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 |
Iceland
Frontier: Iceland
Matt Barr recalls a snowboarding pilgrimage to the original land of fire and ice, and finds that today this quirky, ocean-battered chunk of rock has lost none of its moody mystique
It was only a handful of years ago that Iceland didn’t even merit a ‘Here Be Monsters’ mention on the snowsports’ map. The first I heard of it as a viable destination was in a Snowboarder magazine article at the end of the ’90s, and the trip described was strictly an exploratory procedure. But things began to change a couple of years later when native Bjarni Valtimarsson, and Glaswegians Rob Wyke and Graham MacVoy turned many hours of daydreaming as they shaped a snow park in Austria into a plan to start a summer camp in Iceland where the vibe would be chilled out and the rewards open only to the intrepid.
In 2002, they made their vision a reality just outside the small fishing village of Arnarstapi on the Snaefell Peninsula, three hours from Reykjavik. They christened it the Icelandic Park Project. Snowboarding adventurers stayed in the tiny Arnarstapi community centre and rode a hand-shaped park high on the Snaefell volcano. There were no lifts, but 24-hour daylight meant sessions could go on at any time. Things were different In other ways too, and the other local attractions (landscape, surfing, drinking, whale watching, exploring, socialising in the old-fashioned, Blitz-spirit sense) made the off-snow downtime unique. Riders I spoke to came back charged, as if they’d rediscovered something fundamentally fun about snowboarding. I had to go myself.
On the journey to Arnarstapi, I stared at the scenery and realised why Iceland is the kind of place that leaves you groping for superlatives and esoteric adjectives. It came back to me that I’d noticed this about all the articles I’d read about the first camp here in 2002 – that and the spectacular shots. All the writers struggled to convey their feelings about this landscape. Banging down convincing words about a battered and torn lump of primordial rock straddling the crossroads of the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans and the North Sea is a tricky one, and the results were often varied and always purple. Some opted for fantastical dream-like accounts, borrowing heavily from Hunter S. Thompson and the like, while others chose a pared down approach that seemed to mirror the scenery and evoke the elemental feelings visitors to the island all seem to experience.
The snowboarding at IPP is done on the Snaefells volcano and staying there was characterised by a weird and enjoyable routine. With the sun always out, there were no set times to do anything – sleep, drink, eat, snowboard, walk, talk. It engendered a real community feel, the kind that comes through the mutuality of a rare shared experience. On my first night I went for a walk with some friends and came across a pod of killer whales slapping their tales and blowing air about half a mile off-shore. You don’t get that in Les 2 Alpes. Quite simply, I’ve known no snowboarding experience quite like the Icelandic Park Project. It is an expression of snowboarding at its purest.
Continued...

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