Videos

ESCAPE.

by LWachs
Apr 2016 - 1.1K views

We set out into the Oregon wilderness to hang out and focus on the simple things in life. Skiing, surviving and having fun. Enjoy the short edit from our little adventure. Filmed by Fletcher Hukari. Skiing by John Ware and Lucas Wachs. Shouts to Marissa for coming out with us and hanging out as well! Music: "Charlie don't surf" The Clash "meRua" Umalali "Turn down the sound" Adrian Younge

NOONERS - Juicy Fruit

by Ariles12
Apr 2016 - 1.6K views

Favorite shots of the year... Shout out to our sponsors: JUICY FRUIT Skiers: Ashley Coulthard Steven Fullerton Tom Peterson Andrew Riley Bruce Chappell Ben Miller

Gettin' Down @ Alta

by MikeMastro
Apr 2016 - 4.5K views

I had a hell of a season skiing my first year out west. Thanks to all the people who made every day great and thanks to the Salad Boys for grabbin these shots. Can't wait till next season!

The New Old-School

by oster.jacob
Apr 2016 - 782 views

In the town of Jackson, Wyoming stands an interesting relationship within their tight-knit skiing community. There was once a day when the resort and surrounding backcountry was torn up and tracked out by the best skiers in Jackson Hole. Known as the Jackson Hole Air Force, these talented and seemingly crazy men and women hucked cliffs and skied the gnarliest lines that anybody had ever seen at the time. They ticked off cliff after cliff, line after line and ducked the boundary ropes, setting a precedent that Jackson Hole skiers were a different breed, pushing the limits of how far and big they could go. Fast forward twenty years and there is a new breed of skiers. Building off of the foundation that the JHAF set, the new-schoolers are shredding lines that even the Air Force had only dreamt of during their reign. Don't discount the JHAF's influence, though. Had it not been for the Jackson Hole Air Force and their new school approach to skiing at the time, the young skiers of Jackson Hole today would not have open access to the backcountry nor would they have a bar to push higher and higher.

The Big Picture - Move - BTS No.3 : Intersection

by chrislogan
Apr 2016 - 1.3K views

Rossignol presents The Big Picture. The third installment of our 'behind the scenes' series following Chris Logan, Parker White and friends as they travel and film for our upcoming mini movie series 'Move'. After wrapping up shooting MOVE 1 in the British Columbia interior, the boys make their way to the coast range in early March to meet up with local shredder Jordan Clarke. They spend the first week in the Whistler backcountry filming for 'Intersection' , a World Ski and Snowboard Festival video contest where five crews have one week to shoot and edit a video shot on and around Whistler/Blackcomb for a $10K winner take all purse. Check out some of the highlights from our video and watch as Chris, Parker and Jordan manage to pull off the victory with a United States of Canada theme. Thanks to our supporting sponsors Electric, Tomahawk International, Tall T Productions, Bomb Snow Magazine, Cheetah Factory Racing, Cooke Knives. Skiers: Chris Logan, Parker White, Jordan Clarke, Oliver Chornous Location: Whistler/ Blackcomb, Whistler Backcountry Music: "Fire" by Yukon Blonde + "Cross Canada" by Stomping' Tom Connors www.thebigpicturemtn.com www.rossignol.com www.electriccalifornia.com www.tomahawkinternational.com www.talltproductions.com www.bombsnow.com www.cheetahfactoryracing.com www.cooke-project.com

What is this?

by ZacharyLuscher
Apr 2016 - 118 views

Other then the fact I completely ate shit. Given more speed I would have rotated enough to land what would this be called? I've never seen anyone pull it off.

--Tough Job: IFSA Judge--

by HuckSolo
Apr 2016 - 89 views

Being an IFSA judge has no perks (#SARCASM) Overworked IFSA judges have many responsibilities: when scouting and analyzing the competition terrain, it is important to fully understand the difficulty of the terrain. This forces the judges to poach every good drop and bomb hole every landing. With fresh snow, it is crucial for safety that the judges get into the venue to assist with snow compaction; slaying every last bastion of powder is essential in creating a safe venue. Courses need to be set up to help athletes and coaches understand the set boundaries of the venue -- typically the venue has a start gate, a finish corral, and a venue map given to each athlete prior to the event. During course set up is a great time to poach those killer pow stashes before the athletes get to it. You know it can be a pretty tough job when checking out the terrain, checking snow conditions, setting up course, then having to go back again just to verify everything is in place -- it's a tough job, but someone has to do it. http://freeskiers.org/