How has skiing changed

AlexFogo85

Member
Aside from the rather obvious technical trick progression (more spins, more flips etc) how has skiing changed in style, features, media, and whatever else? I've noticed lately between watching a lot of different old edits and new edits just how different things were a few years ago in skiing.
 
Everything has changed. When the park trend really got rolling in the earl/mid 90s there were halfpipes starting to pop up everywhere. That was where it was going down. Straight skis, not even shaped, definitely not twins. People spinning the same way thr whole way down the pipe, alley oop, regular air or 5, alley oop etc. Ski patrol pulling passes for skiing through the pipe as their were signs saying snowboard only many places. Snowboarding was freestyle, skiing was racing and cruising. Before that if you got gnar on skis it was moguls.

Then it started growing more and becoming more accepted. y the late 90s I think everywhere allowed skiing in the parks though for the most part park skiers were goofy with the exception of some talent here and there.

Around that time was the way of snow blades. That brought freestyle "skiing" in. People were really starting to dial in some legitimate tricks n the park, hitting rails etc. You could ride backwards and everything was sweet.

Then the real twin tip revolution started at the very end of the 90s/early 2000s. That really started to cement skiing in as a sport that would stay and continue to grow. Though the tricks weren't as ridiculous as they are today, park skiing was a happening thing.

Then a few years later the next wave where lots of kids were starting to get into it. The parks were full of skiers on twins by 2005. At this point you could still tell a good skier by them having twins and their outerwear.(or at least to an extent). Skiers and boarders really bonded during this period and the park became a shared space. Filming was pretty common. A lot of people had a beat ass jvc camera to film some tricks with questionable style.

Then skiing started to get thug, the old school days were officially over. Technology was improving. A lot more footage was out there in general. Cameras became accessible to the point everyone had one. You could watch all kinds of edits and see get motivation to get down etc.

Then recently. Skiing STILL continued to grow. Freeskiing made it to the olympics. Everyone has twin tips even the little girl with hello kitty skis. Snowboarders and skiing are super close. The world hasn't ended. And drugs are still bad.
 
I think one of the biggest ones is style. Little things like just having the goggles on the outside of your helmet is hard to find in the park. Also urban is huge. More and more people are leaving the hill and filming entire segments and seasons of just urban.
 
Freeskier mag made a video on the early history, it's really cool.

[video]
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"Here's a lithograph of a skier doing a bomb drop"
 
parks are way less sketchy now. rails used to be super janky and like 5 feet off of the ground with no landing. jumps didn't match transitions more often than not and step downs were super common.
 
The biggest thing has already been touched on; saturation of cameras and how many people ski in front of one.

People think more about their skiing from a standpoint of how it will look on film to someone else (don't get me wrong, people have always skied to impress, but it was whoever happened to be riding the chair above them right that second), as opposed to what will feel good right in this moment. But, even that's now changing and people are filming less "gnarly" or tech stuff and more "this is how I ski on a regular day on a regular mountain with a regular park", which I think is really cool.

Newschoolers, and the internet in general has connected all of the little enclaves that popped up all over the world in the late 90's and early 00's and there's a lot less regionalism. I feel like it's a lot more likely for an average skier to pursue skiing in the summer and/or to travel to ski in new places, largely thanks to NS and the internet connecting likeminded people.

I guess to sum up a lot of what I've noticed as a guy who's 30 and a skier is that the changes in skiing reflect the larger changes in our world. People film everything they do and there's a desire to have a voice and to have other people hear it. And, the ski community has become global and much more integrated like most other aspects of life.

More specific to skiing is the fact that there's more specialization and "niche-ization" (which you can really say about all extreme...err....action sports....fuck those terms are painful to say, type, or hear. We gotta do better.) It used to be that the pros and top tier skiers came from race or mogul backgrounds, or at the very least, mountain hippy/ski enthusiast parents. Now, you see kids who's entry point is rail skiing which was unheard of even 15-20 years ago when a lot of slightly older people started to get into the park. Back then, most people spent a huge amount of time "just skiing" before approaching skiing like a skater approached skateboarding, now not at all. The pros and top-tier skiers of yesteryear jumped, hit rails, skied pipe, hit powder booters, competed, etc. Today, sure there's guys and gals who truly do it all and kill it, for the most part, people gravitate towards more specific elements, whether because of circumstance/access or interest.

There's a lot more stuff, and this is a cool thread. Looking forward to other (old) people's thoughts and I'll post more if I think of any.

OOH! Last thing: Number of people venturing beyond resort boundaries/touring equipment production and sales is basically a brand new phenomenon in the last 5-7 years.
 
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13113478:karlmarx said:
parks are way less sketchy now. rails used to be super janky and like 5 feet off of the ground with no landing. jumps didn't match transitions more often than not and step downs were super common.

For sure. It's a great trend the last 5-10 years. Rails are getting longer, more technical, and creative but lower to the ground.

The advanced rail line doesn't need to all be head height which is awesome.

Jump building has definitely improved a bunch and become more standard across the board. Still could use a lot of work though. Hoping the trend keeps moving until almost every park even small ones are built properly.

Casual, well said.
 
This pretty much sums it up.

Then
Or if you would prefer to look at it this way.

Then

725686.jpeg

Now

725685.jpeg
 
Some things change, but the important things stay the same.

For example, Line sold out its independent spirit, but at least we can take comfort in the knowledge that Tanner Hall always has been and will continue to be a first-class weenie.
 
well there was a time where hitting the big jumps in a park was a big deal.

and people didn't have this many tricks down.

every one had a couple of good tricks that they could do, but not like today where every one has the 4 sw 10, 3 doubles etc...

i remember this one guy had some sick 900 tails, this other one was the switch guy, this one had nose grabs down etc....

and mainly it was a much smaller community. you knew pretty much every one quickly and making a career out of it was not a goal for most skiers.

it was just for fun.

other than that i feel the spirit hasnt changed too much for most people.
 
13114808:DBH5601 said:
This pretty much sums it up.

Then
Or if you would prefer to look at it this way.

Then

View attachment 725686

Now

View attachment 725685

i hope this isn't actually the way you think about it, old school freestyle is so much more than ski ballet. a lot of those guys fucking sent it and were every bit as gnarly as the guys today. the style and tricks may have changed, but the mentality and badasstitude were the same.
 
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