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Jonaven Moore has long been one of my favorite people to snowboard with. His mother had him doing backcountry trips from an early age and it has given him a feel for the mountains like I have never seen. When I started Jones Snowboards, Jonaven Moore was the first person I asked to be involved. Jonaven embodies the spirit of Jones Snowboards on and off the hill.
Craig Kelley said it best, “Jonaven charges big terrain with such fresh style and exuberance that you can’t help but get excited to ride with him. It’s time for a changing of the guard in big-mountain freeriding, and it makes me feel proud to see the torch passed on to someone like Jonaven.” – Craig Kelly
Craig would be proud if he saw what Jonaven has done with the torch. He was a staple for many years in the Absinthe FIlms movies charging critical lines in big mountains. Two years ago he went off the pro snowboarded map. . Jonaven follows his hart more then anyone I know and his hart was no longer into having his whole snowboard world revolve around Snowmobiles and Helicotpers. He could not get film companies or photographers to follow his path and he fell out of the spotlight and lost some key sponsors. However when I tracked him down at the start of the Deeper project he was totally rejuvenated on the sport thanks to his split board and riding a ton. The irony off this is that our friendship was born on the heli pads of Alaska but both of us at similar times, with out talking to each other, had turned our backs on Heli’s and sleds and started tackling mountains on foot.
To top it off it was these very mountains, filming for the Rome movie were he decided to change his approach to snowboarding. He had rushed up to the mountains chasing a blue whole and on his third run his riding partner kicked off a class three avalanche that they both barely got out off. He felt he was rushing things int the mountains and was taking big risks for other people. Since that time he has longed to get back to these mountains and ride them his way. Three years later the star aligned and we are back with our camping gear and splitboards.
Going into this trip I figured I would get a good tune up for Alaska. With in an hour of leaving our base camp I realized we were in terrain every bit as intense as Alaska. Blind rolls, knife edge ridges with huge cliffs on one side, big bergschrunds to cross, intricate crevasse riddled glaciers to navigate, extra steep spines walls to climb up, and complex sluffs to manage on the way down. With perfect weather and a stable snow pack we were able to get after it right away. (We were in the Coast Range not in the Canadian Rockies where the high avalanche danger was)
Our home.
The Wizards Toque. Thanks to a 3:30 AM start I was able to stand on the peak of this line at sunrise.
Jonaven and Garry go over logistics for the next mornings session. Afternoon heating kept us out of the mountains from the peak warming hours, 1PM to 5PM. Jonaven ended up hiking up the far wall in the evening and digging a bivouac on top of the line so he could ride it at sunrise. So well we were travelling the glaciers at dark trying to beat the sunrise, Jonaven was sleeping soundly on top of his line.
The beauty of being out all day is you get to see the terrain light up and react to the warming temperatures. It is the best wide screen, hi-def TV you will ever watch. This wall only got about 30 minutes of light and the glacier had to many open holes in the outrun making the consequences to high for us.
I forgot how hard and scary it is to cross Bergschrunds. This thing looked really mellow from far but it was 15 ft deep. This is why we always get roped across them.
Why do we cross Bergschrunds? To get to then goods. When I started to climb this line I assumed I could not get up through the spines or the gut because it cliffed out. After an hour and a half of clawing my way up it I was standing on top. This is the climb of the year for me.
Thanks to the Canadian crew for showing me their amazing world. Mikey, TIm, Jonaven, Garry, Melisa, and Dan.