2011 - ...Like There's No Tomorrow
Photos by Mike Arzt
Where would you like to ski that you haven't been to before?
Svalbard, Greenland, and Iceland.
Who has been the biggest influence to you in your ski career?
My heroes are still Craig Kelly and Terje Haakonsen, but I have had so many friends who have inspired me with their positive energy, love for, and dedication to winter sports that there are too many in my life to name.. I get inspired by seeing little kids and I get motivated to see what people like Jeremy Jones and Xavier Delerue are riding.
Where is your absolute favorite spot for après-ski?
At the base of the Sugarloaf Access Road, a little place called The Rack.
What do you look forward to most after a long day on the mountain?
Food and sleep...I really like to sleep.
What is something you wish you had more time for outside of skiing?
Surfing, golf and just time off.
FEATURED ATHLETE: MICHELLE PARKER
Shane McConkey continues to inspire me and to influence me regularly. He was someone who I looked up to before he passed and continue to look up to. Ingrid Backstrom has always been a hero of mine as well as Eric Pollard. Eric is an incredibly diverse athlete outside of skiing with his art. JP Auclair, as well, has always been a great influence to my skiing and career.
The friends you surround yourself with.
View this post on Instagram
Photos by Grant Gunderson
What’s your “Back in my day, we…”?
Used to duck the out-of-bounds ropes at JHMR
Who has inspired your skiing the most?
Doug Coombs
Best recovery exercises?
Pilates
Ideal down day?
Fun breakfast joint with friends, long dog walk, host a dinner party.
Spiciest/most intimidating line you've skied or ridden this year?
Un-named on the Ruth Glacier-Denali.
Goals in skiing/riding this next year?
Push myself.
What’s a great book you’ve read recently?
Diary of a Surf Bum
Favorite mountain range?
Tetons
Working title for the book or movie about your life?
The Road Goes on Forever and the Party Never Ends
Best moment filming with WME this year?
Ruth Glacier-every moment was incredible.
How did Warren Miller the man influence your skiing/riding career?
He put skiing on the map!
Featured Athlete: JT Holmes
Shane McConkey (deceased), Timy Dutton (deceased), and Jeff Engergretson (alive and working for WME).
Buy an airplane, payoff my families debts, then helicopter ski, or maybe purchase my own ski resort.
Breakfast sandwich from Wildflour Baking Company in Squaw Valley's Olympic House.
KT-22 at Squaw Valley.
Blitzed by Norman Ohler.
James Bond because he uses clever pieces of gear to outwit his opponents with a confident swagger.
Highlight memory from filming with WME for this year's film?
Speedriding at Solitude right off the chairlift as well as in their nearly endless lift acccessed backcountry.
Alps & Meters Patrol knit sweater and their Alpine WInter Trouser. Both are warm, breathable and very stylish. I like their stuff because of the comfort and because I look different than anyone else on the mountain. I get compliments on my attire all day!
Red Bull's Wings For Life. They raise money for spinal cord injury research.
It was nice to stay at home and ski Squaw Valley rather than travel a bunch. COVID travel bans definitely had their silver linings.
I would like to see North American skiers and riders skiing with parachutes inbounds just like they do throughout Europe and Scandinavia. I have seen families of four with kids 11 and 14 speedriding like it is no big deal. In fact, it is not a difficult activity and it should not have the stigma of an extreme sport.
Take slow deep breaths, then exhale with my lips softly closed but relaxed. This makes that horse like sound and flappy lip movement. If you are too tense to flap your lips, you should take a moment to calm down and push the fear aside.
That is a tough one but it is hard to beat Hot Dog: The Movie. It is hilarious and captures the vibe of early days Squaw Valley freestyle skiing.
The cool thing about the Warren Miller program is the tours. Just the fact that it’s still based around having everybody in one room and you feel that energy and pre-season ski stoke, and that just really fires me up, to go and shoot stuff that I know is going to get people off their seats and just stoked.
Speed riding is adding a fourth dimension to skiing. Suddenly you're able to ski all sorts of places that otherwise aren't available, and you do that by flying over the sections that are un-skiable or even just undesirable to ski, and what that does is it allows you to just ski the highest quality ski experience, and then you're using the wind as transportation to the next high quality ski experience. It's almost gluttonous with the amount of fresh tracks we're able to get and the amount of fun we're able to have.
First of all, it's just fun. Second, doing something new that is really uncommonly done or never done before, that adds kind of an exploration element to it where you feel like you're figuring something out and conquering new territory and it really kind of triggers a new type of motivation. You brainstorm something interesting to do and then you figure out what toys you need to bring or develop in order to make it possible and then when you do complete it, it's not only fun but also an accomplishment feeling. That's really what motivates me.
Everybody needs to try speed riding. Put it on the bucket list and then scratch it off the bucket list and put it on the now list, because it’s just so dang fun. I know a lot about having fun - I'm an expert at having fun, and this is really fun. And it’s not that hard.
-
Don't miss JT in our 72nd film, Winter Starts Now, dropping Fall 2021!
FEATURED ATHLETE: Kevin Quinn
Metalica
There are so many to list but I would say Pontoon, Sphinx and Meteorite would be at the top. They are 3 of the biggest peaks in the Chugach, very esthetic and part of the "holy grail".
Being with my family and all our guests coming home safe and sound after experiencing the "best day of their life".
I am obsessed with flying my 180 Cessna Airplane. I am a true believer in Crossfit (Avalanche and Blizzard in Tahoe), mountain bike and of course spend a ton of time with my 2 year old Kinley Drake and wife Jessica
I had been visiting Valdez for years and knew I wanted to start a heli ski operation. There were over 5 operations in Valdez so I rented a fixed aircraft and flew the Chugach to Cordova where I saw the Orca Adventure Lodge. I knew this was the perfect location for a heli ski operation as it's 30 miles as the crow flies from Valdez but the only operation in Cordova. We truly have a chunk of the Chugach to ourselves. The Orca Adventure Lodge is the ideal setting, 2 miles from town located directly on Prince William Sound with the Chugach in our backyard. We are truly all-inclusive with 3 beautiful A-Stars out our front window, there is no driving up a pass to see if we are flying or not.
Skiing with Mitch Toelderer and Travis Ganong. These 2 guys have such great energy. It was pretty cool spending time in the Chugach with Mitch who has been coming to PNH for years and Travis who was a 1st timer in the Chugach.
Featured Athlete: Daron Rahlves
Appreciation
Nature
Who is your greatest influence in life?
Inspiring people, those who push themselves.
3 things you will make time for?
Family / friends, eating, skiing!
If you could have a drink with anyone who would it be?
Warren Miller!
FEATURED ATHLETE: Jessica Quinn
What is your biggest fear?
Heights, believe it or not.
What are you rockin’ to on your music player?
This is a tough question I always get asked, as I like so much different music. I am a big playlister!
How would your friends describe you in one word?
Vivacious.
What’s your favorite drink? Favorite food?
I used to be obsessed with purple Gatorade but I got a bit upset when my buddy Ingrid pointed out that there is high fructose corn syrup in it so not sure now. Fav food... so many. I love Sushi, Mex, Thai and Italian.
If you weren't a pro skier what would you be doing?
Making lot's of $$$$.
What is your most treasured possession?
My bear I have had since I was born, "bearbe".
Of Warren Miller’s 60 ski films, which one is your favorite?
I really liked Impact.
Describe a day in the life of a PNH guide.
Day in my life as a PNH guide: Go to bed well after midnight as my husband, partner in crime, Kevin is still looking at weather for the next day. Wake up at 5pm, as once again, weather needs to be looked at. 6:30am guide meeting, 7am: get my group together and go over the day. 7:30: inhale an egg sandwich standing up. 7:30: get ready (the night before I have set everything out, and made sure I am ready for the next fly day!) 8am go to office and organize the radio duties for the day and make sure the PNH staff staying at base are set for the day. 8:30: meet my group, give them their lunch, go over order of loading once more, check their beacons (I have long since made sure their bindings, equipment and backpacks are ready for the day) and get ready for the best day ever. 9ish - 5ish work together with the other guides in the helicopter, access snow and snow-pack, dig snow-pits, test slopes, make sure every member in my group is safe, load and unload the helicopter 24 plus times, talk to the pilots, check in on base, make sure everything is going well, make sure my group is getting the terrain they came after, eat lunch on a peak, fly home to the most amazing sunset over Prince William Sound you will ever see, get out of the heli, high 5 everyone. 8-9ish: have dinner with the most energetic, electric group ever. 9-10ish: make sure the office is packed up for the day. Midnight: pass out with dreams of the Chugach and doing the same thing tomorrow!
When would be the best time of year to take a PNH heli-skiing trip and why?
Honestly, the Alaska season is so short that there is not a "best week" to come. February / March has shorter daylight hours and colder temps. You are able to ski most aspects and the snow tends to be lighter deep powder. Late March / April has longer daylight hours which optimizes your time in the helicopter. There are days when it clears at 2pm and we are able to launch groups into the field, as the sun does not set until 10pm. The temps are warmer at this time limiting the aspects you can get on. The snow is still amazing (we had a 4ft storm last April 23) and it's classic Chugach! I tell people that if they have never been to Alaska, come late March / April so you can truly experience Alaska and all it has to offer with the long daylight hours! We have a pretty cool feature on our website "zone report". It's a report from our days in the zone and at base camp. It allows guests to see what we are up to, how the weather and conditions are and to go back to the archives and see what weeks had more sunshine, snow, etc. Check it out! http://www.alaskaheliski.com/blog/