http://www.skihood.com/Mountain/Videos/Default.aspx
Click on the "Film the Idea" video.
A good day at Meadows.
Can't wait till next season.
http://www.skihood.com/Mountain/Videos/Default.aspx
Click on the "Film the Idea" video.
A good day at Meadows.
Can't wait till next season.
xcellent shit...the buttered 5 off the lip was sweet....I like the skiing better than the goob shots...but your the artist....bravo
Pollard is so smooth. In the beginning of the clip he walked by my car... so I got that goin for me, which is nice.
I liked the shot of the pillows off HRM.
I never get tired of 1st-Person POV tree skiing.
The other Idea YouTube segment with Andy Mahre and Pep Fujas in Park City is pretty neat too.
That was sick. That last segmant, nose press on the pinanic table. Oh, and might as well not take your hands out of you pockets. Wow.
those are both bananas.
This was sexy.
I haven't been in skiing mode for a few weeks now, but that got me back in the mood. Very, very nice.
"I knew in an instant that the three dollars I had spent on wine would not go to waste."
bump for stoke
Pollard is so sick. His butters off those cornices are amazing. His style is so fluid. The sequence when he summer-salts off of that lip was cool. The helmet cam footy is $$$ too.
Edit: I need a pow fix...
Another bumb for stoke.
I love the fact that those guys (both Fujas(!) and Pollard) spent alot of time on the snowboard these days. Multi-glisse is the way to go! (more on the issue, check the blogs from: www.filmtheidea.com)
Those tree shots remind me of the crazy winter of -99 in the Alps. Cruisin' the trees of Bruson on my 168cm Burton Supermodel was just like that...I wish we've had the reverse-camber superfats back then!
Btw. I believe the no-poles steeze front sommersault off the cornice was Andy Mahre...right?
Last edited by Jiehkevarri; 05-30-2007 at 04:04 AM.
"Average summit heights are around 1000m to 1200m but on the high glaciers of the main Lyngen Peninsula there are summits over 1400m with Jiehkkevarri being the highest at 1834m above sea level."
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