Posts Tagged ‘EmberPhoto’

Turning the Corner – Waves and Winter

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

We’ve turned the corner. That crisp feel is in the air, the wet chill early in the morning and evening. Daytime 70s are diving into the mid-30s in the mountains at night, and the frost is getting heavier. Feeling winter on the way? The first magazine issues are out for the season, films are making the opening rounds in another month or so, it’s all just around the corner. Here’s a little fall feel from Brian Mohr to drive those dreams in the meantime…

Waves and Winter
by Brian Mohr and Emily Johnson

Our thoughts often go to the deepest, fluffiest powder days when we watch the tops of breaking waves get blown back to sea by a strong offshore breeze. Maybe the wind reminds us of Old Man Winter’s legendary howl and roar. Or perhaps surfing among these waves – floating in that fluid ocean as the spray of peeling waves rains on our heads – gives us the same feelings we have when gliding in a snowstorm down a powder-coated mountainside.

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Ultimately, it is the simple beauty witnessed on both occasions that makes the connection for us. Be it the the wind-blown spray of breaking waves or the billowing clouds of snow behind the descending skier/rider, there is something undeniably surreal and powerful and spectacular going on here…

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Here’s to a fun fall surf season…and an snowy winter ahead!

Brian and Emily
Moretown, VT
www.EmberPhoto.com

Skiing Elbert

Monday, August 17th, 2009

From the depths of the Himalaya with Dave Watson, Karhu friend Brian Mohr switches gears for some more summer turns in the Rockies…

Skiing Elbert
by Brian Mohr/EmberPhoto

It’s been over a month now since we climbed and skied Colorado’s highest 14er, Mount Elbert, a peak Emily and I hadn’t skied since the late 90s when we still lived in Colorado. Elbert’s north facing drainage is a classic and relatively straight-forward descent, and it tends to hold a long, skiable line well into July. So back in late June, while traveling the scenic route from the Front Range to a wedding in Paonia, we couldn’t resist the idea of skiing Elbert again. Driving through Leadville at sunrise, we scouted Elbert’s north side from a distance. It appeared that there was just barely enough snow to string together a solid descent from the very summit, down along the summit ridge, and over into the depths of the mountain’s north facing drainage.

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With sneakers on our feet and our skis on our backs, we cruised up the mountain via the well-worn trail that climbs away from Half Moon Creek, and by late morning, we were on the summit. We figured we had at least an hour to spare before thunderstorms would become a threat, so we soaked up the clear views across the heart of Colorado’s mountain country.

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A sandwich and then a few passing rain drops had us swapping sneakers for ski boots, and for the next thirty minutes, we savored what would turn out to be our last ski descent of the season. Incredibly, the snow burned out along only one 50m stretch below the summit ridge, and we were able to ski a beautiful line nearly to treeline.

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Think snow.

-Brian

Extra Deep

Monday, July 6th, 2009

From Seattle to Boston, the summer heat wave is in effect, forcing us to log miles on the road and trails in the cooler weather of dawn or dusk. Time for a flashback to cool down…

Extra Deep
by Brian Mohr and Emily Johnson / EmberPhoto.com

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We spent some great time with the next generation of powder hounds this past winter in Vermont, including the snow-loving offspring of Tangie and Terry Barbour, head of Vermont’s Mad River Glen Ski School. Considering the Barbour family’s legendary enthusiasm for skiing, no matter what the weather or snow conditions, it’s no surprise that 7 year old Turner (in the white helmet/red jacket) and 11 year old Carson (black helmet) have become some of our favorite ski partners.  If there is one thing that became clear this season, it was this: skiing powder with kids that know how to ski powder is incredibly fun…unforgettably fun. They seem to love it more than any of us.  And when it’s waist deep for us, it’s over their heads…  More than anything, when the powder turns to edgable ice, breakable crust or a patchwork of dirty corn, grass and moss, their enthusiasm remains unparalleled.

We can all learn something from these Barbour kids…  They’ve got a younger sister, too.  And they just let her off the leash. So stay tuned.

- Brian and Emily

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Grass Skiing 101

Monday, June 15th, 2009

A little lighthearted fun for Monday stoke from our friends at EmberPhoto in Vermont. We’re not that desperate yet, but we will be come September…

Fast grass in the Greens

Fast grass in the Greens

Grass Skiing 101
by Brian Mohr and Emily Johnson / EmberPhoto.com
It all starts with your favorite pair of old, dusty boards…and the right attitude.  Then…
1. Wait for some light rain;
2. Head for an older ski area trail with an especially thick coat of moss and grass, and few, if any, rocks exposed… somewhere in Vermont or New England, ideally;
3. Try not to turn much.
-Brian and Emily

Pedal Powered Skiing

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Coming off a long weekend with beautiful weather, it’s fun to reflect on taking an adventure at a different pace. Wrapping up the ski season from the East, Brian Mohr sent us a great story on spring biking and skiing in the Green Mountains:

Pedal Powered Skiing
by Brian Mohr

Earlier this spring, with our options for skiing out the back door melting away, we loaded our skis, poles, day packs and boots into our bike trailers. About an hour later, we’d be stashing our bikes in the woods and skinning toward the base of our local Mad River Glen ski area. We’d spend several hours skiing a mix of lift-served and sidecountry terrain, catch up with a few friends, and when the shadows chased us off the mountain, we’d enjoy a bonus off-piste ski descent to our bikes in the woods. Back on the bikes, our soon-to-be-cycling-season legs appreciated the early spring warm up. We’d spot crocuses in the valley blooming along the edge of snow patches, hear our first peepers of the season and watch the sun dip behind the Green Mountain Divide along the final uphill approach to our home. More than anything, it just felt good to spend the afternoon out skiing in the big mountains, without having to drive.

On the bikes, the trip (60-70 minutes) takes approx. 45 minutes longer than it does by car (20 minutes)… no big deal. We once pulled off a 3-day pedal-powered ski trip in the Rockies, biking a little, skiing a lot. Now, with gas prices climbing (finally!), glaciers melting (not cool) and fossil fuel combustion causing all sorts of global problems (oil spills, air/water pollution, war), it’s time for something different…

Imagine… 2 weeks, countless peaks and a great variety of ski descents, pedalling bikes primarily to move to new trailheads and terrain every so often, or to roll into town for some supplies or a lil’ culture. A SKI trip, not a bike trip… starting and ending right here at our home in Vermont. It would be an epic, human-powered skiing adventure.

For now, here are a few images that might inspire you to get out on your own pedal powered skiing adventures…

Think snow!

Brian and Emily
EmberPhoto.com
Moretown, VT

Emily Johnson and Peter Wadsworth cycle through Vermont's Mad River Valley, en route to Mad River Glen.

Emily Johnson and Peter Wadsworth cycle through Vermont's Mad River Valley, en route to Mad River Glen.

Read more…

EmberPhoto on The Dirtbag Diaries

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

For the past two years, writer Fitz Cahall has been bringing his favorite outdoor stories to the world via the Dirtbag Diaries. A mixed media of podcast, slideshow and more, the Dirtbag Diaries this week covers Karhu friends Brian Mohr and Emily Johnson of EmberPhoto, with an episode on their Rio Baker expedition to Patagonia. We’ve published a number of posts from Brian and Emily’s trips to Patagonia on the blog, and it’s cool to hear their take in a new form:

From the Dirtbag Diaries – The Adventurer’s Parable
Today’s episode has it all. Steep descents. A battle to save South America’s pristine rivers. Backyard adventure. Eye candy. Photographers and activists Brian Mohr and Emily Johnson present stories and photos from wild ski terrain and their struggle to become a piece of the conservation puzzle rather than a cog in the problem. If adventure is the reflection of the human spirit, do we need to travel half a world away to find it in distant ranges, wild rivers and unpaved roads? And if the very act of traveling harms the places you hold dear, is going justifiable? The answers to those head jarring questions don’t always come easy.

The Dirtbag Diaries: The Adventurers Parable

The Dirtbag Diaries: The Adventurer's Parable

Click over to the Dirtbag Diaries for the podcast and slideshow.

Winter Waves

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Vermont’s recent thaw has skiers like Brian Mohr contemplating the transition between seasons and the similarities between two seasonal passions. Here’s a little dispatch on good snow past and waves to come:

Winter Waves

Winter is an endless source of photographic inspiration and natural beauty.

Recently, while waiting in line for first chair at Alta, on a especially deep and fluffy powder day, we were lucky enough to connect with our friend Dylan Crossman – who grew up skiing in Vermont’s Mad River Valley. We enjoyed most of the day at Alta together, and then set off ski touring into the surrounding mountains with just a few hours of remaining daylight.  The sun was playing hide and seek with us all day long, but it emerged for just a few fleeting moments as we dropped in for one of our last runs of the day.

This photo of Dylan (first image) reinforces my belief that powder skiing and ocean wave surfing are deeply intertwined.  The billowing snow behind Dylan could easily be the crest of a breaking a wave getting peeled back by an offshore breeze (second image).

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What a beautiful world this is…

-Brian

White Mountain Wandering

Monday, April 21st, 2008

With longer sunlight and warm temps, the East Coast corn season is fully in session. Brian Mohr checks in from the White Mountains.

Ahhh spring! Barely fifty miles east of Vermont’s Green Mountains lie the snowcapped ranges and mountain clusters that characterize New Hampshire’s White Mountains.


(Dave Bouchard looking out across the options. Photos by EmberPhoto)

The Whites are significantly higher than the Greens, with the region’s highest summit, the infamous Mount Washington, topping out at 6288′ – nearly 2000′ higher than Vermont’s highest. Top to bottom descents of over 4000′ vertical lure many skiers to the Whites, while an abundance of challenging alpine terrain, open slide paths and snow-filled cirques (e.g. Tuckerman’s Ravine) offers a nice change of scenery for the forest-dwelling Northeastern skier. Mid-winter, the best ski terrain in the highest elevations of the Whites is often plagued by high winds and dangerous – if not totally unskiable – snow conditions. That is not to say that you can’t score an incredible day of skiing here in mid-January. However, come early April, when the warmer days of spring begin to consolidate the snowpack, the Whites come into their element.

Although there were still 100″ of settled snowpack at treeline in Vermont earlier this month, a stretch of warm, clear days and cool, clear nights made it impossible for many to resist the lure of Whites. Personally, I kicked off the spring with a fun, solo traverse of a good stretch of the region’s Presidential Range (from Castle Ravine to Franklin Brook), scoring several runs of beautiful, untracked corn along the way. In the days that followed, with bluebird weather prevailing, I connected with various friends. We shared some truly adventurous turns in some seldom visited places, as well as some great descents right off the popular summit flanks of Mount Washington.

Then, just a few days ago, I finally got to connect with Karhu skier Dave Bouchard, of Hinesburg, Vermont. Always a joy to ski with, Dave recently scored first place in the men’s telemark division of Mad River Glen’s annual Triple Crown. Busy all week as a school teacher and busy at home with two growing kids, Dave was psyched to have a whole day to go ski. So we made the most of it, with a 5am start here in Vermont and a tour that included some of our favorite White Mountain gems.

By 9am, we were up high on the White Mountain divide, dropping into our first of many fine lines we planned to ski. A thin coat of fresh snow that had plastered itself to the springtime base was still skiing dry and nearly powder-like in the shadier aspects, while corn was already taking shape in wind-scoured zones and gullies catching the direct morning rays. By noontime, the fresh snow in the direct sun was getting sticky and best avoided, while anything else in the sun was delectable.

After another great day in the mountains, we spotted this beautiful little fox back at the trailhead.

Back home in Vermont, most of the ski areas are now shut down for the season, but an impressive snowpack leaves us with another 1-2 weeks of top to bottom skiing. We’ll likely be hopping on the bikes a bit, too – but with the skis in tow – to access some of this skiing, so stay tuned…

Brian
Moretown, VT
EmberPhoto

Thank You Old Man Winter

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

After an epic weekend in the Northwest, a dispatch from EmberPhoto on New England’s winter, still going strong:

Old Man Winter has been especially generous with us here in the Northeast this winter, and although spring is creeping into the valleys and up the warmer hillsides, Old Man Winter seems to have no intentions of letting up. Over the last two weeks, the snow stake that marks the depth of settled snowpack at treeline on Vermont’s highest summit, Mount Mansfield, topped the 100-inch mark! And a weekend storm pushed us even closer to the 12-foot limit of the old wooden stake – to 110 inches. To put this in perspective, a snow stake reading of 110 inches indicates that we are enjoying 40-50% more snowpack in the mountains around here than we normally do in late March. For this, we can thank the steady string of storms that Old Man Winter has been throwing our way since October.

The storm from a week ago Friday (we’ve been calling it “Really Good Friday”) not only produced 10-20″ of Vermont Grade A powder, and thus some fine powder skiing…


(Photos courtesy of EmberPhoto.com)

…but it also cushioned the snowpack that had been crusted over in most areas a few days earlier. With the Really Good Friday storm, and then another 6-8 inches last weekend, we’ve been able to take full advantage of our unusually deep snowpack, and ski safely and smoothly into many beautiful gullies, creekbeds and alpine zones that during many winters don’t get a chance to fill in.

We’ve had little new snow this week, but temps are preserving the fresh snow up high. Down low and in the sun, the maple sap is running and the corn cycle is in effect. As nice as the powder touring high in the mountains has been, we’ve also been scoring some beautiful sunset corn runs in our local farm fields with the XCD skis… We step into our skis on the porch, climb through a beautiful hardwood glade, and slide into one of many pastures that leans toward the setting sun and the higher Green Mountains across the valley…

Spring approaches, but the prospect of another dose of Vermont Grade A is still there. Last early April, Old Man Winter blessed us with over six feet of snow in the mountains. By morning, we were skiing powder under the shelter of the forest canopy. By evening, we were carving sunset turns in the alpine, in the calm before the next storm.



Maybe he’s is the same mood this year. We will soon find out…

Happy spring!
Brian and Emily
Green Mountains, Vermont
March 26, 2008

Link: Mount Mansfield Snow Stake

Vermonters – Wild People, Wild Places Slideshows

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

This week and next, EmberPhoto presents two more shows of their Wild People, Wild Places Slideshow Series. For beautiful photography and inspiring backcountry travel, these shows can’t be missed (plus a chance to win some new Karhu skis).

SHOW #5: “SAILING AND SKIING ICELAND: A Backcountry Skiing Adventure”
When: Thursday, Feb 7, 2008 at 7:00pm (show goes til 8:30pm)
Where: UVM’s Billing’s / CC Theatre – Burlington, VT

Cost: FREE (Raffle tickets for sale $5 – Proceeds to benefit conservation efforts in Iceland’s West Fjords)
Sponsors/Prizes: Outdoor Gear Exchange, Patagonia Inc, Karhu, Garmont USA, Life Link, Mountain Hardwear, Backcountry Magazine, Vermont Sports, Mad River Glen, Isis, Ibex, VT Artisan Coffee and Tea, Bumble Bar and the Green Mountain Club
More info here: EmberPhoto

SHOW #6: “SAILING AND SKIING ICELAND: A Backcountry Skiing Adventure”
When: Wednesday, Feb 13th, 2008 at 7:00pm (show goes til 8:30pm)
Where: Inn at Long Trail – Route 4 (between Killington and Pico)

Cost: FREE (Raffle tickets for sale $5 – Proceeds to benefit conservation efforts in Iceland’s West Fjords)
Sponsors/Prizes: Mountain Travelers, Patagonia Inc, Karhu, Garmont USA, Life Link, Mountain Hardwear, Backcountry Magazine, Vermont Sports, Mad River Glen, Isis, Ibex, VT Artisan Coffee and Tea, Bumble Bar and the Green Mountain Club
More info here: EmberPhoto