
Jamaica is not sending a bobsled team to Vancouver for the Winter Games, but the Caribbean nation will be represented by one skier. Several countries will have only one participant in the Olympics, because there are no winter sports to speak of in these tropical lands. Yet sometimes the work of one person keeps the Olympic dream alive.

Errol Kerr is the sole Olympian from Jamaica this year. Lack of funding eliminated any other contender. Alpine skier Kerr grew up in Truckee, California, a product of a Jamaican father and an American mother. Kerr’s father died when he was 12. His mother is an avid skier who started Kerr on skis when he was four years old. Olympic training on a budget means that Kerr only skis in winter, while better-funded alpine skiers travel to higher slopes or the southern hemisphere to train in the off-season.
You can follow Kerr on Twitter or his blog.

Kwame Nkrumah-Acheampong is nicknamed “the Snow Leopard”. The alpine skier will be the first ever athlete representing Ghana at the winter Olympics. He was born in Glasgow, Scotland but grew up in Ghana. Nkrumah-Acheampong only learned to ski nine years ago when he got at job at a ski resort in Milton Keynes, England, where he skied on artificial snow. The Snow Leopard did not qualify for the Turin Olympics only because his plane to the qualifiers in Iran was delayed in Amsterdam due to ice on the wings. Nkrumah-Acheampong is active in promoting winter sports in Ghana as well as a charity that builds schools in Ghana and another organization dedicated to saving the snow leopard.
Follow Nkrumah-Acheampong’s progress on Facebook, Twitter, or his blog.

Samir Azzimani was born in France to Moroccan parents. He took up skiing at age six during a period of his life as a foster child. The alpine skier will be the sole athlete from Morocco in Vancouver. Azzimani created the Moroccan Olympic Association on his own in 2001, but did not participate in the Salt Lake City Olympics in 2002 due to insufficient funding. He was not in Turin 2006 due to an injury. But he will be in Vancouver next week to represent Morocco on the slopes.
Follow Azzimani’s Olympic adventure on his blog.

At the opening ceremonies for the Vancouver Olympics Friday, cross-country skier Robel Teklemariam will carry the flag for Ethiopia. He is the first winter Olympian ever from his country. Teklemariam came to the United States at age nine when his mother took a job with the UN in New York City and he fell in love with skiing the first time he tried it. He attended the University of New Hampshire on a full scholarship. This will be Teklemariam’s second Olympic competition. He doesn’t hold out much hope of winning a medal, but his goals are for the long term -he hopes to get more Ethiopians involved in skiing. Watch Teklemariam training in Ethiopia.
Follow Teklemariam on Twitter, Facebook, or his blog.

Dow Travers is the first ever winter Olympian from the Cayman Islands. That makes him a national hero in the tiny nation where the highest altitude is 141 feet above sea level! Travers learned to ski during family vacations in Beaver Creek, Colorado. The downhill skier is also a student at Brown University, where he plays on the rugby team and is majoring in geobiology. He has been training in Aspen for the Vancouver Olympics.
Follow Travers on Twitter.

Cross-country skier Tucker Murphy was supposed to be one of two Olympians from Bermuda, but countryman Patrick Singleton failed to qualify, leaving Murphy to carry the flag. Murphy graduated from Dartmouth, where he was on the rowing team as well as the ski team. He is attending Merton College at the University of Oxford as a Rhodes scholar. No Bermudan has ever competed in skiing events before at the Olympics.

Vancouver will be the second time Leyti Seck represents Senegal all by himself. The 28-year-old alpine skier placed 55th in the Super-G in 2006 and hopes to do better this time around because of a scholarship from Olympic Solidarity that led to improved training opportunities. Seck attends the University of Salzburg in Austria where he can ski year-round. He doesn’t expect to win any medals, but is striving to achieve his personal best and to proudly represent Senegal.

Prince Hubertus of Hohenlohe-Langenburg is 51 years old, yet he qualified to represent Mexico as an alpine skier in Vancouver. Born in Mexico, he is a descendant of a royal family from an area that is now part of Germany. Von Hohenlohe grew up in Austria, where he had plenty of opportunity to ski. He now lives in Liechtenstein and holds dual Austrian and Mexican citizenship. The only Mexican athlete in Vancouver this year, von Hohenlohe also skied for Mexico in 1984, 1988, 1992, and 1994. He qualified in 2006, but the Mexican Olympic Committee declined to send any athletes to Turin. Besides skiing, von Hohenlohe is a photographer and records music under the name Andy Himalaya. See a bit of von Hohenlohe’s life in this video.
I’ll be rooting for The Snow Leopard.
posted by Miss Cellania on 2-11-2010 at 9:55 am
Why is Dow Travers skiing underwater in that picture?lol
posted by Emma on 2-11-2010 at 10:01 am
They’re all male skiers? And almost all of them had to come to the U.S. to learn it? I guess ice skating never sounded as promising to these guys…
posted by catherine ann on 2-11-2010 at 11:33 am
I wouldn’t go so far as to say these are the ONLY countries with only one Olympian. There may be a solo female or two, or a lone skater. I didn’t check every nation, and a few that I found weren’t included because I couldn’t find enough information in English. Philip Boit of Kenya was on my list, but he was eliminated just yesterday.
posted by Miss Cellania on 2-11-2010 at 12:15 pm
Four trained in Europe, four in the US.
posted by Miss Cellania on 2-11-2010 at 12:17 pm
I hope they gets plush Olympian digs all to themselves! It’s interesting, though unsurprising, that they all encountered skiing in colder climates. But what interesting life stories they each have…
posted by muffy on 2-11-2010 at 12:28 pm
Prince Hubertus of Hohenlohe-Langenburg.
Best…name….ever!
posted by Ted Lange As Your Bartender on 2-11-2010 at 5:01 pm
Thanks, Miss Cellania! Great read!
posted by elizabutt on 2-11-2010 at 11:16 pm
Miss Celliana, thank you for the coverage. However Morocco doesnt deserve the labelling of Snowlesss nation. There are 2 skistation in operation (near Ifrane and Oukaimeden near Marrakech). Slopes are usually not groomed so its power snow skiing.
Nevertheless Morocco has a specific appeal to Ski-mountaineering adepts, as they can start from 3400m on a 10-day tour in absolutly desolate snowscapes touring from refuge to refuge, where the refuges dont even have electricity. True the seasons is too short only a few weeks on avarage.
posted by suleyman idrissi on 2-12-2010 at 7:46 pm
Thank you, suleyman -I did not know that!
posted by Miss Cellania on 2-12-2010 at 7:56 pm
Cynthia Denzler is representing Colombia for the very first time ever on winter games as well. The “Colombian” (She is actually half american and half swiss but claimed Colombian citizenship for the event) will be participating on the Slalom event…
posted by Edwin on 2-16-2010 at 3:17 pm
Mexico shouldn’t be considered a snowless nation. I grew up in Northern Mexico and we would get snow every winter, granted there are no ski resorts. Just this winter northern Mexico received many snows. It is due to high elevations, like the sierras in Chihuahua and central Mexico. Even these areas in central Mexico get snow.
posted by Alex on 3-4-2010 at 12:40 pm