Well it’s been a month to remember over here in the Austrian Alps. The new year brought in a monster storm system that pounded along the entire length of the Alps, bringing as much as 5 meters (15 feet) of snowfall in some areas.
Here at the Stubai Glacier we got about 2 meters from the storm, which is more than enough to officially kick off this winter after a very dry fall season!
I started off 2012 by digging out the Stubai Zoo terrain park for four hours on January 1. At least I got to watch an amazing sunset at the end of the day!
The next day I drove over to Kitzbühel to meet Anja and friends at the Fritzhütte on the backside of Kitzbüheler Horn in the Raintal, which I’ve already “blown up” in an earlier blog communiqué. Let me summarize by saying “sick freeride terrain” and we’ll leave it at that! The one day I got to ride at Kitzbühel got me real stoked to ski some powder and fun terrain this winter!
Just a few days after the trip to Kitzbühel, the heart of the monster storm came blasting in. The ski area where I work, Stubai Glacier, is very exposed and often has problems with wind. This storm was good enough to keep the lifts at Stubai closed for four days straight, and the road to the glacier closed because of avalanche danger for two days afterward.
While higher-elevation slopes were swept bare by the wind, an incredible amount of light-n-fluffy was falling in the valleys, prompting a nationwide full-scale powder assault on Austrian tree runs. Anja and I did our part on the slopes of Schlick 2000, which is the second-closest ski area to my apartment. (The first is the Elferlifte, which is a 10-minute walk away; Schlick is just a 10-minute drive!)
I can’t rant and rave enough about how awesome Schlick’s terrain is. Its prominent feature is a long, steep, treed and gullied mountain flank upon which the adventurous freerider can test his mettle and/or whet his whittle on lines ranging from gentle tree runs to high-alpine rock-chute straighline drop-ins to endless powder bowls. I love it!
During another one of the storm days while the glacier was closed, I decided to find some terrain to ski in the immediate vicinity of my apartment. I walked out out the front door of the building, shouldered my skis, and walked about 10 minutes until I found a little cliff to drop on what had been a grassy hillside just a week before. Not bad ski terrain for a backyard!
When the storm madness finally subsided, it was time to rebuild my half-buried terrain park on the glacier. We took a few days to enlarge the rollers in the park with the near-endless supply of building resources at hand, and added a three-jump beginner kicker line. For a one-man park I think it looks pretty good!
A bit later in the month Anja and I paid a visit to an enticing-looking pillow zone that’s an easy hike from the road the the glacier. We had a great time bouncing down pillow lines, and since then I’ve realized that this little zone is just the tip of the iceberg, there are some massive, gnarly pillow lines hidden up in these woods. Expect to see more…
At the end of the month I spent a few days down in Innsbruck helping a Schneestern crew build the kicker for the Air & Style snowboard big air held in the Bergisel ski jumping stadium above the city. Working on a city big-air project like this is always interesting, it’s unbelievable how much time and work goes into just a few hours of top-level snowboard competition.
For the past few weeks it’s been perfect conditions to start exploring lines higher on the mountain. I’m starting to get a feel for some of the better terrain at Stubai, but there’s still so much to see and to ski!






































































