This is the latest Girls Shred Session video, featuring footage from Snowpark Gstaad in snowy Switzerland. These ladies are seriously talented. Enjoy the highlights!
Category: Snow
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Using Night Vision in Extreme Sports
Note: this post comes from Jim Van over at Integrated Components, a company that sells night vision equipment to extreme athletes.

If your favorite outdoor sport is not challenging enough, try doing it on a moonless night under night vision goggles. If you’re a top performer, the learning might be shorter than you think.
The two major things you’ll need to overcome:
1. Limited Depth of Focus
It takes practice. You may not be in an ideal position to reach up and to refocus, so you’ll have to take your best guess as to how far out to set the focus.
2. Less Than a 180-Degree Field of View
So far, only one person had an issue with vertigo until she realized she was moving her head up and down way too fast. Everyone is quick to realize there are many more shooting stars every night than are visible to the naked eye!
Ice climbing, downhill skiing, and dog mushing are among the first three activities we’ve tried.
Spelunking, fly and float fishing, back country boarding and skiing, motocross and desert racing, as well as Rocky Mountain 4X4 ing on 100 year old mining roads to ghost towns at over 10,000 ft are all on the docket in the coming month.
Check out our YouTube channel here.
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Behind The Scenes: Backcountry Snowboarding With Some Of The Best
Backed by Mountain Dew, Scotty Lago, Danny Davis, and Jack Mitrani set off in search of some great Utah backcountry powder, intending to document their experiences in Virtual Reality. This video features some really cool behind the scenes footage shot during the project.
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Sebastien Toutant: Real Snow
Sebastien Toutant, two-time gold medal winner at the X Games, submitted this incredible video to the 2015 Real Snow snowboarding video contest. It’s going to be difficult for anyone else to compete with this.
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Winter Wakeskating In Bosnia
Wakeskating legend Brian Grubb recently made the long trip to Bosnia and Herzegovina to wakeskate in the area’s harsh winter conditions. He headed for Studeni Potok, also known as Icy Creek — a wintry environment featuring a combination of narrow creek stretches and powdery snow. Pulled by a 1,300 foot winch line, Grubb showed off his skills at fast speeds over some incredible terrain and water.
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Snowyaking: Speedflying A Kayak
Miles Daisher continues to push limits in all the right ways. Daisher takes a kayak, adds a speedwing, and gets to a high place covered in snow, creating a new sport for himself to try.
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Ivan Malakhov’s Winning Freeski Run
Ivan Malakhov, of Russia, pulled off an incredible run at the Freeride World Qualifier Final — incredible enough to earn him first place in the contest. This point-of-view video takes you along for quite a ride.
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Urban Snowboarding In Bosnia
We love this episode of Grilosodes, which takes you on a trip with Marko Grilc, Sage Kostenburg, Zak Hale, and Ethan Morganhead to Bosnia. The guys take to the incredible and oftentimes somber war-torn landscapes of abandoned cities and hotels for some crazy shredding.
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Will Gadd Completes Historic First Ice Climb up Niagara Falls
Niagara Falls is the most famous waterfall in the entire world. The falls, which straddle the border of Canada and the United States, welcome 20 million visitors a year and are a national landmark for both countries – one of the world’s first tourist attractions, and simply put, a wonder of nature.
See the incredible video of the climb above
Plenty of people have gone down the falls over the years but Will Gadd – recently named a Nat Geo Adventurer of the Year – is the first person to ever go UP the falls. How? Well, he’s one of the world’s best ice climbers, and Niagara Falls was frozen.
At least, Niagara was frozen enough to climb. “I checked out the spot we were thinking of climbing in the summer,” Gadd said. “You’d be swept away by the torrential downpour then.” But this year’s cold winter slowed water flow, allowing climbable ice to form. “On a warm winter, there’s no climb here.”
The massive water flow constantly shakes the ground, and makes the ice shelves and walls around you unsteady and unpredictable
After working with NYS Parks Department and NYS Parks Police, Gadd and his team were able to create a comprehensive plan to ensure the climb could be done safely and the necessary precautions were taken to protect the natural environment, as he put the final touch on one of his most epic years ever as a climber. “It’s one of the most visited places in North America,” Gadd said. “We have to treat it as a jewel, or it won’t work.”
There were two priorities for the climb – ethics, and safety. “We’re doing it on natural protection,” Gadd said. “No bolts. There won’t be one thing left in the ice that wasn’t there to begin with, and that’s the best possible way to do it.” The line – which sits on the American side of the Horseshoe section of Niagara, near what’s known as Terrapin Point – extends approximately 147 feet from bottom to top.
It’s a harsh environment and an intense challenge to stay attached to the wall, let alone climb it
It’s not easy ice, either. “The ice is formed in layers,” Gadd said. “That means there’s a layer of ice, then snow (with a lot of air), then another layer of ice. It’s unstable, for sure.” Will estimates the grade at WI6+, as hard as it gets for this style of climbing. Tools he used include ice axes, crampons, and a specially-designed Black Diamond prototype “ice hook.”
The day before the climb, Gadd dropped in from above to clear the route of dangerous hanging ice that could break off during his climb. “I was taking off pieces the size of small cars,” he says. After a full day in front of the route, it was ready.
At one point I was behind the water, climbing on ice that froze behind the falls
The environment may appear pristine, but it’s anything but peaceful. With 150,000 tons of water flowing over the crest every minute at speeds of nearly 62 mph, the water impact is equivalent to roughly 4,000 eighteen-wheel trucks hitting the ground at the same time.
“The massive water flow constantly shakes the ground, and makes the ice shelves and walls around you unsteady and unpredictable,” Gadd said. “It’s a harsh environment and an intense challenge to stay attached to the wall, let alone climb it.”
I was so close to the water, I could reach out and stick my ice tool in the Niagara Falls
The route starts with an intense traverse over something Will came to call the “cauldron of doom,” where the waterfall slammed into a hole in the ice. “If you go in the ‘cauldron of doom,’ you’re done,” Gadd said. “You can hit rocks, drown, or freeze to death. Above the cauldron, he and his climbing partner Sarah set up a belay station in an ice cave a little smaller than a phone booth.”
From there, he methodically picked his way up the route, stopping every few meters to add protection in the form of ice screws and climbing quick draws. One of the biggest challenges? Getting really, really wet.
“I was so close to the water, I could reach out and stick my ice tool in the Niagara Falls,” Gadd said. “At one point I was behind the water, climbing on ice that froze behind the falls. I got [a] whole lot of Niagara down my neck!”
That climb beat me up. I may have reached the top, but Niagara won the war
Gadd ascended the route three times, taking about an hour for each ascent. The line lies nearly perfectly on the American-Canadian border – a fitting location for Gadd, who is a citizen of both countries, and the perfect finish to an incredible year that saw him put up a new route on Helmcken Falls, climb ice in Kilimanjaro, and take home top honors at the Ouray Ice Festival.
So how did it feel to claim victory on top of Niagara? Actually, Will isn’t sure about the “victory.”
“That climb beat me up. I may have reached the top, but Niagara won the war. At the end of the day I was hypothermic. That waterfall did a lot more damage to me than I did to it!” Victory or not, Gadd accomplished one thing for sure – an historic ice climb on the world’s most iconic waterfall.
Source: Red Bull
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Speedriding The Rowel In Alaska
What a wild ride this is. Pro speedriders Andy Farrington, Ippo Fabbi, and Jon DeVore take on The Rowel, an incredible line from the top of a 9,000 foot peak deep in the mountains of Alaska. This line features every sort of terrain you could imagine, and these guys handle it all perfectly, while also getting some tricks in with the help of performance wings.
