"Bunny hill" symbol, used in America for signaling ski pistes for novices

Shervin Afshar shervinafshar at gmail.com
Thu May 28 14:59:55 CDT 2015


Single and double diamond?

https://bbliss176.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/symbols2_jpg.jpg
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_2Rc9ifOGLYg/TO5fF0XNTSI/AAAAAAAAIxE/RJPvVDD6gLM/s1600/caution-double-black-diamond.jpg
http://thumbs.dreamstime.com/z/double-black-diamond-sign-legend-ski-slopes-map-40955860.jpg


↪ Shervin

On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 12:46 PM, Philippe Verdy <verdy_p at wanadoo.fr> wrote:

> Is there a symbol that can represent the "Bunny hill" symbol used in North
> America and some other American territories with mountains, to designate
> the ski pistes open to novice skiers (those pistes are signaled with green
> signs in Europe).
>
> I'm looking for the symbol itself, not the color, or the form of the sign.
>
> For example blue pistes in Europe are designed with a green circle in
> America, but we have a symbol for the circle; red pistes in Europe are
> signaled by a blue square in America, but we have a symbol for the square;
> black pistes in Europe are signaled by a black diamond in America, but we
> also have such "black" diamond in Unicode.
>
> But I can't find an equivalent to the American "Bunny hill" signal,
> equivalent to green pistes in Europe (this is a problem for webpages
> related to skiing: do we have to embed an image ?).
>
>
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