You are so lucky to have those condition. And ski in the trees even when the conditions are a bit less favorable (but GO slower) so when those powder days come you can just blast them glades
@@riseandalpine in Oford, Québec or more commonly know as Iceford. It’s so icy that it’s normal to see race skies in the glades. You can see an exemple of the conditions at 2:30
Im from US east coast and unfortunately there's nothing similar in terms on powder conditions here. It's all icy. Would love to travel to mid west or europe to get a feel more relaxed skiing. Here I'm always anxious I won't be able to stop in time before hitting a tree.
@@solome6478 I was super fortunate to end up at Sugarbush, Sunday River, and Stowe all within 4 weeks. 3 of those 4 weeks, they got a lot of pow. It isn't PNW for sure but amazing for the east!
Great tips. I stopped using the pole straps all the time on and off piste. Helmets are also great protection against frozen snow on branches. Like hitting a rock!
As an avid tree skier I wanted to see what you had to say and I loved the whole video man, great stuff here! Tree skiing is the most fun you can have on the sticks!
I have skied for 60 years now and tree skiing adds so much spontaneity and creativity to the sport. Nothing was better than ripping through the trees in close proximity to my brother. Having another person near you adds a moving variable mix. One additional tip I have is don't be so proud to not press the ejector seat, meaning doing a quick purposeful butt crash as a last resort. It will stop you quickly! This was not a regular thing, but I have used when all my other options quickly ran out. Loved the video.
Definitely took this to heart. Last season I went to do some tree skiing, but was unable to turn once due to the turn being all ice and hit a tree with my left shin. Had to lay down for a solid 5-10 minutes, but no lasting damage thankfully!
The tip about anticipation and looking two or three trees ahead also applies to ski racing! I did it for 4 years in high school and something I had ingrained in my skull was ALWAYS look ahead! Great tip! You also want to turn earlier so that by the time you finish your turn you are past the gate/tree and ready for the next one. If you turn too late you are probably going to crash into that obstical. I usually avoid trees but knowing a lot of racing tips has helped me survive them!
Thank you. There are a number of poles made with straps that release if they're pulled hard. That solves the problem of dropping poles and having to hike back to get/find them.
I'm not a big fan of trees skiing. I mostly ski by myself. After viewing this extremely informative video , you are making me fell like I should do it, and I will do it. I quest I will have to wait untill next year. I'll take all your tips and put them to work. Thanks for this video , so informative. You'r amazing..
Yeah don’t do like I did a few years ago: solo skiiing, get too far into the trees, trapped above a cliff and have to hike back uphill, sinking into waist deep powder with every step, with no one in ear shot
Words of wisdom for tree skiing: Ski good or eat wood! Good on you for mentioning mogul skiing for tree skiing. If you can ski moguls, you can ski trees as you're going to turn in front of a mogul as you do a tree. Target fixation is a real thing, so practice NOT looking at the trees or you will hit them. Keep telling yourself to look for an opening and not at what you don't want to hit. Great video!
Good advice. To your point about moguls, the same skill for moguls is needed for trees (and chutes and steeps) - quick , quick, unweighting turns. That is entirely trainable on flats. Then, pick your place to need the quick turns and work up. Still, flat ski skills is foundational. The thing about trees is that there isn’t time to “think” about technique…it’s gotta just be there. As stated in lots of training, particularly military, no one rises to the challenge…they sink to their training level.
Awesome video! only other tip i had was getting used to kick turns. Sometimes you didn't pick the best direction to stop moving and don't have enough space to do a hop turn.
I've never been able to do kick turn in my life. My level of flexibility is naturally low. And even when I tried at could never turn my feet that wide There was a time I wanted to be a ski patroller and that lack of kick turn ability was stressing me out, lol
Learned to ski this year after decades of snowboarding. Got really comfy ripping groomers, decent technique, etc. Then I went in the trees on some powder days and it was back to flailing beginner again, lol! I think I should have taken the vid's advice and started on moguls, which I have a hatred of as a boarder. Next season I'll commit to that, I'm guessing being able to navigate a mogul field will make trees more fun on skis!
Hey Steve, Sweet to hear that you're joining us gentlemen on two twigs. The moguls will help a ton & they're also fun on skis once you get the hang of them!
Great video. Also, if skiing with a partner but perhaps out of direct line of sight, each have a call sign that you can chirp so you can hear where the other is. If you can no longer hear, stop, listen and determine next steps.
@@riseandalpine Usually a bird whistle or a caw caw caw type of thing. Learned this skiing in South America many years ago and also heli-skiing in BC. You can never stay 100% line of sight so it just gives another layer of communication.
My first day back in Niseko and able to try out your tips. I found just looking up and further ahead down the mountain so helpful ; and your other great tip of focusing on the snow and not the trees. I am skiing them so much better - thanks a million! I will use the same concepts to ski moguls 🙏🙏👍
GREAT VIDEO and tips. I will reference these tips/video when taking out amateur friends. I love tree skiing, My favorite runs are glade-rippers. The interior BC hills offer sooo many tree lines. it never gets old.
I’m 60 years old and I like to ski well beyond my comfort level. I love tree skiing but I generally do Wide slower turns rather than shooshing the mountain. All of your tips are great I never thought about taking my straps off of my poles. that’s probably a good idea though. Also, don’t be focusing and shooting RUclips footage while your tree skiing. It’s a good way to get yourself in the trouble. I like skiing. For example, at Park city in the aspens. It’s kind of like a little amusement park. But then again wide open places with wider spaced trees are just tons of fun. The hardest trees, I’ve skied recently was the centennial trees at Deer valley . Huge old-growth trees with tons of moguls and fairly dense. But it was beautiful.
If you're still shredding at 60+ you can turn however you like. And I agree filming + skiing can be quite distracting. I always mellow it out if I'm holding the stick in the trees. Where is Deer park located? Sound beautiful.
@@riseandalpine deer valley is just down the road from Park city. It’s an Uber spoiled rich person, kind of place no offense to people who really like it there. They have people handing out tissues at the top of the chairlift. But The skiing was nice. Yeah I’ve been running for over 40 years and skiing since I was a kid in Michigan and somehow I still have knees- go figure.
Glad you liked it and even more glad to hear you're mastering the bumps! A lot of people skip out on moguls but it does great things for your skiing in the long run. Some of the best skiers I've ever known all had a moguls background!
I came across your channel from a reddit comment. You have one of the most informative channels on here. You're a fantastic teacher, and I appreciate everything you share about Whistler - you're not just showing off and being cryptic. I've subscribed from both accounts. All the best with the growing channel! Hope to run into you one day... but I probably won't be able to keep up haha.
Wow - cool to here that my stuff is being shared on reddit organically! I really appreciate all of the support and I as always I'm thrilled I can make everyones skiing experience a little bit more fun :). For sure say hi if you see me on the slopes!
@@riseandalpine LOL it was on r/Whistler, someone was asking how to maximize their time on the mountains, and someone else shared your "skiing Whistler in one day" video. Great content.
Wear a helmet and goggles, and don’t use your pole straps. If your pole gets caught on a tree and you’re wearing your pole strap, the tree will yank on your arm and shoulder with such force it could dislocate your shoulder. Those are the equipment tips he highlighted in the video. If the glades are fresh and fluffy, wider skis will be better. If you have only one set of skis with a waist width of less than, say 90mm, deep powder may create problems, but will be decent in less deep powder. Not to step on James’ toes. Just reiterating what he said, and throwing in another thing he’s talked about in other vids. The boy knows his stuff!
Tree wells scare the crap out of me! I got stuck in one once and it was terrifying. I don't really know how to spot them so I usually just avoid going too close to the trees. I CAN ski trees but they scare me sometimes.
Oh man - getting stuck in a well sounds very scary. It's always best to ski with a partner. You can see most tree wells but its safe to always assume that there is going to be a well around most trees! As long as you keep your skis on and don't fall head first you'll always be fine. Best to be to always use caution!
Awesome video! Thank you for sharing the tips! After 15 days of skiing, I started to feel comfortable on the moguls like Catskinners. Do you have any recommendations of entry level glade runs in Whistler/Blackcomb for beginners like me to start with?
My favourite recco for the Whistler side is Arthurs choice on crystal chair. You can kind of enter it from the middle of twist and shout too if the start looks too intimidating.
It depends on what mountain you are skiing and what kind of snowfall they get. Length is going to play a greater factor with turn radius in trees than width. I like my skis on the wider side so I'm happy with something 104-120 in the glades with deeps now
I've seen them. Looks like you're a storm trooper on the mountain! Not for me though. I'm working hard and breathe so heavy on the hill I think I'd have fogging issues.
@@riseandalpine I've not had a fogging issue myself and they do have vents. You can remove the chin guard as well. Great video hopefully I make it to Canada to ski one day
The best skiing tio I ever read was to focus on the light, not the trees, where you look is where you go. If you ever get fixated on a particular tree it becomes like giant supermagnet
tree tip: if you're skiing with a buddy and following their line, don't trail right behind them ahahhah. Sometimes the snow gets dense and you stop suddenly which causes a crash
Thanks for a good instructional video; I like the way your channel is developing. It would be interesting to see a video focussing on tree wells, what they look like, how to recognise them, in which situations they occur, etc with actual examples. I dream of skiing trees in powder as you're always showing in your videos. Here in Europe we don't have so much of it. Always love the sexual innuendo.
Dont be afraid to break branches? Most tree skiers know that trees in the Alpine grow very slowly. I was tree skiing in Tahoe one season and tried to brush past a thin branch at shin height at 15mph....it was like hitting a wire cable, stopped me instantly and ripped the binding off my ski. So best advice is to assume that tree branches are unflexible and not like skiing through slalom gates.
@@riseandalpine you think liking moguls is weird well I DONT LIKE flow runs I like technical and hard runs (not that hard, but like black double blackish.)
Totally! And even if you don't look at the trees... sooner or later you'll kiss one. It's just the price you pay if like keeping your foot on the gas pedal :).
Great tips! I just started tree skiing last year and now love it after some trial and error. Headed back to Kicking Horse and Revelstoke for more in a couple of months. Yeehaw!
Yooo glad to hear you've been converted to a tree worshiper as well. They just hold earths best snow and best pillows. I'm planning to rip a trip to Revy and KH too. So Stoked!
@@riseandalpine I go with a group of dudes who got me hooked. We've been on three trips (Revelstoke, Aleyska and Banf/KH) with two heli trips. The heli out of Golden with CMH were the tree days and they were glorious. Perfect snow and some great tree skiing/boarding. Keep up the cool videos. Cheers man!
Tree wells scare the crap out of me! I got stuck in one once and it was terrifying. I don't really know how to spot them so I usually just avoid going too close to the trees. I CAN ski trees but they scare me sometimes.
You are so lucky to have those condition. And ski in the trees even when the conditions are a bit less favorable (but GO slower) so when those powder days come you can just blast them glades
So very lucky!!!
Nothing is better than skiing the glades in the POW.
Where do you usually ski?
@@riseandalpine in Oford, Québec or more commonly know as Iceford. It’s so icy that it’s normal to see race skies in the glades. You can see an exemple of the conditions at 2:30
@@ceoofshanghaicorn3096 I love Orford! 👍
Im from US east coast and unfortunately there's nothing similar in terms on powder conditions here. It's all icy. Would love to travel to mid west or europe to get a feel more relaxed skiing. Here I'm always anxious I won't be able to stop in time before hitting a tree.
@@solome6478 I was super fortunate to end up at Sugarbush, Sunday River, and Stowe all within 4 weeks. 3 of those 4 weeks, they got a lot of pow. It isn't PNW for sure but amazing for the east!
Great tips. I stopped using the pole straps all the time on and off piste. Helmets are also great protection against frozen snow on branches. Like hitting a rock!
Helmets and Goggles are always a must. I've finally gotten off the straps for good. Took me like a year!
As an avid tree skier I wanted to see what you had to say and I loved the whole video man, great stuff here! Tree skiing is the most fun you can have on the sticks!
Glad you love the trees as much as I do!
I have skied for 60 years now and tree skiing adds so much spontaneity and creativity to the sport. Nothing was better than ripping through the trees in close proximity to my brother. Having another person near you adds a moving variable mix. One additional tip I have is don't be so proud to not press the ejector seat, meaning doing a quick purposeful butt crash as a last resort. It will stop you quickly! This was not a regular thing, but I have used when all my other options quickly ran out. Loved the video.
Love that tip! A tactical fall can totally save you. Thanks for sharing.
Best tip I know about tree skiing is, do not hit one.
😂 😂 😂
Definitely took this to heart. Last season I went to do some tree skiing, but was unable to turn once due to the turn being all ice and hit a tree with my left shin. Had to lay down for a solid 5-10 minutes, but no lasting damage thankfully!
This video really spoke to me. Love the attitude, love the tips, love the tapes, love tree skiing.
So glad you liked it Sam!
The tip about anticipation and looking two or three trees ahead also applies to ski racing! I did it for 4 years in high school and something I had ingrained in my skull was ALWAYS look ahead! Great tip! You also want to turn earlier so that by the time you finish your turn you are past the gate/tree and ready for the next one. If you turn too late you are probably going to crash into that obstical. I usually avoid trees but knowing a lot of racing tips has helped me survive them!
These are some great insights! There is totally a close connection between slalom skiing and tree skiing skills.
Thank you. There are a number of poles made with straps that release if they're pulled hard. That solves the problem of dropping poles and having to hike back to get/find them.
Good Shout!
Sounds like a good balance between reducing hassle and saving the rotator cuffs.
I'm not a big fan of trees skiing. I mostly ski by myself. After viewing this extremely informative video , you are making me fell like I should do it, and I will do it. I quest I will have to wait untill next year. I'll take all your tips and put them to work. Thanks for this video , so informative. You'r amazing..
Glad you going to give it a whirl!!
If you stick to the gladed runs on blackcomb and Whistler it's totally safe to ski solo!
Yeah don’t do like I did a few years ago: solo skiiing, get too far into the trees, trapped above a cliff and have to hike back uphill, sinking into waist deep powder with every step, with no one in ear shot
Generally better not to ski trees solo. Especially in powder. Tree wells are real. And if nobody knows your lost nobody can look for you.
Words of wisdom for tree skiing: Ski good or eat wood!
Good on you for mentioning mogul skiing for tree skiing. If you can ski moguls, you can ski trees as you're going to turn in front of a mogul as you do a tree.
Target fixation is a real thing, so practice NOT looking at the trees or you will hit them. Keep telling yourself to look for an opening and not at what you don't want to hit.
Great video!
"Ski good or eat wood" - words to live by!
Thanks for watching Stephen :)
Good advice. To your point about moguls, the same skill for moguls is needed for trees (and chutes and steeps) - quick , quick, unweighting turns. That is entirely trainable on flats. Then, pick your place to need the quick turns and work up. Still, flat ski skills is foundational. The thing about trees is that there isn’t time to “think” about technique…it’s gotta just be there. As stated in lots of training, particularly military, no one rises to the challenge…they sink to their training level.
Good advice from you as well! Thanks for sharing.
Best instructional tree skiing vid I've seen yet! Thanks
Thank you! Happy you enjoyed the pointers.
Lmk if you have any Q's.
Always happy to help :)
Awesome video! only other tip i had was getting used to kick turns. Sometimes you didn't pick the best direction to stop moving and don't have enough space to do a hop turn.
Totally - great call!!
Kick turns are a super handy tool and can get you out of some seriously precarious situations!
I've never been able to do kick turn in my life. My level of flexibility is naturally low. And even when I tried at could never turn my feet that wide
There was a time I wanted to be a ski patroller and that lack of kick turn ability was stressing me out, lol
Learned to ski this year after decades of snowboarding. Got really comfy ripping groomers, decent technique, etc. Then I went in the trees on some powder days and it was back to flailing beginner again, lol! I think I should have taken the vid's advice and started on moguls, which I have a hatred of as a boarder. Next season I'll commit to that, I'm guessing being able to navigate a mogul field will make trees more fun on skis!
Hey Steve,
Sweet to hear that you're joining us gentlemen on two twigs. The moguls will help a ton & they're also fun on skis once you get the hang of them!
I resemble this post. They told me moguls are like stairs to navigate the fall line.
Wow awesome. What a ski out!
Great video. Also, if skiing with a partner but perhaps out of direct line of sight, each have a call sign that you can chirp so you can hear where the other is. If you can no longer hear, stop, listen and determine next steps.
Great Tip!
What is your go to call sign?
@@riseandalpine Usually a bird whistle or a caw caw caw type of thing. Learned this skiing in South America many years ago and also heli-skiing in BC. You can never stay 100% line of sight so it just gives another layer of communication.
Such a great vid, love the energy and articulation. You explained why we love skiing trees so well!
Thanks Joe - skiing pow filled trees is such a joy!
also western tree skiing is a different beast compared to eastern... love your vids
I used to ski out east, I agree, the glades are totally different. Out east you have to watch out for roots not tree wells hahah
Great video Jamesy! Folks, I can confirm this man is an absolute rocket in the tree's
_just_ getting good enough to start doing tree skiing. Thanks for the tips.
Enjoy it and watch out for those pesky snow snakes!
Amazing tips and insights - thank you so much 🙏🙏🙏
Glad you found them helpful Robert!
My first day back in Niseko and able to try out your tips. I found just looking up and further ahead down the mountain so helpful ; and your other great tip of focusing on the snow and not the trees. I am skiing them so much better - thanks a million! I will use the same concepts to ski moguls 🙏🙏👍
GREAT VIDEO and tips. I will reference these tips/video when taking out amateur friends.
I love tree skiing, My favorite runs are glade-rippers.
The interior BC hills offer sooo many tree lines. it never gets old.
Thanks Tyson!
Interior mountains have sick tree lines.
I need to head further north this season!
I’m 60 years old and I like to ski well beyond my comfort level. I love tree skiing but I generally do Wide slower turns rather than shooshing the mountain. All of your tips are great I never thought about taking my straps off of my poles. that’s probably a good idea though. Also, don’t be focusing and shooting RUclips footage while your tree skiing. It’s a good way to get yourself in the trouble. I like skiing. For example, at Park city in the aspens. It’s kind of like a little amusement park. But then again wide open places with wider spaced trees are just tons of fun. The hardest trees, I’ve skied recently was the centennial trees at Deer valley . Huge old-growth trees with tons of moguls and fairly dense. But it was beautiful.
If you're still shredding at 60+ you can turn however you like. And I agree filming + skiing can be quite distracting. I always mellow it out if I'm holding the stick in the trees. Where is Deer park located? Sound beautiful.
@@riseandalpine deer valley is just down the road from Park city. It’s an Uber spoiled rich person, kind of place no offense to people who really like it there. They have people handing out tissues at the top of the chairlift. But The skiing was nice. Yeah I’ve been running for over 40 years and skiing since I was a kid in Michigan and somehow I still have knees- go figure.
It depends on the forrest type, but keeping the ski tips out of snow is also highly recommended as you never know what you will hit.
Totally! When the snow pack is low or you're ripping through Pow, sometimes leaning back can save you from linking up with a stump, root or rock!
Sooner or later the snow snakes are going to bite you.
Love this tutorial type vid. Would enjoy seeing what gear you use too.
Thanks Rob!
I could totally do something about my gear!
BUT no one wants to hear anything about my skis or bindings LOL They are falling apart!
I always thought bump skiing was the step right before tree skiing. That's what I'm at, mastering the bumps. Solid content!
Glad you liked it and even more glad to hear you're mastering the bumps! A lot of people skip out on moguls but it does great things for your skiing in the long run.
Some of the best skiers I've ever known all had a moguls background!
Excellent, informative video. Sincerely, Middle Aged Mom Skier who is looking to spice things up & get off the groomers sometimes...
Amazing!! It's great to hear you're still challenging yourself :)
Absolutely awesome footage!!!
Thanks Trevor 🌶️
I came across your channel from a reddit comment. You have one of the most informative channels on here. You're a fantastic teacher, and I appreciate everything you share about Whistler - you're not just showing off and being cryptic. I've subscribed from both accounts. All the best with the growing channel! Hope to run into you one day... but I probably won't be able to keep up haha.
Wow - cool to here that my stuff is being shared on reddit organically!
I really appreciate all of the support and I as always I'm thrilled I can make everyones skiing experience a little bit more fun :).
For sure say hi if you see me on the slopes!
@@riseandalpine LOL it was on r/Whistler, someone was asking how to maximize their time on the mountains, and someone else shared your "skiing Whistler in one day" video. Great content.
So in other words, tree skiing is the jazz of skiing.
I love that!
Any equipment tips for tree skiing?
Wear a helmet and goggles, and don’t use your pole straps. If your pole gets caught on a tree and you’re wearing your pole strap, the tree will yank on your arm and shoulder with such force it could dislocate your shoulder.
Those are the equipment tips he highlighted in the video.
If the glades are fresh and fluffy, wider skis will be better. If you have only one set of skis with a waist width of less than, say 90mm, deep powder may create problems, but will be decent in less deep powder.
Not to step on James’ toes. Just reiterating what he said, and throwing in another thing he’s talked about in other vids.
The boy knows his stuff!
FlapJackson said it best!
It took me 3 seasons to get tree skiing dialed in.
That's where the adventure is.
Glad you've joined team tree skiing! Soooo much fun.
Home is Park City Utah. 43 years.
I had a legitimate laugh hearing “better close the hotdog stand”, funny guy
I was wondering why my willy was feeling a little chilly
i love the trees , one comment , always look for the spaces , not at the trees. ! Sounds simple but this is thr golden rule in the woods
Totally dude! If you look at the trees, get what you're gonna hit?
Love it!
Thanks!
Get great rockered skis to make turning in the trees fast and effortless.
Totally - makes turns alot more buttery!
Great tips.
Glad you found them helpful James!
Thank you!
You're welcome!
Tree wells scare the crap out of me! I got stuck in one once and it was terrifying. I don't really know how to spot them so I usually just avoid going too close to the trees. I CAN ski trees but they scare me sometimes.
Oh man - getting stuck in a well sounds very scary. It's always best to ski with a partner. You can see most tree wells but its safe to always assume that there is going to be a well around most trees! As long as you keep your skis on and don't fall head first you'll always be fine. Best to be to always use caution!
You carry a whistle ?
Or a Beacon?
Good Shout.
I Always have a whistle attached to my upper zipper!
I only carry a beacon in the backcountry but it never hurts to wear one on deep days.
@@riseandalpine I carry my beacon any time there's more than 18 inches of fresh snow. It's small and I don't even notice it.
Great tips and advice. Thank you!
My pleasure. I'm happy you found it helpful!
Awesome video! Thank you for sharing the tips! After 15 days of skiing, I started to feel comfortable on the moguls like Catskinners. Do you have any recommendations of entry level glade runs in Whistler/Blackcomb for beginners like me to start with?
My favourite recco for the Whistler side is Arthurs choice on crystal chair. You can kind of enter it from the middle of twist and shout too if the start looks too intimidating.
Also 1 tip is to know hop turns cause when you're on steep trees and you need to get turned around it's harder with more obstacles.
Totally! Jump turns are useful all the time. Also a great drill to improve stance and balance on skis!
What mm under foot and radius would you look for in the ultimate glade ski?
It depends on what mountain you are skiing and what kind of snowfall they get. Length is going to play a greater factor with turn radius in trees than width. I like my skis on the wider side so I'm happy with something 104-120 in the glades with deeps now
Have you ever looked at the ruroc helemets they are full face and look awesome.
I've seen them. Looks like you're a storm trooper on the mountain!
Not for me though. I'm working hard and breathe so heavy on the hill I think I'd have fogging issues.
@@riseandalpine I've not had a fogging issue myself and they do have vents. You can remove the chin guard as well. Great video hopefully I make it to Canada to ski one day
The best skiing tio I ever read was to focus on the light, not the trees,
where you look is where you go. If you ever get fixated on a particular tree it becomes like giant supermagnet
Great advice!
tree tip: if you're skiing with a buddy and following their line, don't trail right behind them ahahhah. Sometimes the snow gets dense and you stop suddenly which causes a crash
Great Tip :)
Sounds like there is a story there?
you dont know what a treewell is until you fell face first into one. scary af
love the trees!
I definitely love moguls too!
That's what I like to hear!!!
Go to Colorado, 3 hours at winter park will have you skiing more moguls than 3 years in California
Must be nice.., I have ice in our trees, wish it was powder but it’s typically packed snow & it’s dug out
Are you skiing somewhere out east?
Thanks for a good instructional video; I like the way your channel is developing. It would be interesting to see a video focussing on tree wells, what they look like, how to recognise them, in which situations they occur, etc with actual examples. I dream of skiing trees in powder as you're always showing in your videos. Here in Europe we don't have so much of it. Always love the sexual innuendo.
That's a cool video idea! I'll see if I can make it happen.
Great job! #13 No drugs or alcohol
You betcha.. You need every ounce of mental clarity you've got if you want to ski mach chicken!
Dont be afraid to break branches? Most tree skiers know that trees in the Alpine grow very slowly. I was tree skiing in Tahoe one season and tried to brush past a thin branch at shin height at 15mph....it was like hitting a wire cable, stopped me instantly and ripped the binding off my ski. So best advice is to assume that tree branches are unflexible and not like skiing through slalom gates.
Ouch! Are ya sure that wasn't a root hahaha.
i love snowboarding in trees but so afraid to try to ski in there
It's sweet that you can do both sports!
Practice on some moguls on your skis first!
Carry a whistle
100%.
I've actually always got one on my jacket zipper & totally forgot to mention it!
Tip 1, find friends. Dang I give up
Also I might add, Snow Ghosts are not soft!, It’s like running into a concrete post.
Very true! Learnt that the hard way in BC's interior
What about Sonny Bono?
What about Sonny Bono?
@@riseandalpine He died skiing into a tree.
Some good tips, but what I wanna know is how the hell did you shoot some of that video?!?!
The insta360 ONE X2 on the helmet mount and invisible selfie stick. Best Camera Ever!
"The trees aren't dangerous until you're skiing dangerously in the trees". Perfect!
;)
I also love moguls :)
Right On!! TEAM MOGULS Here we Go!
@@riseandalpine you think liking moguls is weird well I DONT LIKE flow runs
I like technical and hard runs (not that hard, but like black double blackish.)
i don't know why i am watching these tree skiing videos... they scare the !@#$ out of me;)
Living on the edge!
@@riseandalpine True
Same who do I think I am
"Ski like nobody's watching!" Most of us do that anyway, and it's not deliberate policy! 🙄
Good man Jim! I'm all for doing what feels good,. The mountain ain't a fashion show.
dont brake ! just the funny part
Tip #1 - "Drink Hot Sauce " !!!
How did I forget the #1 tip..... LOL
Tip 7 . Only the trees are watching but not judging 😉
so true!
Bro I need to ski with you, please organize group skiing event and charge $50/head so I can join.
Maybe I could organize something next season!
Easy….. follow a trail and don’t look at the trees, if you do you will eventually hit one …..
Totally! And even if you don't look at the trees... sooner or later you'll kiss one. It's just the price you pay if like keeping your foot on the gas pedal :).
"Im gonna sHaRe you my to top 12 tips"
🤣🤣 I was so annoyed when I started editing and noticed I forgot a word in there. Nothing gets by you guys 🤣🤣
@@riseandalpine lol
Great tips! I just started tree skiing last year and now love it after some trial and error. Headed back to Kicking Horse and Revelstoke for more in a couple of months. Yeehaw!
Yooo glad to hear you've been converted to a tree worshiper as well. They just hold earths best snow and best pillows. I'm planning to rip a trip to Revy and KH too. So Stoked!
@@riseandalpine I go with a group of dudes who got me hooked. We've been on three trips (Revelstoke, Aleyska and Banf/KH) with two heli trips. The heli out of Golden with CMH were the tree days and they were glorious. Perfect snow and some great tree skiing/boarding.
Keep up the cool videos. Cheers man!
Pro tip: whatever you stare at, you will hit!
100%
Aim for the white spaces. Boards before body.
Preach it!
Tree wells scare the crap out of me! I got stuck in one once and it was terrifying. I don't really know how to spot them so I usually just avoid going too close to the trees. I CAN ski trees but they scare me sometimes.