April 15, 2026
Silver Star injuries: what we see, what to do, and when to come in
A Vernon chiropractor's guide to the most common skiing and snowboarding injuries from Silver Star and the rest of the Okanagan — what's serious, what isn't, and how to recover well.
By Dr. Steve Hofmann · Chiropractor
Silver Star is on our doorstep, and Sovereign Lake is right next door. We see the consequences in clinic from December through to a surprisingly late spring season — and most of the injuries fall into a small handful of patterns.
Here’s a practical guide to the most common ones, what to watch for, and when to come in versus when to head straight to emergency.
The big four we see
1. Knees — skiers more than snowboarders
The classic ski knee injury is the medial collateral ligament (MCL) sprain — the inside-of-the-knee ligament getting overloaded when a ski catches an edge and the lower leg twists outward. Less common but more serious: anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears, often from a fall where the binding doesn’t release in time, or from the dreaded “phantom foot” position landing backseat after a jump.
When to come in: persistent knee pain, swelling, or instability after a fall — especially if you heard or felt a “pop.” Mild MCL sprains often respond well to a few weeks of focused care including exercise rehab and Active Release Technique® for the surrounding tissue.
When to head to ER: locked knee that won’t straighten, severe deformity, or you can’t bear any weight at all.
2. Wrists and shoulders — snowboarders more than skiers
Snowboarders fall on their hands. A lot. The classic injury is a wrist sprain or a broken wrist from landing hand-first — the small scaphoid bone in the wrist is especially easy to break and easy to miss without imaging. Shoulder dislocations also happen — often a separation between the collarbone and the shoulder blade from the impact, or a full shoulder dislocation when the arm gets levered out.
When to come in: persistent wrist or shoulder pain with limited range of motion that doesn’t settle in a few days.
When to head to ER: obvious deformity, significant swelling within minutes, numbness or coldness in the fingers, or any fracture concern.
3. Heads and necks — both disciplines
Concussions don’t always happen on the dramatic falls — sometimes a moderate head impact that “felt fine” at the time produces symptoms hours or days later. Whiplash-style neck injuries are also common, especially from chairlift collisions and lower-speed falls where the head whips back.
Watch for these symptoms in the 24–72 hours after a head impact:
- Headache that worsens
- Difficulty concentrating, memory issues
- Light or sound sensitivity
- Nausea, balance problems
- Sleep changes
- Mood changes (irritability, low mood)
If any of these show up, get assessed. We screen for concussion at the first visit and coordinate with appropriate concussion-specialist care if your presentation warrants it. We also work with the neck and upper-back component of post-concussive symptoms as part of recovery.
When to head to ER immediately: loss of consciousness, repeated vomiting, severe headache, weakness or numbness in the limbs, slurred speech, or significant confusion.
4. Skier’s thumb
Specific to skiers: a fall onto the hand while still gripping a pole can sprain or tear the ulnar collateral ligament of the thumb. The thumb feels weak when pinching, and the inside of the joint is tender.
When to come in: persistent thumb weakness or pain a few days after the fall — early diagnosis matters here, because complete tears sometimes need surgical repair.
The injury you might not notice for a week
A pattern we see often: someone takes a “nothing fall” — maybe a slow-speed catch, maybe a tumble in the trees — gets up, finishes the day. By Tuesday, the neck or low-back is locked up. By Friday, the headache has shown up.
That delayed presentation is normal. Soft-tissue inflammation peaks 24–72 hours after the injury, and stiffness often lags behind that. If you fell — even a “non-event” fall — and your body is talking to you a few days later, that’s worth coming in for. Earlier care typically means a shorter recovery.
What we do for ski and snowboard injuries
Most of the work involves a combination of:
- Assessment — figuring out which tissue is actually driving the symptoms (often not the obvious one)
- Hands-on treatment — joint mobilization, chiropractic adjustments where appropriate, Active Release Technique® and Graston Technique® for soft-tissue restrictions
- Rehab — graded loading to rebuild capacity in the injured area, plus the surrounding tissue that’s been guarding
- Coordination — if imaging is needed, or if we suspect a structure that needs surgical evaluation, we refer
For uncomplicated soft-tissue injuries, most patients are back to full activity inside a few weeks. More structural injuries — confirmed ligament tears, fractures, severe whiplash — take longer and often involve a coordinated team.
A note on coming back too soon
The biggest predictor of a chronic problem from a winter sports injury is going back to riding before the tissue has actually healed. The early-season injury that turns into a season-long problem is almost always one where the patient pushed back too fast, re-injured, and never quite caught up.
Our job is to get you back to skiing or riding as quickly as the tissue will reasonably allow — and to be honest with you when “as quickly as you’d like” and “as quickly as the tissue will allow” are different timelines.
Booking
If you’re nursing something from a recent day at Silver Star, book online or give us a call. The earlier we see it, the simpler the recovery usually is.
Related
General information only — not medical advice and not a substitute for assessment by a qualified health professional. If you have specific concerns about an injury or symptom, book a consultation or contact your healthcare provider.
Need to be seen?
Book online or give us a call.