What is the image?, curiosity killed the bunny ☺  I expect that it’s limited to 
a single ski area or maybe region.

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Philippe Verdy
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 3:01 PM
To: Shawn Steele
Cc: Doug Ewell; Unicode Mailing List
Subject: Re: "Bunny hill" symbol, used in America for signaling ski pistes for 
novices

The rope (or other barriers) are also present in Europe, but they are 
considered true "pistes" by themselves, even if they are relatively short. In 
frequent cases they are connected upward to a blue piste (not for novices) but 
there are "slow down" warnings displayed on them and the regulation requires 
taking care of every skier that could be in front of you.

Various tools are used to force skiers to slow down, including forcing them to 
slalom between barriers, or including flat sections or sections going upward, 
and adding a large rest area around this interconnection.

The European green pistes for novices are also relatively well separated from 
blue pistes (used by all other skiers and interconnected with mor difficult 
ones: red and black): if there's a blue piste, it will most often be parallel 
and separated physically by barriers, this limits the number of intersections 
or the need for interconnections (the only intersection is then at the station 
itself, in a crowded area near the equipments to bring skiers to the upper part 
of the piste).

But my initial question was about the symbol that I have seen (partly) 
documented without an actual image for ski stations in US. May be the "bunny 
hills" symbol is specific to a station, not used elsewhere, or there are other 
similar symbols used locally. I wonder if this is not simply the symbol/logo of 
a local ski school...

2015-05-28 23:44 GMT+02:00 Shawn Steele 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>:
Typically we have “slow” zones with include both “novice” areas and congested 
areas.  Additionally the “novice” part of a slope often has a rope fence 
delineating it from the rest of the slow.  However on the maps, etc, its 
usually just off to the side of a green run and doesn’t have a special symbol.

From: Unicode 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On 
Behalf Of Philippe Verdy
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 2:26 PM
To: Doug Ewell
Cc: Unicode Mailing List
Subject: Re: "Bunny hill" symbol, used in America for signaling ski pistes for 
novices

2015-05-28 22:59 GMT+02:00 Doug Ewell 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>:
Looks like a green circle is the symbol for a beginner slope. (The first
link also shows that "piste" is the European word for what we call a
trail, run, or slope). There is no difference between a "bunny slope"
and a "beginner" or "novice" slope.

The difference is obvious in Europe where the "novice" difficulty is marked as 
green pistes (slopes are below 30% or almost flat), and the "beginner/moderate" 
difficulty is marked as blue pistes (slopes about 30-35%).

Even America must have this "novice" difficulty, with areas mostly used by 
young children (with their parents not skiing but following them by foot, and a 
restriction of speeds); these areas are protected so that other skiers will not 
pass through them. In fact if you remain on these novice areas you cannot reach 
any speed that could cause dangerous shocks: you have to "push" to advance, 
otherwise you'll slow down naturally and stop on the snow.

These areas can be used by walkers, and randonners using "raquettes".



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