line when the bullwheel began to spin. Alas, Keystone employees decided he was still too drunk to ride, Nadler said.
How have these two consistently gotten first chair for 31 seasons? Each year, in early October, Nadler and Miller run scouting missions to ski areas across the Front Range. They assess the readiness of the four resorts that are usually in contention to open first. Once they decide which ski area is best prepared to open, they stake out their spot beneath the chair鈥攁bout a week out from their anticipated opening day.
But resorts don鈥檛 want people to camp out for that long while employees ready the mountain for winter. That鈥檚 where Nadler and Miller hold another advantage: the resort staff knows who they are. Often, they will arrive early and speak with the general managers, the marketing departments, lift operations, and ski patrol to make sure they鈥檙e out of the way.
Nadler and Miller have聽built their lives around this annual quest. They both live in Summit County near the ski areas and careers that afford lots of flexibility. Nadler works three jobs: he manages a 34-unit property, drives a hotel shuttle, and operates聽his own hot tub repair service. Miller makes snowboard films and is a professional pinball player. But camping out for days on end requires more than just a malleable schedule; in Nadler鈥檚 case, it demands a very patient spouse.
鈥淢y wife is a godsend, she鈥檚 part of our support staff,鈥 said Nadler. 鈥淏ut when the temperature starts dropping, I鈥檒l take her out to a nice dinner. I try to sweet talk her a bit. Then I鈥檒l sort of drop in, 鈥楬oney I鈥檓 going to go scouting at Keystone tomorrow.鈥欌
Miller isn鈥檛 married, and his career as a snowboard videographer and professional pinball player allows him to take the time he needs to stake out a spot beneath the bullwheel. His unorthodox job affords another perk: in past years Miller would bring pinball machines to the base of the ski area and run extension cords from a generator to power them, to help him and Nadler pass the time. 鈥淎 long time ago at Loveland we鈥檇 have a bonfire that would last for three days before lawsuits became a thing,鈥 says Miller.
Miller started targeting first chair in 1992, when he was 15 years old. Back then, snowmaking was rare and expensive, so resorts opened later in the season. Because Keystone was the only resort with night skiing infrastructure, it was usually first. When operations managers at Keystone caught wind that another resort was planning to open the next day, they would open on the spot鈥攐ften at 3 or 4 A.M. Miller made sure he was there. “It was a wild time, it鈥檇 be totally dark,鈥 said Miller. Miller says he鈥檇 work all summer to buy snowboarding gear, and by fall he was always champing at the bit for the season to begin.聽 He鈥檇 join a group of friends staking out the lift.
But Miller and his crew never quite got first chair back then. A retired airline pilot named Elmer Mulkins held the unofficial record for scoring the first chair at Loveland for 26 years straight. Mulkins was much older than the teenagers, and Miller says he held a major advantage in the quest for first chair: relationships. Miller says Mulkins would sleep in a heated car the night before opening. Then, resort operators would allow him to slide past the kids to take his spot at the front of the line every year. Miller was outraged.
Nadler moved from Minnesota to Breckenridge in 1995 and joined Miller鈥檚 crew. Together, they went to war with Mulkins. Each year they would show up earlier to Loveland, partying harder and louder. They chanted 鈥減ass the torch!鈥 at Mulkins.
In 2000 Mulkins died of heart failure. Loveland ran an empty chair that year, with a banner that read 鈥淓lmer鈥檚 Chair.鈥
You may have noticed that the timeline of Nadler and Miller鈥檚 first-chair accolades is not adding up to 31 years. Nate Dogggg Nadler and Trailer Tom Miller claim 31 years, but some grumbling Colorado skiers argue Miller says he got first chairs in Colorado before Nadler聽arrived. The duo only started going for first chairs together after 1997.
No matter how the math works out, the duo told me that聽snagging first chair of the year decade after decade requires another strength: a bladder of steel. The pair eschew food and drink for much of the days, fasting to keep their spots in line.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been offered money, health care, and sexual favors for our spots in line,鈥 said Nadler. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 not about the money, it鈥檚 about the legacy, the fame.鈥 Both Nadler and Miller are sponsored snowboarders, and Miller makes snowboard films, but being the kings of first chair has brought the pair more fame than any athletic achievement. Recently, Colorado Public Radio aired an interview with them. Nadler scored a profile in Colorado Summit Magazine.
In 2019, Nadler and Miller were camping out at Keystone, convinced that the resort would open in the next 24 hours. Suddenly, Arapahoe Basin announced on Instagram that it would open later that afternoon, at 3 P.M., for a single hour of riding. Nadler and Miller聽packed up as fast as they could and drove the five-and-a-half miles to A Basin. They arrived before anyone else, but as they were unpacking their camping gear, Nadler realized he left his snowboard sitting under the chair at Keystone. 鈥淚 drove back in a panic and found my board. It was a miracle that I made it back to A Basin just moments before other people arrived.鈥
As hard as Nadler and Miller fight for first chair each year, they claim they would never fight dirty. 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 pay for a first chair, I would concede,鈥 said Nadler. 鈥淏ut if you had three people in your group, I鈥檓 still getting on that chair.鈥
The duo insists they鈥檒l keep at it as long as they鈥檙e still able (the 鈥淔irst Chair Family鈥 as they鈥檙e called scored the chair this year despite recovering from a broken leg and a bad back). But if someone ever gets close to their record, you can bet they鈥檒l be back. 鈥淚鈥檒l roll my wheelchair up to that chair to keep my record,鈥 said Nadler.