Riding and remembering the first snowboard park
Once the skate boarders took over snow boarding, things got better fast. Tricks, style, equipment—pretty much everything. And thanks to that influence, 1980s snowboarding quickly evolved from looking like some odd offshoot of windsurfing to something much better. The skate mindset brought other ideas. What if there were jumps and rails, banks and transitions? Terrain features built for the sole purpose of shredding. With the perfectly sculpted parks and pipes of today it’s hard to imagine snowboarding without them, but that time actually existed.
Until 1991 there was no such thing as a dedicated snowboard park. Not until a little resort in Southern California called Bear Mountain built one. Outlaw. The world’s first. In the spring of 2016, TransWorld and Bear teamed up to re-create the groundbreaking park, session it, and shed some light on a time and place in snowboard history that completely changed the paradigm. To prepare for the build, Bear’s park crew watched grainy videos, scoured old photos, and even talked to some salty old dudes who actually rode Outlaw. Then we invited a crew of riders for some laps down memory lane: local legend Chris Bradshaw, longtime Bear local Zak Hale, SoCal-bred Harrison Gordon, Bear edit regular Jordan Small, and a handful of others. Over the course of several days, the crew shredded the classic park run, lapping, laughing, and slashing the berms. Same as it ever was.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 2016-Ausgabe von TransWorld Snowboarding.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 2016-Ausgabe von TransWorld Snowboarding.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
In Transition
Josh Dirksen's Perpetual Momentum
Outlaw Revival
Riding and remembering the first snowboard park
Jackson Fowler's Dreamer Home
It takes an eye like mine to appreciate a truck like mine.
Resort Sessions
Red Mountain, British Columbia