0:01 Once Is Enough (unmarked) 0:17 The Fingers (unmarked) 0:34 Notch Chute 0:49 The Fingers (unmarked) 1:02 Dick’s Drop 1:27 Vista (unmarked) 1:42 Hell’s Delight 2:04 The Handrail (unmarked) 2:39 Top Of The Wall (unmarked) 2:50 Norm’s Nose 3:08 Ski School Chute (unmarked) 3:18 Upper Sisters Chute (unmarked) 3:35 Sister Chute 3:45 The Fingers (unmarked)
Love this vid. Not only are you accomplishing some great lines, but your camera work is excellent! You're showing where you should be looking when taking on the steeps and nailing it. So much better than clips with lower half of frame focused on skis, upper half the next 5 ft of down. Kudos.
Holy crap! I had the pleasure of being out in Kirkwood around the same time and never knew there was anything like this hiding around there! Thank you for showing us where some of the craziest chutes are and for having the guts to bomb them!!
By the way, I know you've been asked this before but what skis are you using? Being from Ohio, I have no experience with powder skis and even if I did, it wouldn't be on powder, which leads me to one more question: do they also carve ok on groomers? I don't ski out west as much as you but just enough that I've struggled through many powder days when I'm stuck on basically racing skis.
V.I.F. I have Blizzard Bonafides for most days, they are a 98 under foot so they do well on powder 1 ft and under and they carve like a beast on the groomers. I have Blizzard Zero Gs for ski touring and deep powder, but I have tried them on groomers well my other pair was in the shop. They are 108s with no metal edge, so you float on any powder, they do work on groomers but it’s a different experience. You need to be very good with your edging skills and you will have to suffer through an ice day. Having tried both pairs, I like the 98s better, for you I would recommend anything between 98 and 102, with a real edge and flat tails. That way you get high performance on the groomers at your home hill, and out west you can ski powder without a problem. It’s unlikely you’ll get snow deep enough to make those unusable. It’s not always 3 foot deep powder out there, sometimes they have ice days too.
Extreme Ryan Delena yeah believe me I've seen plenty of ice days out there too, but certainly want to be able to take advantage of the power days when they come. But that's really cool thanks for the advice
I did Once is Enough in March of 1999 (the only time I've been to Kirkwood). When I hit the open space, I hadn't prepared for the deeper snow and I exploded in a yard sale. lol. Took me a minute to find my buried skis. :)
Handrail looked like a "Do it, or Die Trying." You schussed it with no fear or trepidation. During the mid-eighty's when I lived on the South Shore Nevada side We'd go down to Kirkwood (My favorite) or up to Sugar Bowl over the Donner Summit. Both areas have some knarly chutes and, when the day is done you know you've skied your "money's worth!" I would've loved trying Handrail especially on a good snow day like you had in this video but, unfortunately I did not know where it was or even if it existed. Really nice video by the way I added a like and subscribed!
Thank you! I appreciate that a lot. Yeah Handrail lives below hell’s delight and good snow definitely helps take the sting off that gnarly spine. Sugar Bowl has been on my list for quite some time, I’d love to make it happen one of these years.
Nothing in the world beats Kirk on a powder day. Can't believe you skied these all on one trip. Took me years to figure out the names / locations and you checked off pretty much every classic.
That’s called The Handrail. It was definitely scary doing that for the first time. Guys who know it probably huck it no problem but it was intense having no idea what was coming next.
The thing with kirkwood is that the really steep stuff doesn't necessarily have that much vert to it, although there are definitely some very steep and technical parts and the terrain is generally pretty interesting and unique. If you head to Tahoe again and like this kinda weird and interesting terrain, definitely also check out sugar bowl and Alpine Meadows (btw they're in north tahoe and also may be a lil pricier...). Especially their upper mountain terrain is riddled with intense steeps and sometimes extremely technical terrain, although technical stuff will be all over the place for you to explore. The higher elevation terrain, while maybe a little closer to the classic big mountain stuff, is still very unique and interesting with some strange features here and there (especially at sugar bowl. Check our sugar bowl's palisades), and the steep terrain is justified with some more vertical height.
I hit dicks drop on a 172 snowboard. Tail clipped the right wall on the dog leg. I’ll never forget that run. Gnarliest inbound terrain I’ve ever been on
Crazy that thing is on the map. You can see the boot marks of all the people who drop the gully not knowing where it goes and hiked out when they see the exit.
It’s on the lower section of Thunder Saddle to the right through a patch of trees you’ll see a few gullies. Then there’s an unmistakable skinny ridge between 2 of them.
This is amazing footage Ryan! OutsideTV is working with the Adventure Film Festival and started our own Adventure Filmmakers challenge! To compete, create a Campfire channel and post your film here: campfire.outsidetv.com/home Once you have created an account, more likes=MORE POINTS! If you win, you will be flown out to the festival and featured on OTV! If you have any questions, click this link: campfire.outsidetv.com/campaignleaders/affchallenge
0:01 Once Is Enough (unmarked)
0:17 The Fingers (unmarked)
0:34 Notch Chute
0:49 The Fingers (unmarked)
1:02 Dick’s Drop
1:27 Vista (unmarked)
1:42 Hell’s Delight
2:04 The Handrail (unmarked)
2:39 Top Of The Wall (unmarked)
2:50 Norm’s Nose
3:08 Ski School Chute (unmarked)
3:18 Upper Sisters Chute (unmarked)
3:35 Sister Chute
3:45 The Fingers (unmarked)
Wow thanks for this!
The Handrail looks insane!
Where can u find the handrail
Love this vid. Not only are you accomplishing some great lines, but your camera work is excellent! You're showing where you should be looking when taking on the steeps and nailing it. So much better than clips with lower half of frame focused on skis, upper half the next 5 ft of down. Kudos.
Holy crap! I had the pleasure of being out in Kirkwood around the same time and never knew there was anything like this hiding around there! Thank you for showing us where some of the craziest chutes are and for having the guts to bomb them!!
noernqknonepq thanks man, you just have to poke around!
WOW, I didn't realize Kirkwood was so crazy. It looks beautiful
V.I.F. Yup, Everything in between the left side of Vista Ridge and the right side of Wagon Wheel Bowl is freerider paradise.
By the way, I know you've been asked this before but what skis are you using? Being from Ohio, I have no experience with powder skis and even if I did, it wouldn't be on powder, which leads me to one more question: do they also carve ok on groomers? I don't ski out west as much as you but just enough that I've struggled through many powder days when I'm stuck on basically racing skis.
V.I.F. I have Blizzard Bonafides for most days, they are a 98 under foot so they do well on powder 1 ft and under and they carve like a beast on the groomers. I have Blizzard Zero Gs for ski touring and deep powder, but I have tried them on groomers well my other pair was in the shop. They are 108s with no metal edge, so you float on any powder, they do work on groomers but it’s a different experience. You need to be very good with your edging skills and you will have to suffer through an ice day. Having tried both pairs, I like the 98s better, for you I would recommend anything between 98 and 102, with a real edge and flat tails. That way you get high performance on the groomers at your home hill, and out west you can ski powder without a problem. It’s unlikely you’ll get snow deep enough to make those unusable. It’s not always 3 foot deep powder out there, sometimes they have ice days too.
Extreme Ryan Delena yeah believe me I've seen plenty of ice days out there too, but certainly want to be able to take advantage of the power days when they come. But that's really cool thanks for the advice
@@extreme_ryan_delena dont forget the palisades
Title of the video does not disappoint; this was some sick skiing! Thanks for the tour.
I did Once is Enough in March of 1999 (the only time I've been to Kirkwood). When I hit the open space, I hadn't prepared for the deeper snow and I exploded in a yard sale. lol. Took me a minute to find my buried skis. :)
Sounds gnarly!
Dude you are a maniac!! Awesome footage!
bill Gabert thanks man!
Nicely done!
Never knew the name of any of those spots but I've skied most. That first chute is so much scarier than it looks in the video.
Lol it was tight that year!
i was here last week in horrible icy conditions just to watch this
Snow looks amazing on this trip
Handrail looked like a "Do it, or Die Trying." You schussed it with no fear or trepidation. During the mid-eighty's when I lived on the South Shore Nevada side We'd go down to Kirkwood (My favorite) or up to Sugar Bowl over the Donner Summit. Both areas have some knarly chutes and, when the day is done you know you've skied your "money's worth!" I would've loved trying Handrail especially on a good snow day like you had in this video but, unfortunately I did not know where it was or even if it existed. Really nice video by the way I added a like and subscribed!
Thank you! I appreciate that a lot. Yeah Handrail lives below hell’s delight and good snow definitely helps take the sting off that gnarly spine. Sugar Bowl has been on my list for quite some time, I’d love to make it happen one of these years.
Nothing in the world beats Kirk on a powder day.
Can't believe you skied these all on one trip. Took me years to figure out the names / locations and you checked off pretty much every classic.
wow! great skiing and beautiful day as well.
Bruh, That knife edge line on the top was sick, not sure of the name, though the drop off either side look like gloom and doom! Mega Props!
That’s called The Handrail. It was definitely scary doing that for the first time. Guys who know it probably huck it no problem but it was intense having no idea what was coming next.
Wow... The carves look good and looks like some pow💨🤑
Logan Miller oh yeah! 11 inches overnight
Extreme Ryan Delena beautiful
Sick lines! Slaying them with style.
Thank you gotta try and find some of these
Looks like a killer resort
Nothing at kirkwood is longer than 100' or steep... They really need to open "The Cirque"
Wow, that video was amazing. str8 gnar
Thanks man glad you liked it
Awesome video dude! Looks fun!
Had to check out your video with the most views 👏
Yup lol for whatever reason this is the one. I suppose not a bad one
Awesome video!
How sick is Kirk actually? Cheers from Europe bro
Absolute Ninja
Awesome!!!
Dang! I ski Colorado and most of my friends take trips to Utah and Tahoe. Almost all of them say Kirkwood is lame. They are lame!!! I’d ski there!!
The thing with kirkwood is that the really steep stuff doesn't necessarily have that much vert to it, although there are definitely some very steep and technical parts and the terrain is generally pretty interesting and unique. If you head to Tahoe again and like this kinda weird and interesting terrain, definitely also check out sugar bowl and Alpine Meadows (btw they're in north tahoe and also may be a lil pricier...). Especially their upper mountain terrain is riddled with intense steeps and sometimes extremely technical terrain, although technical stuff will be all over the place for you to explore. The higher elevation terrain, while maybe a little closer to the classic big mountain stuff, is still very unique and interesting with some strange features here and there (especially at sugar bowl. Check our sugar bowl's palisades), and the steep terrain is justified with some more vertical height.
You da man!
I hit dicks drop on a 172 snowboard. Tail clipped the right wall on the dog leg. I’ll never forget that run. Gnarliest inbound terrain I’ve ever been on
Crazy that thing is on the map. You can see the boot marks of all the people who drop the gully not knowing where it goes and hiked out when they see the exit.
@@extreme_ryan_delena I was almost one of them but there was another dude there who reassured me I could get through
@@hoodratthings4088 haha I’ve had those moments
how difficult is notch chute. I've done the wall on several occasions and I'm wondering if I can do notch chute?
AJB the wall is definitely harder than Notch Chute, you could side slip it all if need be.
How do you find The Handrail? More specific is better, thanks
It’s on the lower section of Thunder Saddle to the right through a patch of trees you’ll see a few gullies. Then there’s an unmistakable skinny ridge between 2 of them.
This is amazing footage Ryan! OutsideTV is working with the Adventure Film Festival and started our own Adventure Filmmakers challenge! To compete, create a Campfire channel and post your film here: campfire.outsidetv.com/home Once you have created an account, more likes=MORE POINTS! If you win, you will be flown out to the festival and featured on OTV! If you have any questions, click this link: campfire.outsidetv.com/campaignleaders/affchallenge
That first clip woah
That thing is skinny huh
💞Wow💗💗💗💗💗💗💙💗
Good skiing my dude; been to Kirkwood before. Where exactly are the Fingers if I'm looking at the trail map? The more specific the better :)
KMarble between Lost Cabin and Cliff Chute. They actually exit into Cliff Chute.
Just above your wrist?
@@chrispykelly haha
Where do you find all of these. I ask everyone I see for good chutes but nobody mentions these?
I followed some dude on Vimeo who posted about a bunch of these.
Not even a GoPro can make any of these shots not look steep and gnarly
Hey this jonathan from our psia level one exam this my ski channel
You guys are ski instructors?
V.I.F. Yup
Looks so fun! Where are you from?
Emily Smith Sudbury Massachusetts believe it or not
This is Mammoth, not Kirkwood, go there instead.
Huh?