Words and Photos by Chris O’Connell
		
		
	
	
	In
my 15 years in the ski industry, it has become easy to recognize true
talent when I see it. Travis Steeger was a shinning star. His sponsor
me video was the best I have ever seen come across my desk at Armada:
double front flips off 50 foot cliffs, 40 foot cab 900s off cliffs with
his jacket open?!? His sponsor me video was more entertaining than many
pro skier’s video parts. We signed him up immediately.
	Travis was a breath of fresh air in the ski industry and his potential was limitless.
	Travis’
life ended too soon, victim of a hit and run in Fernie, BC while
crossing the street early Sunday morning. The car didn’t stop at the
cross walk and Travis was taken from us.
	It was Travis’ birthday that night. He was 19 years young.
	Having
just spent time with him on a trip with him at Baldface Lodge, I was
privileged to get to know him. He was the rock star of one of the
powder capitals of the world, Nelson, BC. I never met anyone there that
didn’t love him. His skiing to a casual observer surely would have
appeared crazy and maybe even a bit loose canon, but he was calculated
and smart, and so entertaining to watch.
	Travis
loved snow and he was never cold, he was a true powder child. He had to
tow out of Baldface behind a snowmobile for 15 miles in the freezing
dark, when we got to the bottom, I expected him to be so beat up and
bummed, but he was so stoked. “That was awesome!” He was just beginning
to experience the life of a sponsored skier and loving every minute of
it.
	He was a quick learner and so stoked to be in the
mountains. He learned handplants in one day with Riley and JP, and
apparently he just did a switch backflip to 180 to front flip off a
natural cliff, which has never been done before.
	Travis was
nice enough to drive me 4 hours to Spokane on a very snowy night last
month just so I could make my plane to fly home from Nelson. I got to
learn quite a bit about him on that drive, he had decided that he would
study medicine in University and wanted to be a doctor so he could
travel the world and help people without access to good medicine. Med
school would have been really easy for him cause he was so damn smart.
Some of his family friends said he was a certified genius. But he
really just loved hucking big cliffs into the famous powder of the
Kootenays and skiing lines at Whitewater, the local hill. He was
already a Nelson local legend at age 18. We talked for four hours
straight on that drive and our 45 minutes detained in the US Customs
Office, and we didn’t speak much about skiing at all. In the ski world,
that’s pretty rare, most 18 year old sponsored ski athletes don’t have
much to say about anything else but skiing. Travis had opinions on the
world, he read novels, and worked on the biggest puzzles I have ever
seen in his spare time.
	Travis
will always be a part of the Armada Family and we will miss him dearly.
We send our love and heartfelt regards to all of Travis’ Friends in
Nelson and his family in Ymir.
	May the Fresh Breeze that is Travis Steeger blow through the Kootenay Mountains of British Columbia forever.
RIP man