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Algonquin’s Kelly takes scenic route

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Algonquin's Kirby Kelly competes in the U.S. Grand Prix in January in Park City, Utah. She will compete in the Burton U.S. Open in Vail, Colo., beginning Monday. (Photo provided)

Kirby Kelly is only 17, but her passport already resembles that of a veteran world-class traveler.

She spent part of last fall in New Zealand a year after she trekked to Valmalenco, Italy, when she was only 15 as part of the U.S. Junior World Championship half pipe snowboarding team.
Next month, her journey could take her to Erzurum, Turkey for another junior worlds competition, but there are times – given the political unrest currently going on there – when Kelly’s father, Joe, has to draw the line and make a decision for his teenage daughter.

Kelly isn’t slated to graduate from Dundee-Crown until this spring, completing what’s already been a nontraditional high school education. But for Kelly, who will compete in this week’s Burton U.S. Open Snowboarding Championships in Vail, Colo., living life a little differently than everyone else has always been part of who she is.

“It’s definitely a huge reality check when I come home,” said Kelly, who lives and trains in Colorado for much of the winter. “My social life here is completely different – my teammates are my best friends and I see them everyday and when I come home (to Algonquin), I really don’t have as many friends anymore.”

Leaving home at 16 was never in doubt.

Kelly learned to love snowboarding at Raging Buffalo Snowboarding Park in Algonquin, where many young riders discover a sport that’s now among the most popular in the Winter Olympics. But Kelly knew that if she was ever going to accomplish the goals she wanted to, Chicago’s far northwest suburbs weren’t the place to do it. So one day, Kelly laid it out to her parents. If snowboarding was going to take her places, she had to leave.

But her parents made it clear: There would be rules.

“It’s not for everybody, but at the time, she was getting really good grades and so we just kind of went with it,” said Joe Kelly, who, along with his wife and son communicate with Kirby on a daily basis via FaceTime. “If her grades ever suffered, it was like, ‘Well, we can always stop it.’”

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