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538 Search Results for ""snow park""

  • Third Annual Beartooth Summer Third Annual Beartooth Summer Session Presented by ON3P Ski Company

    • From: TetonGravityResearch
    • Description:

      Beartooth

       

      The Third Annual Beartooth Summer Session is set to occur from Wednesday through Sunday, June 5th-June 9th at Beartooth Basin Ski Area, formerly Red Lodge International Summer Ski Camp, and in the surrounding backcountry. 

       

      The little ski area, near the top of Beartooth Pass on the Montana/Wyoming border, features two high-speed poma lifts, steeps,  chutes, cornices, and a terrain  park at the bottom.  The ski area was first opened in the 1960s as a venue for summer  ski race training.  During the late 1990s and early 2000s the ski area saw an influx of newschool skiing. Mickey Price, Tony Gilpin, Glen Plake, and Donovan Power trained and coached alongside Tanner Hall, Wiley Miller, Paul Cotter, and many others.  Prominent film companies such as Teton Gravity Research, Team 13, and Toy Soldier Productions have featured  footage from the Beartooth Basin Ski Area in their films.

       

      The Second Annual Beartooth Summer Session  brought approximately 100 skier visits and 40 competitors from all around North America. Writers from Teton Gravity Research, Sking Magazine, Bomb Snow Magazine, and Explore Big Sky covered the event.

       

      ON3P Ski Company and other sponsors will be working with the ski area to host the session and build a quality terrain park and competition course. The event, terrain park, and ski area will be open to the public as well as to invited riders and photographers. In addition to world-class, lift-accessible summer skiing, the surrounding area has excellent backcountry access, including day-long tours, boot packs, and car shuttle laps.

       

      On Saturday, June 8th, a big-mountain/slopestyle competition will take place at Beartooth Basin. Competitors will take top-to-bottom runs and be judged on style, technique,  amplitude, and consistency.

       

      ON3P will have its fleet of demo skis available free to the public. Tickets to the ski area will be discounted for session attendees to $40 per day. Half day tickets for $35 will also be available.

       

      More details including group lodging options, competition  registration, and a roster of invited riders will be published at www.beartoothsummersession.com . View the rest of the media gallery here. We hope to see you next month in the Beartooths.

       

      Get ready for the summer season with awesome gear deals here.

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  • Laying Down Lines and Saving L Laying Down Lines and Saving Lives in Cooke City

    • From: TetonGravityResearch
    • Description:
      Words by Michael Sudmeier
      Images by Sam Pope

      Some things in life are subject to change. And this is especially true for those who spend time in the backcountry. While recently filming near Cooke City, Montana for Way of Life, TGR athletes and filmers had to continually adapt to new challenges—including saving a man’s life. The plans for the trip had been simple enough—film some late spring ski descents at the end of April. The start of the trip, however, was filled with pow days, cold temperatures, and assisting with a rescue.

      Nightmare Camp
      Before heading into the backcountry, the crew convened in Cooke City and geared up for the trip.

      “I thought it was going to be mainly mountaineering missions—skiing couloirs and things like that,” explained Todd Ligare. He was joined by TGR athletes John Spriggs and Griffin Post, as well as a production and support team that included Dan Gibeau, Sam Pope, Hennie van Jaarsveld, Corey Seeman, and Steve Popovich. Despite anticipating spring conditions, “It felt like a mid-winter trip in late April, which was awesome,” offered Spriggs. He and the group named the project Nightmare Camp—a play on TGR’s Fantasy Camp, which had wrapped up a few weeks prior in Alaska.

      After members of the crew skied a few lines on their first day, a snowmobiler approached them, searching for assistance and a means to contact rescue and medical personnel. “You could tell he was dealing with a heavy situation, but he seemed calm and was dealing with it appropriately,” explained Ligare. “He basically asked if we had a way to contact help.”

      The man’s friend had stopped breathing after his vest became tangled in his sled. “Basically, the [patient] had a protective vest on, and he was hill climbing,” explained Post. “Through an unfortunate series of events, his handlebars went through his protective vest and hung him.” The man had rushed to aid his friend, but his response time was delayed due to the steep slope on which the injured snowmobiler was perched. Initially, the snowmobiler was not breathing. Once freed from his sled, however, he resumed breathing but remained unconscious.

      Nightmare Camp
      Whether exploring new zones or assisting with a rescue, the group relied heavily on its sleds.

      Tapping into rescue and medical training they receive at the start of each season, the crew from TGR sprung into action. Ligare sought out the crew’s satellite phone and medical equipment while Pope traveled to the injured sledder. Once at site of the incident, Pope and a snowboarder who was also in the area provided initial care for the patient. According to Pope, they “created a flat spot for [the patient], cleared his airway, stabilized his head, and put some layers under and on him to provide insulation from the snow.”

      After retrieving the group’s satellite phone, Ligare—now joined by Post—sought out higher ground in order to contact Park County Search and Rescue. Post remained in contact with rescuers while Ligare, Gibeau, and Spriggs brought the group’s medical kit and sked, a collapsible rescue stretcher, to the scene. The group helped Pope further stabilize the patient and initiated a high angle rescue to lower him down the slope. They also took turns traveling to Post, relaying updates to rescuers. Seeman, who had been in town servicing a snowmobile, led rescue personnel Ben Zavora and Jan Gaertner, President of the Cooke City EMS, to the patient.

      By the time Gaertner and Zavora arrived, the team had not only lowered the patient down the slope, but also prepared a landing zone for a helicopter. Gaertner and the team provided additional care and readied the patient for transport. “We packaged him, got him on some oxygen, and cleared his airway,” she explained. “I also put an AED on him [in the event his heart stopped]. He had quit breathing twice.” Fortunately, the weather briefly cooperated with rescuers. “We got there and the sky opened up and the sun came out. We got a helicopter in and when the helicopter left, the clouds came over and it started snowing again,” explained Gaertner.

      “I’ll tell you what, it was not his time to die,” offered Gaertner. She credits the team from TGR with ensuring this was the case. “The guys did an awesome job,” she explained. “They were so excited to use their skills and equipment. I would work with those guys any day.”

      Nightmare Camp Thank You Letter to TGR
      In a letter to TGR, Jan Gaertner—President of the Cooke City EMS—thanked the crew for its assistance.

      For the team, the incident provided an opportunity to put into practice the skills they had cultivated through TGR’s annual safety summit, the International Pro Riders Workshop (IPRW). Although the curriculum is continually evolving, IPRW aims to help attendees successfully negotiate the challenges inevitable in backcountry travel. The course typically addresses assessing avalanche terrain, initiating first aid in a wilderness context, and leading rescue efforts.

      According to Cofounder Todd Jones, TGR developed its IPRW program because “we recognized that we’re out in a really dangerous and inhospitable environment that demands high levels of training and expertise. That training can make the difference between a fairly standard rescue and a really bad situation.”

      Nightmare Camp
      IPRW ensures TGR's team is prepared for backcountry emergencies.  Luckily, no emergencies resulted from the crew killing this line.

      The rescue in Cooke City served as a testament to the training’s success. In a thank you letter to TGR, Gaertner wrote, “Your skiers were the first responders on the scene, and because of their training and communications [they] saved this man’s life.” According to Spriggs, the high angle rescue that the team performed was “exactly what we learned at IPRW.” Gaertner noted that the team was especially successful in executing the skills it had developed at the workshop. “It’s one thing to get the training,” she explained. “It’s another thing to be able to act on it—and all those guys were able to act calmly and efficiently and do what they were taught to do.”

      During its time in the Cooke City area, the TGR crew checked in with Gaertner to receive updates on the patient’s status. After several days in a coma, the man was released from the hospital. He is expected to make a full recovery. This, according to Ligare, “is a miracle—or at least not typical.” After all, the man had stopped breathing twice throughout the incident.

      The rescue with which the team assisted provided an unusual prelude to the trip—and the adventures only continued. At the start of their filming, “it snowed two feet so we just skied pow for days,” revealed Post. “It was unseasonably cold for the first four days and we had some of the best snow of the year.” 

      For the ten day trip, the crew established a base camp from which they began sledding and touring each morning. “We basically had a little village out in the woods and camped there and didn’t come back to town,” explained Post. “We were really much more immersed in the mountains than trips where you just go out for the day.” 

      Nightmare Camp
      The crew was better at skiing than cooking, as evidenced by its reliance on precooked dinners.

      Although the group had a large dome tent, plenty of food, and a propane stove and heater, being immersed in the mountains was not especially luxurious. Temperatures one evening hovered near twenty below. For dinner, the crew had “two different options of precooked meals that we would heat up: Mexican or Thai. The big joke every night was ‘what do you guys want for dinner?’” explained Pope. As the days progressed, the crew also established a second camp from which it could access more remote zones.

      TGR Nightmare Camp
      There's nothing like the smell of a campfire--especially one accompanied by the smell of wet socks and boots.

      According to the team, its base camp provided quick access to terrain but was not without its challenges. “The camping adds a whole new layer of logistics to deal with—drying clothes, charging batteries, and dumping footage,” Pope explained. The group’s proximity to its target terrain helped fuel the intensity of the experience. “The trip was probably the most full throttle trip I have ever been on,” revealed Post. “We were just so busy—we would get up at six pretty much every morning, put our ski boots on by seven-thirty or eight, and we’d pretty much be skiing and in our ski boots until eight at night.”

      As the temperatures warmed up towards the end of the trip, the crew was also able to ski several couloirs. After being shut down on one couloir due to rapidly softening snow and wet slides, the team was able to ski the couloir on its final day. “The snow conditions were super variable,” revealed Pope. “But to me, that’s the impressive thing about professional skiers—they make it look easy no matter what the conditions.” But this should come as no surprise. After all, they can even make saving a life look easy.

      Nightmare Camp
      The crew kicked back in Cooke City at the trip's conclusion.
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  • Park Check Video 9 Park Check Video 9

  • Easter Sunrise Parks Easter Sunrise Parks

  • Fun in the Sun at Whistler Bla Fun in the Sun at Whistler Blackcomb

    • From: TetonGravityResearch
    • Description:

      The Whistler Blackcomb terrain park crew has been on top of their game all winter building amazing features. Now the spring sunshine is here, making it the perfect time to enjoy all of the crew's hard work. Check out this awesome edit filled with fun shredding in the park in Blackcomb. Jealous? Don't be, just get up to the glacier this summer.

    • 2 weeks ago
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  • Stevens Pass: More Snow Than H Stevens Pass: More Snow Than Hype

    • From: TetonGravityResearch
    • Description:

      Words and Images by Joey Mara

      The Cascades are loaded with underrated gems—and Stevens Pass is definitely one of them. Not only is the resort peppered with steep terrain, it also enjoys massive storms that make the mountain a freerider’s dream. Only eighty miles from downtown Seattle, Stevens Pass has been slinging lift tickets for seventy-five years. In that time, it’s been responsible for more than a few people calling in sick to sample the latest storm. With ten lifts serving 1,125 acres spread between the mountain’s front and backside, the resort accommodates skiers and riders of all ability levels. Nonetheless, the mountain is best known for its expert terrain.

      Cowboy Ridge

      No one disputes that the snow in the Pacific Northwest is deep, yet its quality is often up for debate. A few locals will come clean, however, and reveal that labels like “cascade concrete” are misnomers designed to keep tourists away. The snow at Stevens is premium—and thanks to receiving over 450 inches of snow annually, there’s plenty of pow to go around. In fact, it’s not uncommon for the mountain to see upwards of 650 inches in a season.  

      Stevens Pass Night Skiing

      After a storm, however, the snow at Stevens is typically measured in feet thanks to a unique weather phenomenon known as the Puget Sound Convergence Zone. West of Seattle, the Olympic Mountains split incoming storm tracks, forcing their wind and moisture to divide to the north and south and collide again when they converge at the Cascades. This concentrates precipitation in the vicinity of Stevens Pass. Consequently, storms may hammer the mountain while other resorts in the state receive only a fraction of this snowfall. Needless to say, the storms at Stevens make dreams come true—just come prepared with a snorkel. In December of 2012, for example, a storm dropped 39 inches at the base of Stevens and sixty inches at its summit in just a twenty-four hour period.

      Matt Wainhouse

      Stevens Pass lacks the glamour (and excessive amenities) of a mega resort—and that’s fine with those who call the mountain home. For the courageous, Stevens has plenty of steep lines—perfect for those who like to push limits and occasionally piss their pants. Pillows, chutes, steeps, cliffs, and spines all litter the mountain, while the tree skiing is also world class. It might be worth befriending a local when you come to Stevens, as much of this terrain can be elusive to the uninitiated. To further maximize your time at Stevens, be ready for some serious storm riding. Locals revel in the free refills provided by Steven’s heavy snowfall. The mountain’s night skiing can also add a new dimension to chasing powder. And if you’re fortunate enough to catch a bluebird day, Cowboy and Rooster Ridges provide an ample canvas for laying down creative lines. It should come as no surprise that skiers and riders can explore Stevens season after season and continue to find new zones.

      Stevens Past to Present Celebrating 75 Years! from Joey mara on Vimeo.

      For those prepared to venture outside the access gates, the backcountry at Stevens Pass is the real deal. Due to the high amount of snow and steep terrain, avalanches occur frequently. Adding to the danger, visibility can change rapidly. That being said, a wealth of ridges, back bowls, and peaks can be accessed via the lifts or by touring from the highway or nordic trails. Much of Steven’s backcountry dumps skiers at the highway, enabling them to easily hitch a ride back to the resort.

      The Rooster Comb

      In addition to its natural terrain, Stevens Pass boasts a solid park. The Top Phlight park crew spends its days prepping dozens of rails and kickers of all sizes. Stevens also has one of the few halfpipes in the state of Washington. Thanks to the diversity of its terrain, the mountain is a breeding ground for well-rounded rippers.

      Stevens Pass Park

      Stevens has remained under the radar thanks, in part, to a lack of accommodations at its base. For those wishing to stay close to the slopes, a variety of rental cabins are available on both sides of the pass. Most visitors, however, stay in or around the town of Leavenworth on the east side of the pass. Located forty-five minutes from Stevens, Leavenworth sports a Bavarian theme and offers plenty of entertainment for those looking to kick back and slip off their boots. During the winter months, the town is lit up with Christmas lights and the streets are packed with Seattleites hoping to escape the city, shop, and enjoy some food and drinks at German pubs. For those looking for no-frills lodging, the small towns of Skykomish and Gold Bar on the Seattle side of the pass offer affordable options.

      Stevens Pass Through the Clouds

      Stevens will never be a Whistler or an Aspen—and it does not want to be such a resort. And while the scene is mellow, the mountain is not. Needless to say, Stevens has no shortage of challenging terrain—and good company with whom to explore it. The people are friendly and the snow is deep. If you measure your seasons in faceshots and high fives, Stevens might be your soulmate.

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  • Stevens Pass Park Stevens Pass Park

    • From: TetonGravityResearch
    • Description:
      Stevens Pass boasts a premiere park.
    • 1 month ago
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  • Parks and Wreck Season 2 Episo Parks and Wreck Season 2 Episode 4 "Super"

    • From: angrysnowboarder
    • Description:

      So we took a week off from dropping our weekly edits. You probably thought we called it quits, moved on, and decided filming the Icecapades would be better, right? Wrong, we knew we had to bring you something that would change the direction of Parks and Wreck for the better. So fire up that ole tube TV with its low def, plug in that Nintendo Entertainment System, and lets get 8 bit with some super memories!

      Riders: Chris Collard, Zach Soderholm, Connor Paulson, Andrew Agar, Tylor Berreth

      Filmed and edited by: Shamus Lahman

      Sponsored by: iON Cameras, Echelon Snowboards, Phunkshun Wear

    • 1 month ago
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  • Parks And Wrecks Episode 2 Sea Parks And Wrecks Episode 2 Season 2

    • From: angrysnowboarder
    • Description:
      Riders: Zach Soderholm, Jordan Zdanek, Anthony "Cro" Corbo, Alex Dean, Ben Stafford, and The Great Ted Bendixson
      Filmers: Shamus Lahman, Avran LeFeber

      Special Guest POV Camera Coordinator: Dan Maher
Edited: Shamus Lahman ShayLay Media

      Parks and Wreck Logo: Jesse Denes
      Thanks to iON Cameras for being our official POV camera sponsor and Camtrol for providing stabilizing devices.
      Shout out to The Big Hit Breckenridge for always supporting us. Remember people if you're going to shop local shop The Big Hit!
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  • Parks and Wrecks Season 2 Epis Parks and Wrecks Season 2 Episode 1

    • From: angrysnowboarder
    • Description:

      Season two of Parks and Wrecks kicks off where it started in beautiful Breckenridge Colorado. The Echelon Snowboard team was on hand to be the first group of kids we filmed for this and after two days we were able to put together a park edit full of slams, jibs and spins.

       

      Riders: Andrew Agar, Connor Paulson, Anthony "Cro" Corbo, Marcus "The Blexican" Stephens, Tylor Berreth and Zach Soderholm

       

      Filmed By: Shamus Lahman & Avran LeFeber

      Edited By: Shamus Lahman of ShayLay Media

      Motion Graphic: Jesse Denes 
jessedenes.com

       

      Thanks to our official POV camera sponsor iON.

    • 1 month ago
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  • Jack Hessler January 2013 Jack Hessler January 2013

    • From: jackhessler
    • Description:
      Rider: Jack Hessler Filmed By: Chris Cressy Shreddin at Park City and Jackson Hole
    • 1 month ago
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  • Go Big And Land Soft Go Big And Land Soft

    • From: jacksonhole
    • Description:

      Come out to the Eagle's Rest Terrain Park at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort and try out the airbag jump with USAirbag. The airbag will be open Friday March 29-Sunday March 31st.

      Watch Jackson Hole Videos

    • 1 month ago
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  • Filming for TGR's HIGHER Begin Filming for TGR's HIGHER Begins

    • From: TetonGravityResearch
    • Description:

      Jones CLimb

      On Monday, March 18th, after a two-day approach and five years of scouting, Jeremy Jones dropped in on the Grand Teton in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, kicking off the final leg of a snowboard odyssey that has captivated the world since the premiere of TGR’s Deeper.

      Joined by legendary snowboarder Brian Iguchi, and Exum mountain guides Zahan Billimora and Brendan O’Neill, Jones descended the Grand’s Otterbody face, a high hanging snowfield with hundreds of 

      feet of exposure below it. A massive storm cycle yielded 27 inches of new snow only a few days before the descent, making the line a very touch-and-go operation.

      Just getting to the line was a massive effort. “We broke it up over two days, It’s about 5,000 feet to where we camped on the lower saddle. We spent a day getting to that point.” Says Jeremy Jones. “The next morning it took about five hours for the last 2,100 feet.”

       Jones Climb 2

      Most of the route was hazardous, not just because of the exposure, but because of the new snow as well. “It was really questionable whether the snow bonded to the previous melt/freeze cycle,” says TGR’s Steve Jones who was onsite directing the shoot. “They went up Sunday night with the notion just to look at it on Monday. The whole decent is a no fall zone. If anything were to slough or slide, it’s game over.”

      Conditions were stable and the group made the descent, but not without a few incredibly tense moments. At one point, Jones, Iguchi, and Billamora had all made an initial repel onto the Otterbody face while O’Neill skied toward them and triggered a large amount of slough. The three below were sheltered as the snow passed over them, but there was no way to tell that from the camera angles.

      “It was pretty emotional in the sense that at a point I wasn’t sure if I was going to watch my brother and two friends get sloughed off the mountain,” says Steve Jones. “From our perspective it looked like the slough was bearing down on them. It was a really tense moment for everyone.”

      Jones_6.jpg

      160

      The tension didn’t end there. When the group arrived at a mandatory 400-foot rappel, there was so much snow accumulation that the anchor was nowhere to be found. Instead of using a set anchor, they had to make a new one. Testing out a new anchor with a 400-foot drop isn’t exactly ideal.

      These trials are typical for a descent in Grand Teton National Park according to Jeremy Jones. “I’ve tried to have the Tetons in my last two films,” says Jeremy Jones. “[They] are a tricky range, and probably the toughest place that we’ve tried to shoot in the last five years. Two of the last five years I’ve wrote it off right from the get go.”

      Jones says that Grand Teton National Park was one of his main motivations for going to terrain that was only accessed by foot. “I was running out of terrain, but I realized that there is so much terrain in the park.”

      Jeremy Jones riding the Grand Teton

      When asked where Higher will take him next, Jones’s reply echoed his never-ending sense of adventure. “Higher is an evolution of everything I’ve done in snowboarding. Where that shakes out, I don’t know. We’ll know in a couple of years when it’s done.”

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    • 2 months ago
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  • Park Check Video 8 Park Check Video 8

  • Park Check Video 7 Park Check Video 7

  • Bachelor Parks Tour 1 - Pacifi Bachelor Parks Tour 1 - Pacific City

  • Superpipe Finals - AspenSnowma Superpipe Finals - AspenSnowmass Freeskiing Open

    • From: aspensnowmass
    • Description:

      Some of the world's best riders threw down this weekend at the Aspen/Snowmass Freeskiing Open. Here are the top three men's and women's skiers competing in the X Games pipe at Buttermilk. Final results are below.

      MEN’S SUPERPIPE FINAL RESULTS
      1st – Aaron Blunck, Crested Butte, CO. – $5,000
      Winning run: Right 900 tail, left 900 tail, flair bro-kang grab, ally oop flat 540 safety, ally oop dub flat 720, switch left 720 mute

      2nd – Alex Ferreira, Aspen, CO. – $2,500
      Run: Left 1080 tail, switch right 720 japan, left 900 tail, right 900 tail, ally oop flat 540 mute

      3rd – Walter Wood, Evergreen, CO. – $1,500
      Run: Right 900 tail, left 900 tail, flair truck driver, flair tail grab, right 1080 tail, switch right ally oop 900

      WOMEN’S SUPERPIPE FINAL RESULTS
      1st – Annalisa Drew, Andover, MA. – $1,500
      Winning run: Left 900 to ally oop, left 540 to straight air safety, left 540 mute, straight air safety, left 720

      2nd – Maggie Stout, Ottsville, PA. – $750
      Run: Straight air mute grab, left 540 mute, right 540, left 540 japan, straight air japan, left 720

      3rd – Jamie Crane-Mauzy, Park City, UT. – $300
      Run: Straight air mute, left 540 mute, right 540, straight air safety, flair safety grab, left 360

      Watch More Aspen/Snowmass Videos

       

    • 2 months ago
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  • Manhunt For Armed Fugitive Doe Manhunt For Armed Fugitive Does Little To Derail SoCal Shredders On A Powder Day

    • From: vandagyuris
    • Description:

       Bear Mountain

      Nothing could keep Big Bear shredders indoors when a mid-February blizzard dumped two feet of pow on the Southern California dome – even a deadly manhunt for murder suspect and former LAPD officer Christopher Dorner.

      Big Bear residents were put on high alert as schools closed, resorts shut down, and local shops locked up once the hunt for Dorner moved from Irvine to the mountain town above Los Angeles. Despite the warnings that the fugitive had stowed away in a cabin in the woods, Bear Mountain only shut down for one session. A thousand feet below, Snow Summit didn’t even blink an eye and carried on business as usual. With a record single snowfall of the season, mother earth’s gift of 24 inches overruled any fear of a convicted felon on the loose.

      Dorner was suspected to have launched a killing spree that allegedly began on February 3rd in Irvine. Four days later, Dorner’s burned out truck was discovered in Big Bear Lake, commencing a six-day manhunt. Found barricaded inside a cabin on February 12, authorities tried to smoke him out with pyrotechnics. The cabin caught fire and Dorner’s charred remains were identified a few days later.

      Throughout the ordeal, Bear Mountain offered a constant stream of updates on the status of the mountain on their homepage.

      Despite the media blow out over a mountain lockdown, skiers and boarders continued to chase down fresh powder in the wake of magically clear conditions.

      Undeterred shredders scrambled for first chair at Big Bear as authorities searched for murder suspect Chris Dorner. (Photo: Big Bear Mountain Resorts)
       
      Closing only for a single afternoon session on precautionary terms, Bear continued to operate with all runs open and their legendary fully loaded park – including the big girl and boy playground, Red Bull Plaza. The Plaza provides an urban oasis for expert riders with 32 foot stairs, K-rails, a billboard wall ride, and a marble ledge, just to highlight a few.

      The nonchalant tone on the mountain amidst national anxiety aligned with the essence of skiing and boarding. Sports so reliant upon Mother Nature to deliver opportunity, especially in a region like Southern California, cannot afford to waste a single snowflake. While tense vibes certainly permeated the community of Big Bear, on the mountain it was the crisp wind, the perfect sun and the smell of a fresh layer that reigned supreme.

      Big Bear Mountain Resort and Snow Summit Lift Tickets are available for Sale ONLINE through Liftopia.com
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    • 3 months ago
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  • Medium Jump Line 1 - Snowboard Medium Jump Line 1 - Snowboard

    • From: campofchampionsbc
    • Description:

      If you want your summer to be more than just wishing for winter and dreaming about snowboarding in the best summer park, do what the National Slopestyle Teams from The United States, Canada, Norway, New Zealand, The Netherlands and Belarussia do - come to The Camp of Champions to ride and train in the best summer park in preparation the Olympics and X Games. For 25 years The Camp of Champions, with the only Olympic and X-Games caliber summer park, has been the place to ride, train and have fun in the summer. You can session with your pro coaches as well as pro guests. So many pros have chosen COC as their place to train for Sochi in 2014, that it will make your head spin. You’ll be riding with Seb Toots, Stale Sandbech, Mark McMorris, Mark Sollors, Torstein Horgmo, Antoine Truchon, Maxence Parrot, Alex Beebe, Rusty Ockenden, JP Walker, Simon Chamberlain and so many others you won’t believe it.

      Watch More Camp Of Champions Videos

       

    • 3 months ago
    • Views: 7
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  • Pro Line Second Jump - Snowboa Pro Line Second Jump - Snowboard

    • From: campofchampionsbc
    • Description:

      If you want your summer to be more than just wishing for winter and dreaming about snowboarding in the best summer park, do what the National Slopestyle Teams from The United States, Canada, Norway, New Zealand, The Netherlands and Belarussia do - come to The Camp of Champions to ride and train in the best summer park in preparation the Olympics and X Games. For 25 years The Camp of Champions, with the only Olympic and X-Games caliber summer park, has been the place to ride, train and have fun in the summer. You can session with your pro coaches as well as pro guests. So many pros have chosen COC as their place to train for Sochi in 2014, that it will make your head spin. You’ll be riding with Seb Toots, Stale Sandbech, Mark McMorris, Mark Sollors, Torstein Horgmo, Antoine Truchon, Maxence Parrot, Alex Beebe, Rusty Ockenden, JP Walker, Simon Chamberlain and so many others you won’t believe it.

      Watch More Camp Of Champions Videos

    • 3 months ago
    • Views: 8
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