50% throttle yielded a speed of 47 mph. A second set of test runs demonstrated ascents of black diamond rated slopes. More details to follow at http://www.troyhartman.com .
http://www.troyhartman.com/
http://www.troyhartman.com/speedflying/
http://www.troyhartman.com/paragliding/
http://www.troyhartman.com/speedwings/
http://www.troyhartman.com/niviuk-skate/
http://www.troyhartman.com/niviuk-skate-2/
http://www.troyhartman.com/niviuk-zion/
http://www.troyhartman.com/swing-spitfire/
http://www.theaerialimage.com/
http://www.troyhartman.com/ozone-firefly/
http://www.troyhartman.com/ozone-fazer/
http://www.troyhartman.com/little-cloud-spiruline/ |
Free-ride skier Sage Cattabriga-Alosa and big mountain snowboarder Lucas Debari step out of their elements and make an attempt to climb, ski and snowboard Denali. Sage and Lucas get a helping hand from a huge cast of seasoned and professional climbers and ski mountaineers from the North Face Athlete Team, including Hilaree O'Neill, Conrad Anker, Ingrid Backstrom, Jim Zellers, Emilio Previtali and Giulia Monego, as the two embark on the hardest expedition of their lives.
a CAMP 4 COLLECTIVE production
Director : Jimmy Chin
Cinematographers : Jimmy Chin, Matt Irving, Adam Clark
Editor: Renan Ozturk
Motion Graphics: Barry Thompson, Eric Bucy, Marty Blumen
Additional Media: Teton Gravity Research, Absinthe Films, Colby Coombs, Renan Ozturk
Color: Anson Fogel
music in order of appearance:
Philip Sheppard
Song: Night Vision
PhilipSheppard.com
Yppah
Song: Never Mess With Sunday
Myspace.com/Yppah
Sun Wukong Project
Song: Clear Puzzles in Mjet
TheSunWukong.com
Ammoncontact
Song: Like Waves Of The Sea
NinjaTune.net/Artist/Ammoncontact
Philip Sheppard
Song: The Valley
PhilipSheppard.com
The Damn Sons
Song: Who Wants More
DamnSons.com
CatacombKid
Song: Digital Cliffs
CatacombKid.com
CatacombKid
Song: Water
CatacombKid.com
Amon Tobin
Song: Bloodstone
AmonTobin.com
Ape School
My Intention (Yppah Remix Instrumental)
NinjaTune.net/Artist/Ape-School
Fink
Song: Yesterday Was Hard On All Of Us
FinkWorld.co.uk |
http://www.salomonfreeski.com A sneak preview of Season 5 - Salomon Freeski TV. The first episode drops October 11th. Make sure to mark it down.
Powder is guaranteed. ; ) |
Ueli Steck's solo ascent of Eiger's north face in 2 hours and 47 minutes: a speed record |
Les 3 Vallées - The world's biggest ski area
Golden Carves
For decades a byword for unabashed flash, France’s Courchevel continues to push posh to dizzying new heights. But its four villages and world-class ski area also excel in across-the-board appeal, finds Rupert Mellor.
I may ride more challenging terrain with the finesse of an industrial fridge, but I like to think there’s not much I can’t get down on my board. So it was deeply disconcerting to stand for the first time in my life on a pair of skis, with about as much idea of how to control them as how to fly to the moon. Especially as said skis were pointing over the lip of a 45º degree drop.
‘Just rrrulaxe, lean into ze fall-line, trust, et enjoy!,’ purred Hervé, the paragliding instructor strapped to my back. I took a deep breath, defied every screaming instinct and shifted my weight forward. And after our downhill velocity hit full-on terrifying in three nanoseconds, I relaxed slightly as the canopy snapped full of air and Herve and I had lift-off.
Arriving the previous evening for my first visit to Courchevel 1850, legendarily the haunt of the shamelessly superflash, from team Beckham to Lewis Hamilton, I’d been surprised by how distincly unposh my first impressions had been. As Hervé and I soared over a huge excavation scar at the village’s centre where a petrol station used to stand, along with the boxy 1970s relics Hotel l’Olympic and the shopping and entertainment mall The Forum, I saw little to change my view. But as my pilot hung a right, and our feet swung high and left (at which point I discovered I’d left one ski skidding solo down the mountain – apologies to Ski Republic rentals shop), I began to see what the fuss is about.
As we followed wooded slopes above the highest and swankiest of Courchevel’s four villages, looming into view were privacy-protected, ski-in, ski-out superchalets, ostentatious hotels, swarming restaurant sun terraces and the tiny private airstrip of the ‘altiport’ – site of 8,000 private aircraft ‘movements’ last season. Then, the god-like glory of Les 3 Vallées, the world’s biggest ski area, began to reveal itself – the dramatic crowns of Saulire and La Croix des Verdons, wide-open, sunny valleys below, forest-protected lower slopes and the iconic, 120m ski jump erected for the 1992 Olympics in Le Praz (now, as per recent years’ fiendishly canny marketing drive, aka Courchevel 1300).
The C-word has long been a synonym for excess. With no historical pedigree to speak of, self-made Courchevel was quick to specialise in fulfilling and celebrating the whims of the brazenly loaded, peaking with the infamously Bacchanalian antics of newly minted Russian oligarchs over the last ten years. An orgy of biblical decadence saw caviar, champagne and leggy lovelies helicoptered in for firework-lit mountaintop parties and spending sprees that cleared the stock of local jewellers and furriers. These glory days culminated in the arrest last year of Russian mining tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov – known to some locals as ‘our Gatsby’ – on suspicion of running prostitutes (he was subsequently released without charge, law fans).
Continued...
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