Of course at Melvyn's ski area there would be no chair lifts
While there are indeed a lot of parallels (pun intended) between the two sports where lessons could be learned...as pointed out already there are a ton of significant distinctions.
We all have to play the same golf course but I can often find my own part of the mountain to ski on...
Skiing is exponentially easier to learn and achieve a reasonable degree of proficiency in a short time...
You can ski for an hour and rest/eat/drink for an hour....rinse and repeat...
Shivas- There definitely are pace of play issues...they're called lift lines.
Lastly- someone funnier than I should do a Carlin Baseball vs Football thing with Golf and Skiing
Chris is on the right track here:
The differences seem to far outweigh the similarities. I've taken the liberty to elaborate a bit further:
1) You have several slopes and several lifts at a ski resort that are separate from the bunny hill where the beginners learn on. I don't know of an equivialent to this in golf.
2) All it takes is one foursome of beginners to completely trash a starters sheet and bog down the entire day. In skiing, there is no concept of this. Why would any course operator not want the money of experienced players vs beginners.
3) In golf you are committed to at least the 9 holes, if not 18 once started. In skiiing, you can bail out whenever you want and everyone else remains unaffected.
4) In golf you have to practice for at least a few months before you have any business being on the course. In skiing, with only an hr or two of training, you can then do the easy and medium difficulty runs.
5) In golf everyone must play the same holes, whether they are expert or beginner. In skiing you can chop them up so only the advanced do black diamond, or the terrain park, etc.
6) In golf you have a long list of rules, ettiquitte, etc, you need to know before teeing off. In skiing, all you have to know is where the park boundaries are and try not to run over other people.
7) In golf, there is always an expectation or at least a hope to "Score well". In skiing this doesn't exist, people just go out and have fun without having to worry about "scoring" being something that could negatively impact ones attitude.
In skiing, stopping for 30 minutes to take a lunch break and have a beer is not frowned upon.
9) Skiing embraces technology for its weekend warriors, whereas golfers are still subject to the same rules/limits that the pros are.
10) Skiing embraces its youth and even gives them a place to play, aka terrain park. Many golf courses, while not running them off explicitly, make it tough for them and feel unwelcomed.