Category Archives: Skiing

Ability Challenge Recap!

The all-female SheJumps team basically dominated the Ability Challenge… if the categories were synchronized spread eagles, general enthusiam, and braving the “strong and damaging” winds in retro ski gear. As a team, we raised over $6,000 for Disabled Sports USA Far West, well over the initial team goal of $1600!  Thanks again to everyone who donated. Knowing what sports have meant to me personally, it is amazing to witness the impact of providing accessible adaptive sports for so many people. Here is an article about the week long Wounded Warriors Camp that ends with the Ability Challenge.

The day of the challenge was maybe the worst weather of the ski season with 100 mph winds shutting down all of the Alpine Meadows with the exception of the slow 3 man chair, Hot Wheels – we raged Hot Wheels for 6 runs before calling it a day due to cold extremities and long lines. We had photographer and team member Lauren Lindley on hand to capture some of the awesomeness.

The SheJumps team, ready to go! Lauren, Monica, Holly, Me, Jenn, and Allison.

SheJumps team on the slopes

Synchronized Spreadies - SheJumpers doing what they do best!

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Skiing in the Swiss Alps

I had been “promising” to visit a good friend of mine in Switzerland for a few years now.  She had taken a job with FIFA right after my wedding and I hadn’t seen her since 2008!   Knowing that she doesn’t ski and practically hates winter, I had been holding out to visit outside of ski season – but on a whim I looked at flights and they were just too cheap to pass up – so I bought a flight and let her know I was on my way!  The 10 day trip was short, but perfect because I planned to ski during the week while my friend worked and then visit on the weekends.  Now I just needed someone to ski with so I got to work convincing one of my favorite ski buddies to join the trip. After some research on expediting a passport, Domi was in! And we were off to Central CH!

We arrived in Zurich at 2pm on Saturday and were greeted at the airport by Sophia. She wasn’t looking as Euro as I expected!  That afternoon, we cruised around Zurich, ate some chocolate, and met up with “Ze French Boyz.”

Merkur Chocolates Zurich

Don't say "Sacre Bleu" to these guys.

Sunday morning we were off to Trin, near Chur, to do a hike with Sophia’s friend and co-worker. The hike was near the Rhine River, a portion which is nicknamed “the Grand Canyon of Switzerland.” I think at this point I’ve been to the actual Grand Canyon and the Grand Canyons of Oregon, Peru, and Switzerland. Knowing that we came to Switzerland to ski, Domi and I were a bit worried about the snow, which turned out to be difficult, but we made the best of it. Luckily, we fueled up with Rosti, a Swiss German plate of potatoes, cheese, and other items, before the hike.

mmm, cholesterol. this was better than fondue.

Hiking near the Rhine and the train tracks.

The cliffs of the Ruinaulta

Thoroughly exhausted from trudging through knee deep snow, we traveled back to Zurich and prepped our gear for the next 4 days of skiing – we were off to Andermatt in the AM.
Getting to Andermatt, which is usually a quick train trip from Zurich’s main station, was a bit more challenging for us with all of our gear. Furthermore, there was a “track interruption” due to a landslide. After a bus, train, bus, and train, we made it there around 11 AM, checked into our lodging, and headed over to the Gemmstock Cable Car.

Waiting for the train at the main station

Ski racks on the Swiss trains

Gemmstock Cable Car at Andermatt - giant bowl - like 4 times the size of Kirkwood!

After some advice on the cable car from a local military skier, we headed over to ski the Felsental – one of the classic off-piste Andermatt runs.

1/2 way down the 1st run on the Felsental

After a 2nd lap on the Felsentel, we decided to check out the Guspis, which we later found out ended in a different town! The snow was a bit wind affected, but it was pretty awesome to end up skiing into another village and then taking the train back to Andermatt (included in the lift ticket!).

After skiing the Guspis, heading down into Hospental

Back in Andermatt, we had missed the last cable car, so we laughed about how we did 3 runs in 4 hours over a beer. Granted they were 4,500′ vertical each. Skiing in the Alps was already different from skiing in the US.

The next day, we were excited to spend more time exploring Andermatt. We were feeling the effects of jet lag, so we hit up the piste first and skied a groomer to a T-bar. Then we scoped out “the Giraffe” from an off-piste run near the T-bar. We felt ready to hit Giraffe, which we had read ends in a 500 m couloir. After executing a sketchy traverse over some 100′ cliffs and we were standing on the top of the run. We dropped in and skied some wind affected snow down to the top of multiple chutes. It wasn’t powder, but it was consistent, steep, and aesthetic.

The Giraffe, right above the 500m couloirs (photo by Domi)

Couloir options on the Giraffe.

Avalanche debris at the bottom of the couloir

After skiing the Giraffe, there was a fairly long traverse in a river valley, which we found quite common in the region. Right before the village of Andermatt, I skied into a river while crossing over a snow bridge which was pretty hilarious. I dropped my pole and had to chase it downstream. There was a lot of commotion, but is was 50 degrees, so it turned out to be fine and after a quick stop for lunch and some gear drying at our guesthouse, we headed back out to ski a few more runs and experience some on-mountain apres.

Still some dense pow on the Felsental

Beer at the Umbrella Bar, Andermatt, mid-mountain

That night we met up with a local guide, Dan of Birdos Skis, who just happened to be from the US, at Basecamp Andermatt. Dan was incredibly helpful, lending us all the maps and beta we need to ski the 6000′ vertical North face of the Oberalpstock, near Disentis, the following day.

We headed out of Andermatt on the 7:27 train over Oberalpass and to the ski resort of Disentis. We purchased one way tickets and made our way to the top of the resort. We put skins on and hiked toward the Piz Ault, crossing the rocky ridge via a rebar ladder with 25 of other people – mostly guided parties. Along the way, we met some Swedes and marveled at the proverbial “shit show” in front of us. Making it over the ladder after watching guides carry their clients skis and clients drop helmets down the slope, we were able to sport our skis for a quick run down before the main hike began.

Traffic jam with a view at Piz Ault

Ascending the ladder at Piz Ault

We then had about an hour of skinning to reach the main run. We watched as another guided party made wedge turns down the first part of the run. Wow. I can’t even imagine how long it must have taken them to descend 6,000′! After a snack, we began our descent, which started out with wind affected and tracked snow and then opened up to some perfect powder. High-fiving at the bottom of the middle section, Domi and I agreed that it was the longest powder run we had ever experienced… and she had been heli-skiing in Alaska! And… we still had about 2,000 feet to go!

Domi skinning up the Oberalpstock

Domi tearing up some decent pow on the way down

The bottom of the run was a little dicey with an avalanche debris packed chute, but we made it down and reunited with our new Swedish friends to ski out the river valley down to Bristen.

End of skiing... for now

Grass skiing! Or it smells like manure! Or watch out for that river!

We shared a cab with the Swedes and some stories on the way back to Andermatt. We were lucky to have met them. Jimmy has incredible knowledge as a 17 year guide in Verbier, even penning a book that has been called “the Backcountry Skiing Bible,” and his wife Sara is a former competitor in both the X games and the Freeride World Tour – together they founded the clothing company Elevenate. Watch for them – it is cool, functional, and unique.
That night we met back up with Dan and received our next “assignment,” the Rossbodenstock, a peak that looms over Andermatt which both of us had admired from the lifts a few days before. We headed out Thursday on the 8:27 train to Oberalpass – only 4 Swiss Francs – our cheapest day of skiing so far! The stop at Oberalpass was 2000m and the top of the Rossbodenstock was just over 2800m. From the Rossbodenstock, we could ski back down into Andermatt, elevation 1444m. On the ridge near the peak we noticed the route required some dicey scrambling, which a few guys from the Swiss military had roped up for. We also noticed powder on the more North facing flank of the mountain. So, instead of summitting, we skinned as high as we could and dropped into the shoulder skiing powder all the way to the bottom. Woo hoo!!!!

Domi skinning up the Rossbodenstock

Swiss military in white camo!

Yeah, this looks good... dropping!

Soft snow = airing it out!

Back in Andermatt by noon, we returned the maps to Dan and jumped on the train back to Zurich. We planned on skiing Engelberg the next day and staying at Sophia’s was somewhat on the way.
Engelberg is huge, close to Zurich (1hr train), and bigger and more touristy than Andermatt. The vertical relief is 6000′. It takes 3 lifts for skiers to get to the top – a gondola, a cable car, and a rotating gondola that turns 360 degrees during the trip for a panoramic view. Then you have to climb 4 stories of stairs to get out onto the slopes, past a glacier cave, some restaurants, and jewelry and watch stores. Then you can ski. 1st run, the Steinberg, a steep long run littered with cliffs and crevasses. Some good wind buff snow at the top, a scary and icy traverse, and some powder below with difficult route-finding. Next up, the Laub – a 4,500′ run that remains 35-38 degrees in pitch the entire time. We found some excellent snow and decided to do it again before the end of the day. We skied around the lifts for a while, checked out the igloo bar and then headed back to ski the Laub again before our tired legs called it a day. We made our way back to Zurich to relax and check out some neighborhood bars with Sophia.

Glacier Cave at the top of Engelberg

the Laub - long and wide

Domi on the Laub

Meghan on the Laub (photo by Domi)

Igloo bar - and giant pillows to lay on

We originally had big plans for the 2nd weekend – maybe head to Italy or France, catch a football game, but we decided that we had not seen enough of Zurich and the weather was beautiful on Saturday so we hung out and checked out the local graffiti, markets, Lake Zurich, St. Patrick’s day scene, and finished the night with fondue.

Watch out Soph!

The weather was a lot worse on Sunday, so we headed to FIFA to check out Sophia’s work and then spent a few hours in the employee spa.

Pretending to kick a ball. Can't you tell? Yeah, I played college soccer.

We finished off the day watching football in the pub and eating some delicious raviolis we bought at a local market for approximately $25 (Switzerland is super expensive if you haven’t heard) and packed up for our journey back to the US. Despite the high prices in Switzerland, I can’t wait to ski the Alps again – we didn’t have fresh snow, but we did have amazing weather and some great ski days. I’ve been back in Tahoe for more than a week and my home resort feels small and safe – the Alps made me a better skier and should be added to any expert skier’s bucket list. Next Europe trip – Chamonix, Verbier, and La Grave – so let me know if you’re going!

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Europe is Le Big

… to quote my friend Tim. Or das big in Swiss German?

A quick photo, but a full report to come soon!

A couple hundred more turns to the valley floor below.

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Jackson Targhee Trip and Blame it on the Season!

Yesterday, my friend Bri and I were hiking and heard some of the loudest snowpack settling, aka whoomphing, (indicating instability) that we’ve both ever heard. It sounded like thunder. We stopped and dug a pit and saw a high quality failure with little force (Q1 shearing at 35 cm below the surface with 4 wrist taps). We decided to turn around – one powder run is not worth dying for. We also decided at that point to blame everything on “the season.”

After my dismal skiing performance at the comp, I was feeling a little down on my skiing ability. I could blame it on the season, or lack there of, that we had in Tahoe this year, which is definitely a factor – skiing groomers until January 21st doesn’t prepare you to ski in a big mountain comp. Still, others were able to perform with less than stellar snowpacks going into the comp, so blaming it on the season isn’t entirely fair. I’m pretty sure I’m just not a comp skier – maybe I’m just a “soul skier” as people say. I know I’m a good skier in good snow, but the fact that I ski in Tahoe, where the snow is usually good, and I have the luxury of flexing my schedule to ensure I get to ski the snow when it is best, paired with my love for backcountry skiing, may not give me the skill set to deal with more challenging snow conditions.

skiers inspecting the venue at Targhee

Louise was an awesome friend during the comp. She provided lodging, laughs, and encouragement.

At this point, my comp days are over. Still, this post is about Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, AKA, the village, and how awesome the rest of my trip to Wydaho was…

Having not made the cut to ski in the finals on Saturday, I decided to head to Jackson to ski with Greg and Monica at the village. We awoke Saturday morning to snow showers. Getting the 2nd tram, we skied rendezvous bowl by feel, having absolutely no visibility until we found some trees to duck into. The winds meant that some chairs were closed and we ended up lapping apres vous and thunder lifts most of the day. It snowed all day and the quality was awesome. It was great to ski steep terrain with cliffs and chutes. I also finally got to put my new Moment PB&Js to work and they are a great Jackson ski – good for both untracked and cut up snow. By 2:30, most of the lifts had closed, and the lines on the few that were open were over 30 minutes long. We called it a day and started our Jackson apres – calling it a night early. It was going to be a powder day on Sunday.

The tram line was already over 100 people long at 7:15 AM! We got our skis in line around 7:40 and were in the 2nd Tram. I decided to drop Corbetts, which didn’t go too well, but the snow was awesome! It was going to be a good day! We skied powder all around Jackson that morning, Headwall hikes, danger cliffs, and a bunch of other places I don’t know the names of. I had a blast chasing Greg, Audrey, and Eric around the mountain.

Eric slaying some powder on some classic Jackson terrain

At 1pm I met up with Monica and the Jackson Hole Babe Force at the Tram. What a turnout! About 30 ripping female skiers and riders ready to charge! Check out this great article on the experience. We skied a few hilarious runs and then Monica and I went out to check out the Jackson Hole Sidecountry with our new friend Michelle.

The ripping babe force of Jackson Hole

I knew I needed to get back to Tahoe for work Tuesday, so I decided to hike Mt. Glory with Michelle the next morning and get an early start on the trip back to Tahoe. Glory is a classic Teton Pass hike and you boot pack the entire 1600′ hike. We were rewarded with powder skiing on the way down.

Greg, Michelle, and I on the summit of Mt. Glory

Greg, Michelle, and I on the summit of Mt. Glory


Monica/Pow/Glory (Photo by Greg)

Monica/Pow/Glory (Photo by Greg)

Greg with a long way to go... Mt. Glory, Teton Pass.

Jackson is an amazing place with vertical and terrain unmatched anywhere in the US… it was a little hard to leave, but knowing Tahoe was about to get snow made it easier.

Headed back to Tahoe from the top of Teton Pass. Fun times in Jackson with Greg!

Headed back to Tahoe from the top of Teton Pass. Fun times in Jackson with Greg!

Thanks to Greg, Michelle, and Louise for making this an awesome trip!

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It’s baaaaack!

Powder that is!  Kirkwood was unbelievable yesterday. I’d show you, but the footage I took is somewhere under snow in Eagle Bowl.  So if anyone sees a Go Pro out there, let me know.  The snow was so great that we woke up at the crack of dawn for a little backcountry action.

Domi at the top at 7 AM! So pumped she's coming to Europe with me!

powder turns and "O face"

Domi with the pow slash!

and a little air time!

Sign up for the Tahoe Vertical Challenge here to log your hiked vertical throughout the season. I’m at 58 ski days and 32,800′ of hiking.  Not bad for the snowless cards we’ve been dealt!

 

 

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Astis Mitten Photo Shoot

Astis makes the most beautiful ski mittens I’ve ever seen. I met co-founder Brad when I was in Colorado last fall and was instantly impressed by his product and the story and passion behind it. Brad called me up a few weeks ago and offered to put me in a pair of mittens, I jumped at the opportunity and have been working with my friend Lauren to get photos for them for a potential write up in Ski Magazine. The snow in Tahoe has been less than ideal, so we had to get creative. I figured airing it out was the best way to make the snow look good. Here are a few of my favorites:

Airing it out in thunder saddle! Best snow of the day!

this one is really cool, we're just going to try to work on the focus

It’s been a super fun project and I’m grateful Lauren thinks she needs practice (because she is clearly already awesome). Check out all of the photos here.

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Get the Girls Out!

SheJumps.org announces GET THE GIRLS OUT, a campaign to bring the community of female skiers and snowboarders together on mountains across the country, if not the world, for one day. On February 11, 2012 women all over the country will be encouraged to utilize the resource of the SheJumps community to celebrate their love for the mountain lifestyle by taking the mountain by storm with new and old friends in a safe and supportive atmosphere. Once per month for the remainder of the ski and snowboard season, SheJumps Chapters across the United States will be hosting informal gatherings on the slopes, both with and without costumes, to GET THE GIRLS OUT and grow the community of women in the outdoors!

GET THE GIRLS OUT Tahoe is currently planned at Kirkwood Mountain Resort, meeting at Chair 6 at 9 AM on February 11th. So all you female skiers and riders, come on out, make new friends, and HAVE FUN!

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It Snowed!

It finally snowed in Tahoe and it was pretty much game on at Kirkwood and at some of the local backcountry jaunts. Here is a video from the past 4 days of skiing in real snow!

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The Skiing Community Loses A Legend

Sarah Burke left this world way too early. She was not only an amazing skier and freeskiing pioneer, she was beautiful, funny, and driven to push her sport and live a meaningful life. She is a true inspiration and will live on.

Let’s all try to honor her this ski season by pushing ourselves and having fun every time we’re out on the mountain.

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SheJumps Ski/Board Tuning Clinic and Wine Night

The SheJumps mission is to increase female participation in outdoor activities by building upon a supportive community that inspires its members to reach their highest potential. When I first heard about SheJumps, it sounded like a pretty great idea, so I became a fan of the organization on Facebook.  Then last summer they announced an event where we could ski off ramps into pools and practice aerials, so  a few brave female friends and I traveled to Utah to attend this SheJumps-sponsored event at the Utah Olympic Park Water Ramps.  This was our first foray into backflips…

Oh how far we’ve come!

Fast forward to a few months ago and SheJumps needed someone to lead events in Northern California.  I stepped up to the plate with the encouragement from my friend Ashley, who is the Colorado SheJumps representative, and started planning events.  The first event we wanted to do was an all women’s ski and snowboard tuning clinic… and wine night, because we are women.  I started broadcasting this plan to friends and Lauren P knew the perfect instructor… Pam Warman.

Pam Warman was the first and only female ski technician for the US Ski Team.  She is also a cancer survivor and mother of two.  When Pam was diagnosed with cancer, the US Ski Team and the Lake Tahoe community rallied around her to provide emotional and financial support.  Bode Miller even auctioned off his 2010 Olympic Slalom helmet to raise money for Pam. A resident of South Lake Tahoe, she currently teaches skiing at Heavenly Mountain Resort while tuning skis at South Shore Snow. Yeah, she’s basically emblematic of SheJumps and she was a charismatic, knowledgeable, and overall outstanding teacher!

Pam excited to teach women to tune their skis and drink some wine!

Lauren L took a ton of great photos that night, including the one above, which you can find here.

I’m excited to be a part of SheJumps and can’t wait for the next event.  Taking suggestions and if you’re a female reading this, get involved!

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