Nate Abbott Photography

Images. Experiences. Inspirations.

Freeskier Magazine, December 2012 editor’s letter.

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La Plagne, France. Photo: Nate Abbott.

Spin.

All the other kids with the pumped up kicks / you better run, better run, outrun my gun.

All the other kids with the pumped up kicks / you better run, better run, faster than my bullet.

A piece of junk karaoke machine balances on the bar, which would normally be wide enough to hold it safely. But the crowd in this dark faux-English pub is pulling it, banging into it and nearly sending it to the floor every few seconds.

The loudest of the crowd is fired up, his exuberance has him about 15 seconds ahead of the words halfway into the first chorus. The second verse begins, and he loses the plot, fading into a high volume mumble for a bit before he’s back onto the chorus for his fourth time while the speakers spit it out for their third. A fine sprinkle of spittle is on the bar. The karaoke star and his friends, decked out in Andermatt branded t-shirts and hats—which declare them not to be locals but seasonal workers—dance behind the bar while the bartender twirls her hair off to the side and looks on without showing the slightest sign of amusement. Foster the People gives way to some ‘80s metal band. It sounds like Slayer, but the karaoke machine is now turned up beyond the point where words or band are distinguishable.

I’m in the corner hidden beneath a black hood, sipping a monstrous beer waiting for some people I’ve never met. They work for Head skis and they’ve been doing a ski test for the last few days, which means their day ended with serious après and I have no idea if they’ll even make it. They’re an hour late, which gives me time to examine the clientele of the dark and cramped pub, which is just like the ones you can find in nearly every town around the world, from Breckenridge, to Niseko, to Andermatt to, well, London.

The atmosphere of the bar comes from all sides. To my left, the bar holds up a tipping grey-haired man, with a crooked hangdog cig in his mouth that never touches his hand between light and filter. His weathered face shows no signs of ever wearing proper mountain eyewear, the tan only broken by a week’s worth of grey, bristly stubble.

To my right are some silent, stout and judgy Germanic youth. They sip tall beers and have an opposite smoking style, their cigarettes held out to show leather bracelets and big gold watches. Through the smoke I see a couple of guys whose clean-cut style and black top-frame glasses suggest spotless Audis shuttled them in from Munich to a soundtrack of Mozart. On Monday, their sedans will be parked in front of a mirror-windowed office building in a sea of such buildings, while the drivers spend their week in their cubicles—mere whitecaps in the sea of buildings—dreaming of carving the perfect turn when they return to the pistes of Switzerland a couple weeks later.

With a hat of technical fabric and a geometric design perched high on his head, a middle-aged American skier with scruffy enough hair to cover his ears chats nonstop to two female companions. It all tells me he works in marketing at a software company that got their big break in the late ‘90s, but still looks longingly at Silicon Valley from an office park just outside of Boston. He hears Mumford and Sons break through the metal and pop tunes and exclaims, “Now this is a good song.” The ladies have the pasty, sunscreen-protected faces and, um, powerful upper legs of women who, as teenage racers, out-skied 99 percent of the guys at Stratton. I listen in as he shares stories of weeks at CMH Heli-Skiing and the reasons that the greatest skiers all learned their technique on the icy—I mean challenging— test pieces north of Boston, where great skiers are not born but taught in ski-school lessons.

At another table are the Italians with immense eyebrows. We’re not more than a few miles from the border, so it’s no surprise to see three pairs of matching designer jeans, hand distressed just enough to make them slightly unique. One wears a pink striped sweater, the other two shirts buttoned to their navels. In another corner is a table of Swedish mountaineers, sticky with sweat and all rocking thin quilted, insulating jackets and passing cans of snus.

Everyone is now dancing behind the bar, pouring drinks straight from the bottles. It’s mayhem when my new friends show up and take me to a cavelike bar below the pub, where we are given luminescent drinks and highlighters to draw on faces. There are more languages than I can keep track of and none, even the English, that I can clearly hear over the pumping dance beats. Yet names and home ski areas are somehow exchanged.

In the morning, I can’t remember any of the names. But we stuff ourselves into the tram, and I see a few faces I recall, not for the stereotypes or the phrases scrawled on them in highlighter. We’re the same now, by the light of day. At the top of the mountain, I take a few deep breaths and stare out over the Alps before dropping in.

–Nate Abbott, Senior Editor 

Freeskier Magazine, October 2012. Editor’s letter. Spin.

Each time it has happened—a friend and icon of skiing has passed away too soon—the moment has been mashed into my memory without hope of escaping. In Norway for JOSS in 2009, when Alex O’Brien told me that Shane McConkey was gone. In the spring of 2010, after a long day on Red Mountain Pass, CO shooting a big road gap with Simon Dumont, when I heard of CR Johnson’s passing. And this year, up before 6 a.m. on the final day of a trip to Japan with Nimbus Independent when I got a text message that Sarah Burke had succumbed to injuries suffered nine days before.

When Eric Pollard, a longtime friend, teammate and filming partner to Sarah, came downstairs, I told him the news. After a quick breakfast and a few moments alone to gather our thoughts, we collected our gear and headed out to do what we love, as I’d done in each case before.

The next day, as I traveled back to Colorado, alone for 30 hours, I spent my time listening to music, writing and thinking about the loss of Sarah and the shocking string of other accidents and deaths. I kept returning to the thought: Is skiing too crazy, too near the edge?

Mainstream media swarms to tragedy and pushes that storyline in bold type and frenzied voices: Skiing is too dangerous! The combination of actual loss and observing the hysterical analysis swirled in my head and overwhelmed my emotions. Rather than hiding, it made me want to get out on snow, where I feel most at ease. Whether it is a waist deep day in Japan or a megacold night shooting handrails in Finland or a sunny spring day in a Colorado park, on snow is where I need to be.

As the staff of Freeskier came back to the office this summer and gathered the words for our Sarah Burke Remembrance, the stories and memories of her joy and unashamed love of skiing reminded me why we continue to search for that perfect turn, wonderful new mountain town, great line or stomped trick. And why I found comfort in being closer to the sport that caused me pain.

In the end, we know that skiing is a wonderfully human experience, however it is done. Laughing as you pop up from a flake-spitting fall in powder. High-fiving your friend as she skis away from her first 540. Smiling as you drop in by yourself on that extra lap through the trees after your friends all said, “We’re going in. Gotta get back to work.” The burn in your thighs as you sit at your desk on a Monday after catching the weekend warriors’ perfect Sunday powder day. The first arc of a turn on opening-day, manmade snow when you know you’ll be skiing every single day until the season ends.

CR, Shane, Sarah and others have passed away. We will lose more friends. But skiing brought us these great people and the amazing times we shared with them in person, through videos, on TV or on the pages of ski magazines. And through skiing we will meet new friends, as irreplaceable as those we’ve lost. We will share laughter, tears and smiles. We will visit new places, do new tricks, have more “deepest day evers.”

This issue is dedicated to our friend Sarah Burke. Her remembrance begins on page 48. Inside that section, you’ll find the thoughts and memories of her family, friends, competitors and mentors. Please join us in celebrating Sarah and in remembering why skiing is our sport.

–Nate Abbott, Senior Editor

The issue is available for download on ITunes Newsstand

Gus Kenworthy from Nine Knights in Mottolino, Italy. Check out the full gallery: http://www.freeskier.com/stories/castle-sky-photos-and-wrap-nine-knights

Gus Kenworthy from Nine Knights in Mottolino, Italy. Check out the full gallery: http://www.freeskier.com/stories/castle-sky-photos-and-wrap-nine-knights

Photo outtakes from 2011 are at http://www.freeskier.com/photo/pictures-are-cool

Mike Hornbeck at Breckenridge, Colorado with Level 1 Productions.

Photo outtakes from 2011 are at http://www.freeskier.com/photo/pictures-are-cool

Mike Hornbeck at Breckenridge, Colorado with Level 1 Productions.

Adam Delorme for Freeskier Magazine, January 2012. Outtakes from “Invisible Skier” story, words and portraits by Nate Abbott.

Jossi Wells. January 2011. Freeskier Magazine, Heroes. Snowbasin, UT. Cork 540 Dub Japan.

Jossi Wells. January 2011. Freeskier Magazine, Heroes. Snowbasin, UT. Cork 540 Dub Japan.

Adam Delorme. March 2011. Montana. Freeskier Magazine, Pillow Fight.

Adam Delorme. March 2011. Montana. Freeskier Magazine, Pillow Fight.

Tara. October 2011.

Tara. October 2011.

Lillie. October 2011

Lillie. October 2011

Phil Casabon. Freeskier Magazine. December 2011.

Phil Casabon. Freeskier Magazine. December 2011.

Pillow Fight. For Freeskier Magazine, November Issue 2011.

Pillow Fight. For Freeskier Magazine, November Issue 2011.

Feature Story I wrote for Freeskier Magazine, Line Traveling Circus

Eric Pollard. Colorado. Photo by Nate Abbott. Biggest issue of Freeskier ever (260 pages).

Eric Pollard. Colorado. Photo by Nate Abbott. Biggest issue of Freeskier ever (260 pages).

Niwot, CO: Sunset outside the office.

Niwot, CO: Sunset outside the office.