Tag Archives: Backcountry Skiing

Jack Wolfskin Winter Catalog Photoshoot

Even after 12 years of seeing our work published, it is always exciting to see a big job in print, especially when it looks its best thanks to great design. This last week we received the Jack Wolfskin 2011 winter catalog, at nearly 2cm thick it is probably the biggest catalog in the outdoor industry. Jack Wolfskin is an enormous high end German gear manufacturer with a massive presence in Europe. Last winter we were contacted by their advertising agency about doing a sizeable commercial shoot for them in California’s Sierra Nevada. The timing worked out perfectly, plans were made and a short time later we had a pallet (yes, pallet) meet up with us in California. Along with the product came the creative direction – our job was to realistically document a backcountry ski and alpine climbing trip in the Sierra. Our specialty.

The next step, and always the most difficult, was to find the right people to do the project with. We needed three friends with very specific requirements: the right sizes, a high level of skiing ability, alpine climbing skills, fun for the camera, personable, dynamic, and of course the necessary time. In the end, we had the ideal group; David Page, Ben Grasseschi and Brandyn Roark Gray. Together with the stars we had an equally important team of porters to carry all our stuff into the mountains so we could be free to shoot and not deal with logistics.

The Sierra Nevada was at its best for us, abundant blue sky above a very fresh two feet of unusually dry powder. Our location choice was Basin Mountain above Bishop – we nailed the timing, the conditions and the creative. Our models nailed the turns, the fun, the laughing and the friendship. A huge success. A happy client and a very happy group of skiers, porters, and photographers.

Included here is a small sampling of image usage from the alpine climbing segment of the story. Thanks to Jack Wolfskin and all our friends for a great shoot.

Posted in Climbing, Clips, Photo Business, Photography, Skiing, Trail Running | Also tagged , , , 6 Comments

Italian Dolomites Backcountry Ski Shoot

Ongoing winter weather in California forced us to cancel a commercial ski shoot in the Sierra Nevada and move it to the Italian Dolomites. Here, the weather was with us and we had quite possibly one of our best overall two day shoots. For Janine and I, it was our favorite style of producing photos. The client knows us and provides the Creative, “Go make photos of a real ski tour with friends”. Deal.

The Dolomites are without a doubt one of the finest photo shoot locations in the world, our backcountry ski trip was truly perfection. For more photos, and the fun story of putting this trip together, visit the post at our site DolomiteSport.

Posted in Dolomites, Photography, Skiing | Also tagged , , 3 Comments

Marmolada Avalanche

It is a difficult decision to share what I have to share. But, I truly believe it is important, critical even, that this sort of story is told. It is something that every backcountry skier hopes never happens.

The great war photographer, James Nachtwey once said that the reason he makes the very difficult photos that he makes is because he hopes it will make a difference for someone, someday, perhaps to prevent some tragedy. This is also my desire.

The day started perfectly, May 1 and nearly a meter of winter powder. We arrived to the Marmolada (the Dolomites highest peak) and found literally a hundred or more skiers already skinning up to the east summit. Our goal was the true highpoint, the Punta Penia, but at first look it was glaringly obvious that it was too dangerous. We opted for the lower angle, rolling slopes below the east summit.

We skinned to the top under blue skies, had a snack on top, chatted with a mountain guide friend about the conditions, and then skied down in ideal snow.

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Everyone had noticed that several groups were attempting to climb the Punta Penia, and it was widely agreed upon that this didn’t seem to be the best idea based on what we were seeing. Small, slabs breaking free even on some of the lower angled terrain.

Skiers had skinned to beneath some steep rocks and from there began to climb steep snow to a ridge above. Where this was occurring was in the back of a canyon next to where our descent ended.

After skiing down we regrouped and decided another lap was in order, at least to the best section of snow. Once we were skinning again we stayed well to the side of the exit of the massive canyon in which the Punta Penia climbers were in. I don’t know if we did this consciously or just because we were going back to the slopes we had come down which were well off to the side of the Punta Penia climb.

I remember Andreas making some sort of surprised sound, before we all looked up. The avalanche seemed to release at the climber’s ski depot. What started as just some movement to our eyes, grew to an enormous, astounding, wave of snow, slabs and exploding debris. It came towards us like a wall of water released by a broken dam.

My memory is of trying to follow all of the many falling bodies I could see in the top sections, avy course training tells you to watch them, but then Andreas yelled out, “Let’s get out of here!”. We all quickly spun around, pointed our tips downward, and traversed off and out of the way. The avalanche, at full bore, passed about 100 meters from us.

As quickly as it started, it was over. Reality set in, there were countless people in this thing and we saw no one. We were the closest skiers to it and needed to act.

But how? Where to start? This thing was not just some small slab cutting loose, it didn’t have one or two people in it, it had maybe a dozen or more and covered an area perhaps 2 kilometers long and several hundred meters wide. What lay before us was overwhelming.

Call for the helicopters! What if something else goes above us? Fuck, we see no one. Oh Fuck, no.

Andreas called the emergency phone number. I headed into the debris field while lower, Janine, Dave and the others traversed in as well. Andreas followed behind me and soon we were faced with a lone figure, a young guy, clearly in shock, just standing in the debris. We approached him.

In Italian, “Are we safe here? are we safe here? I want to go away, I want to go away, please come with me, please take me away”. It took a moment to realize it, but this guy had ridden the thing out and was okay. Completely in shock, we took him out of the debris. Now, many other skiers were arriving to help. Chaos was taking over. The area to search was massive, where to start, what to do. Some still had their beacons on transmit throwing off the searches, yelling, screaming, frustration, fear.

The surface of the snow was a sea of clean white balls, frighteningly dense to ski or walk on, it was setting up like concrete. With some groups organizing to methodically search, while others roamed, time was going by. I remember seeing a guy standing alone, kind of brushing himself off, we spoke, he had been carried the length of the avalanche and was also uninjured, a miracle really. But this guy was 100% focused to get to work searching. I can’t imagine how he did it after what he went through.

Finally the helicopters arrived and with them the search parties with dogs. Word was out that two snowshoers had been seen in the path and no one had seen them since. Janine vividly remembered seeing them above us and moving into the canyon. Besides them, no one knew how many people were missing. No one was finding anything with beacon searches. But the dogs were at work.

While amongst it all I was with a woman dog handler and her dog. The dog began digging frantically, I had a probe in hand, the woman gestured for it, made one stab and screamed she had a find. She reached down, pulled away some snow, and right at our feet not 30cm below the surface of the snow, a frozen, clawed hand. We began to dig, the hand became an arm, the arm a torso and thankfully, at this point there were numerous other pros on hand. I stepped away and watched. Janine was there now, the face was freed, expressionless, peaceful. 35 minutes had passed. On his feet were snowshoes.

He was out, they worked on him while other searches continued. 50 more minutes passed, nothing, hope was giving away to hopelessness. Then another dog reacted, and ironically right in front of us and not 2 meters from the first find. Again the probe and the screams of a discovery. Minutes later the second snowshoer was out, 90 minutes with no oxygen. Like his friend, he was not wearing a beacon.

By now a half dozen helicopters were on the scene, each with new dogs and new personnel. A lone skier came through the scene, we all saw him, he had on one ski, carried two sets of ski poles, and was sobbing.

Our group gathered, we could do nothing more to help. The searchers wanted everyone to leave the area so the dogs could work. The rescue effort was turning to recovery.

The thoughts that go through one’s head after an experience like this are difficult to come to terms with. We sit here tonight, numb. For me writing about it helps and understanding that everyone did what they could. But to see it and wonder what is happening now to these people while we are safe at home – this is something else we have to process. Even still we do not know the outcome.

How can a place and an experience be so wonderful one moment, and a living hell the next? How can this playground we love become deadly? We’ve never lost sight of the fact that it is a dangerous game, but to see the reality is something else. A frozen hand seen grasping for the surface will remain with me forever when I ski.

Fellow backcountry skiers will understand about all of this. We continually hear stories, see videos, etc.. But at this same time last night, it had not happened to either myself or Janine. We will not stop skiing in the mountains but we will have this difficult learning experience that we hope will help us make the best decisions. I hope that the same can be true for others.

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This is a real recovery scene

This is a real recovery scene

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Posted in Dolomites, Personal Story, Skiing | Also tagged 14 Comments

Susie Sutphin Interview

Skiing corn beneath the Tre Cime di Lavaredo

Skiing corn beneath the Tre Cime di Lavaredo

A good friend of our’s from the US, Susie Sutphin, just stayed two weeks with us here in the Italian Dolomites. Together we pushed the limits of our legs and motivation, managing to ski every single day of her visit, 2 weeks solid. Included was Austria’s Silvretta Tour,  a few days in the Zillertal Group, numerous days in the Dolomites, including three doubles where we skied during the day, finished at a hut, and then maximized our ski time by skiing out under fullmoon with a slight grappa buzz. The weather was at its absolute best behavior, favoring long days and lots of mileage.

Susie making tracks upward

Susie making tracks upward

Susie is the former Patagonia Athlete/Ambassador Coordinator from where we came to know her years ago, but now lives and works in Truckee, California for the Wild and Scenic Environmental Film Festival. She is, simply put, one of the best telemark skiers around. Where people just should not be dropping their knee, she does, with grace and power at the same time. More than a few Austrians are likely singing songs about her right now. Susie’s primary goal in skiing is one thing, skiing steep, narrow, and mightily long couloirs.

This was Susie’s first visit to the Dolomites, I asked her some questions about the skiing.

I know what is coming, but what are your thoughts on the Dolomites?You have expectations from places, from the media, videos, etc… then what a place really is becomes focused when you arrive. The Dolomites are like the Eastern Sierra times 10. Turn everything up 10 notches and it is the skiing here. There are so many visible lines, so many things I look at and know I can go ski, the Dolomites are raining couloirs.

Here it is GO TIME. My skiing really improved in two weeks because the terrain required me to improve. Back home we have training grounds, then the Dolomites are the olympics. The Dolomites make you show what you’ve got.

And it is just so beautiful, the scale is massive, to be up high in the mountains at night and see the tiny villages shimmering below – fantastic.

20090405-_mg_3403Why the love of couloirs?
You always hear climbers describing being a part of nature when they climb. For me, being in a couloir, I feel connected to something so big, to actually be inside a mountain where not everyone can go is a great experience. And to stand on the top, looking in, seeing your ski tips sticking out above the drop, feels so good.

Explain the quote of the trip, “I love Europe”.

And not just for skiing, for everything. This trip was special, spending all my time with people who live here and not being just a tourist made it feel even better. Seeing how people live here, seeing my friends living here and how to make it happen, I love this.

What is your perception of Europe’s Mountain Culture?

The sports are just part of the culture, it is what you do. I heard a girl on the Silvretta Tour who was learning to ski in the mountains say, “I am from the Tirol, I must ski.”

20090406-_mg_37591And all the older people out?

Great, to be in the mountains, on a tour, arrive at a hut and there are 150 people inside of all ages, amazing. It is so inspiring and motivating. There is so much depth to the culture.

Would you return?

The question is “How do I come back forever?”

Finally, in your group of friends back in the US, is there an awareness of the Dolomites?
They think, “They’re somewhere in Italy, right?” That is it. They seem to be known for just climbing. For skiing, Chamonix and the Alps overshadow everything. But the Dolomites are the most varied, the location and proximity to other incredible areas, the Ortler, the Silvretta, Stubai, etc… And then the Dolomites themselves, if you love skiing couloirs and love just real skiing, go to the Dolomites.

Susie Sutphin dropping into the Holzer Couloir, note the ski line, straight down

Susie Sutphin dropping into the Holzer Couloir, note the ski line, straight down

Susie Super Psyched post Holzer Couloir

Susie Super Psyched post Holzer Couloir

Skinning beneath the Tre Cime di Lavaredo

Skinning beneath the Tre Cime di Lavaredo

In the Silvretta

In the Silvretta

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Dolomite Couloirs: The Holzer Couloir

Susie Sutphin dropping into the Holzer Couloir, note the ski line, straight down

Susie Sutphin dropping into the Holzer Couloir, note the ski line, straight down

When I first started coming to the Dolomites I kept hearing about all the couloirs. Today I really found out what they are about.

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Together with Janine, Andreas Irsara, Susie Sutphin and Arnt (last name unknown…) we headed out for what Susie would later describe as, “The best day of my life!!!”.

First up was the more serious business, the Holzer Couloir (Canale Holzer). Immediately beneath the Piz Boe tramline on the Sella Group, this is a backcountry endeavor without the need for skinning. As you arrive at the entry the first thought is, “No way, nothing can go through this”.

Impossibly steep, narrow and at first blind, one only enters because there are ski tracks already in place. Then the fun begins; sustained 45-50 degrees, 5-8 meters wide maximum, and 500 meters straight to the bottom. It is a stunning line and once seen, obvious as to why it has appeared in countless extreme ski films.

Once we squirted out the bottom we headed straight to the tram and back to the top for the much easier Canale Joel, this one a much more modest 35-40 degrees and south facing – thus, a corn fest.

Finally, after a sizeable lunch, we descended the Dolomite’s most famous off piste ski descent, the Val Mesdi. This was my first time to ski this line and I quickly discovered why I hear about it so much. It is perfection. Being incredibly long with a fantastically narrow and steep entry, it starts off with some business but turns into a massive open canyon with thousands of feet of vertical Dolomite rock on each side. It was difficult to ski because I was continually looking around. We agreed that the style of skiing in the Mesdi must be something like what a big wave surfer feels, just riding this massive feature of what nature dishes out.

Once back enjoying beers on the deck of a hut, I realized Susie was right, this was one of the best days of my life as well, but somehow, here in the Dolomites, I just keep saying that same line.

Exiting the Holzer Couloir

Exiting the Holzer Couloir

Susie dropping into the Joel Couloir

Susie dropping into the Joel Couloir

Susie Sutphin in the Joel Couloir

Susie Sutphin in the Joel Couloir

Looking down the length of the Val Mesdi

Looking down the length of the Val Mesdi

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Lou Dawson Interview

Lou and Ted will have to explain this ritual of pre-ski, post breakfast breathing technique

Lou and Ted will have to explain this ritual of post ski breathing technique

Lou Dawson is a legend in the American ski culture. Primarily known as the first person to ski all 54 of Colorado’s 14,000 foot peaks, he is also a pioneer of backcountry skiing, a leader who brought about awareness of ski touring ideas to the US and the daily manager and writer for the tremendously popular WildSnow.com.

We were lucky enough to run into Lou and his great, longtime friend Ted Karasote while we were all on Austria’s Silvretta Tour. Together we enjoyed dinner in the huts and had some time to chat about Euro ski touring vs. the American scene. I asked Lou some questions regarding his thoughts after years of visits to Europe.

Lou (in red) enjoys a meal in the Wiesbadener Hut, Silvretta Tour

Lou (in green hat) enjoys a meal in the Wiesbadener Hut, Silvretta Tour

Lou, what is the first word that comes to mind when you think of Euro ski touring?

FOOD

Would huts like those found throughout Europe make it in the US?

YES, absolutely, they would have to be in just the right places. Eastern Colorado and the Pacific Northwest seem the logical spots. In the US they would have to be far enough in and with only moderate motorized access to keep out the trouble makers. But yes, they would work once people discovered the concept.

What is your ideal day skiing in Europe?

I have had these days where I have skied lower level stuff, not the big mountains or big tours, but smaller stuff which we have run laps on situated above small villages. At the end of the day we dropped back to the valley and stayed in small, local guesthouses where we have all these great experiences with people who belong to the mountain culture here. It is a wonderful way to experience the mountains of Europe.

Lou, you are 58, in the hut there are numerous others of the same age or even much older. In the US, it is not too common to see “older” skiers putting in 2000+ meter days day in and day out. Here it is completely normal. What do you think fosters this? Will America get to this point in it’s mountain sport culture?

We must have our eyes open to the possibilities in the US. Younger people are much more active and the older ones slow way down. In Europe there is a huge range of people involved with alpinism, in Europe it is no big deal, it’s just what you do. For Europeans, mountain sports are just part of the lifestyle, in America it is a “sport”. Americans are more concerned with “speed” and how much “vert”, this comes from our media. In Europe you would have to be like Messner to get noticed. It is the experience vs. the accomplishment idea. Europeans are more about the mountain experience. There are older role models in the European mountain culture, this has not yet come to the American scene with such a great base.

What is the next ski tour you want to do in Europe?

It’s time I do the Haute Route. I am especially interested in the historical component.

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For me it was a great pleasure to meet up with Lou and Ted and spend time laughing about the decadence of the European ski touring scene. His site WildSnow.com is a fantastic source of information for backcountry skiers and now has a full report of the Silvretta Tour for those interested in visiting Austria. Become a regular visitor and encourage Lou to visit the Haute Route for yet another trip report.

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The Silvretta Tour, part 1

Probably not your typical ski touring photo

Probably not your typical ski touring photo

Home. As good as Euro huts are, we still love to be home, and especially home eating a huge, fresh salad. Tomorrow morning’s breakfast will not include dry bread and jam. Those that have been on Euro ski tours will fully understand dry bread and jam. Janine and I fell sick on the last day, spent a feverish night in the Jamtal Hut and promptly descended to the valley first thing in the morning. Time for a quick recovery at home, and tomorrow, Janine’s Birthday will be spent closer to home than in a mountain hut.

6 days on the Silvretta – no bad weather, this is a first. The GPS stayed in the pack the whole time, lovely.

It was all about corn skiing, although thanks to our powder sniffing friend Susie Sutphin, we did manage to find some pockets of north facing fluff up high. Our great Italian friend Andreas Irsara’s quote sums up being on a trip with Susie, “Susie, you make me crazy for skiing.” This while he set out behind her as she kicked steps up yet another steep couloir.

This is part 1 of the Tour Blog, a full account will follow including a trip report for Austria’s Silvretta Tour (my second time on it and likely my favorite in Europe) as well as an interview with Lou Dawson of the famous backcountry ski website Wild Snow. We discovered Lou in the first night’s hut typing (blogging) on the smallest laptop I have ever seen. With Lou was the best selling author Ted Kerasote and together we were all lucky enough to get to spend time drinking beers and laughing about all the decadance of Euro backcountry life.

For now we leave you with some fun pics and the reminder that the Silvretta Tour is paradise for the backcountry skier. Lou Dawson also posted info at Wild Snow. Check back in here for a complete report on the tour.

Andreas Irsara and Susie Sutphin

Andreas Irsara and Susie Sutphin

Touring through a serac zone

Touring through a serac zone

Headed for the Piz Buin

Headed for the Piz Buin

Skier's Test: Find the line of choice

Skier's Test: Find the line of choice

Susie Sutphin finding powder on a corn day

Susie Sutphin has clearly earned her turns

Topping out for another couloir

Topping out for another couloir

Ridge traversing, Silvretta Tour

Ridge traversing, Silvretta Tour

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What is in my pack?

After countless emails asking me about what sort of gear we use, it is time to just go ahead and show it off.

Yes, we are in the mountains 300+ days a year, year in and year out. I field questions daily requesting camera info, clothing, packs, GPS, food, etc… Seems we do know about gear.

So here it is, gear for a 7 day ski tour in the Austrian Alps. No camera gear shown, no pants, wearing them…  And we are staying in huts, thus no food.

Why do we love European ski touring? 7 days skiing in alpine terrain, 24lbs/11kg total with camera gear. Note credit card.

7 day ski tour: the gear

7 day ski tour: the gear

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