Life Story for
Andreas "Andy" Schernthanner
Andreas ““Andy” Schernthanner passed away on December 7, 2012, at his home, Round Mountain Ranch, Ketchum, in the presence of loved ones. Andy was born on January 15, 1929, in Rauris, Austria, the son of Theresia Moser of Wastl and Andreas Schernthanner of Penninghof, Austria.
In 1952, Andy crossed the Atlantic on the RMS Queen Mary for his initial visit to the US after living and working in several European countries. Shortly after docking in New York City, Andy went to Sugarloaf, Maine, to instruct skiing. It was at there that he met ski enthusiast Alice Eaton, to whom he was married for 50 years.
An avid outdoorsman and skier, Andy knew when he first came to Ketchum in 1957 that it was a place he could call home. His heart and soul has always been the mountains, and when considering other places to live, he expressed you wouldn’t find anywhere better than this to experience them. He enjoyed many pursuits in the wilderness: walking, camping, elk hunting, fishing, and horseback riding among them. It was often said that he knew the local mountains like the back of his hand and traveled game trails so frequently they turned into the paths we follow in places like Adam’s Gulch. He was an institution with the Ketchum/Warmsprings Riding Club and could easily be found any summer Wednesday during the last 50 years on horseback. In the winter, he was a Sun Valley Ski Instructor for 40+ years, taught his six children how to ski, set the race courses for the Kindercup for decades, and supported the Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation.
Andy was a savvy business man and entrepreneur. Trained as a professional ski instructor and cabinet maker in Austria, he bought a ruler, learned the imperial system, and started working as a general contractor in the summer seasons. Andy crafted several houses around the valley and was well known for his workmanship, ethics, practical nature, and generosity. As an early advocate of affordable housing, he built several units which he happily rented to long-term locals for a modest stipend. He also shared his love of nature with friend and stranger, alike, by allowing private property access to Wanderer’s Way and the view along “Wildflower Ridge” on Round Mountain, still used by his horses as pastureland. He believed “it is such a beautiful place, it is nice to share.”
Andy was preceded in death by his wife Alice, last July, and their daughter Kim, in 1965. He is survived by six children, Heidi, Liesl, Pater, Monika, Britta, and Andreas; their spouses; five grandchildren; and his sister, Zenzi, of Rauris, Austria. He will be missed by friends and relations both here and abroad.
A funeral mass will be held at Our Lady of the Snows Catholic Church on Sun Valley Road, after Christmas. An announcement will be posted with date and time when confirmed. In lieu of flowers, a benevolent fund has been established at Bank of the West (725-0672) to be used to establish a memorial.