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WhoMike Giorgio, Vice President and General Manager of Stowe Mountain, VermontRecorded onOctober 8, 2025About StoweClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: Vail Resorts, which also owns:Located in: Stowe, VermontYear founded: 1934Pass affiliations:* Epic Pass: unlimited access* Epic Local Pass: unlimited access with holiday blackouts* Epic Northeast Value Pass: 10 days with holiday blackouts* Epic Northeast Midweek Pass: 5 midweek days with holiday blackouts* Access on Epic Day Pass All and 32 Resort tiers* Ski Vermont 4 Pass – up to one day, with blackouts* Ski Vermont Fifth Grade Passport – 3 days, with blackoutsClosest neighboring U.S. ski areas: Smugglers' Notch (ski-to or 40-ish-minute drive in winter, when route 108 is closed over the notch), Bolton Valley (:45), Cochran's (:50), Mad River Glen (:55), Sugarbush (:56)Base elevation: 1,265 feet (at Toll House double)Summit elevation: 3,625 feet (top of the gondola), 4,395 feet at top of Mt. MansfieldVertical drop: 2,360 feet lift-served, 3,130 feet hike-toSkiable acres: 485Average annual snowfall: 314 inchesTrail count: 116 (16% beginner, 55% intermediate, 29% advanced)Lift count: 12 (1 eight-passenger gondola, 1 six-passenger gondola, 1 six-pack, 3 high-speed quads, 1 fixed-grip quad, 1 triple, 2 doubles, 2 carpets)Why I interviewed himThere is no Aspen of the East, but if I had to choose an Aspen of the East, it would be Stowe. And not just because Aspen Mountain and Stowe offer a similar fierce-down, with top-to-bottom fall-line zippers and bumpy-bumps spliced by massive glade pockets. Not just because each ski area rises near the far end of densely bunched resorts that the skier must drive past to reach them. Not just because the towns are similarly insular and expensive and tucked away. Not just because the wintertime highway ends at both places, an anachronistic act of surrender to nature from a mechanized world accustomed to fencing out the seasons. And not just because each is a cultural stand-in for mechanized skiing in a brand-obsessed, half-snowy nation that hates snow and is mostly filled with non-skiers who know nothing about the activity other than the fact that it exists. Everyone knows about Aspen and Stowe even if they'll never ski, in the same way that everyone knows about LeBron James even if they've never watched basketball.All of that would be sufficient to make the Stowe-is-Aspen-East argument. But the core identity parallel is one that threads all these tensions while defying their assumed outcome. Consider the remoteness of 1934 Stowe and 1947 Aspen, two mountains in the pre-snowmaking, pre-interstate era, where cutting a ski area only made sense because that's where it snowed the most. Both grew in similar fashion. First slowly toward the summit with surface lifts and mile-long single chairs crawling up the incline. Then double chairs and gondolas and snowguns and detachable chairlifts. A ski area for the town evolves into a ski area for the world. Hotels a la luxe at the base, traffic backed up to the interstate, corporate owners and $261 lift tickets.That sounds like a formula for a ruined world. But Stowe the ski area, like Aspen Mountain the ski area, has never lost its wild soul. Even buffed out and six-pack equipped and Epic Pass-enabled, Stowe remains a hell of a mountain, one of the best in New England, one of my favorite anywhere. With its monster snowfalls, its endless and perfectly spaced glades, its never-groomed expert zones, its sprawling footprint tucked beneath the Mansfield summit, its direct access to rugged and forbidding backcountry, Stowe, perhaps the most western-like mountain in the East, remains a skier's mountain, a fierce and humbling proving ground, an any-skier's destination not because of its trimmings, but because of the Christmas tree itself.Still, Stowe will never be Aspen, because Stowe does not sit at 8,000 feet and Stowe does not have three accessory ski areas and Stowe the Town does not grid from the lift base like Aspen the Town but rather lies eight miles down the road. Also Stowe is owned by Vail Resorts, and can you just imagine? But in a cultural moment that assumes ski area ruination-by-the-consolidation-modernization-mega-passification axis-of-mainstreaming, Aspen and Stowe tell mirrored versions of a more nuanced story. Two ski areas, skinned in the digital-mechanical infrastructure that modernity demands, able to at once accommodate the modern skier and the ancient mountain, with all of its quirks and character. All of its amazing skiing.What we talked aboutStowe the Legend; Vail Resorts' leadership carousel; ascending to ski area leadership without on-mountain experience; Mount Brighton, Michigan and Midwest skiing; struggles at Paoli Peaks, Indiana; how the Sunrise six-pack upgrade of the old Mountain triple changed the mountain; whether the Four Runner quad could ever become a six-pack; considering the future of the Lookout Double and Mansfield Gondola; who owns the land in and around the ski area; whether Stowe has terrain expansion potential; the proposed Smugglers' Notch gondola connection and whether Vail would ever buy Smuggs; “you just don't understand how much is here until you're here”; why Stowe only claims 485 acres of skiable terrain; protecting the Front Four; extending Stowe's season last spring; snowmaking in a snowbelt; the impact and future of paid parking; on-mountain bed-base potential; Epic Friend 50 percent off lift tickets; and Stowe locals and the Epic Pass.What I got wrongOn detailsI noted that one of my favorite runs was not a marked run at all: the terrain beneath the Lookout double chair. In fact, most of the trail beneath this mile-plus-long lift is a market run called, uh, “Lookout.” So I stand corrected. However, the trailmap makes this full-throttle, narrow bumper – which feels like skiing on a rising tide – look wide, peaceful, and groomable. It is none of those things, at least for its first third or so.On skiable acres* I said that Killington claimed “like 1,600 acres” of terrain – the exact claimed number is 1,509 acres.* I said that Mad River Glen claimed far fewer skiable acres than it probably could, but I was thinking of an out-of-date stat. The mountain claims just 115 acres of trails – basically nothing for a 2,000-vertical-foot mountain, but also “800 acres of tree-skiing access.” The number listed on the Pass Smasher Deluxe is 915 acres.On season closingsI intimated that Stowe had always closed the third weekend in April. That appears to be mostly true for the past two-ish decades, which is as far back as New England Ski History has records. The mountain did push late once, however, in 2007, and closed early during the horrible no-snow winter of 2011-12 (April 1), and the Covid-is-here-to-kill-us-all shutdown of 2020 (March 14).On doing better prepI asked whether Stowe had considered making its commuter bus free, but it, um, already is. That's called Reeserch, Folks.On lift ticket ratesI claimed that Stowe's top lift ticket price would drop from $239 last year to $235 this coming season, but that's inaccurate. Upon further review, the peak walk-up rate appears to be increasing to $261 this coming winter:Which means Vail's record of cranking Stowe lift ticket rates up remains consistent:On opening hoursI said that the lifts at Stowe sometimes opened at “7:00 or 7:30,” but the earliest ski lift currently opens at 8:00 most mornings (the Over Easy transit gondola opens at 7:30). The Fourrunner quad used to open at 7:30 a.m. on weekends and holidays. I'm not sure when mountain ops changed that. Here's the lift schedule clipped from the circa 2018 trailmap:On Mount Brighton, Michigan's supposed trashheap legacyI'd read somewhere, sometime, that Mount Brighton had been built on dirt moved to make way for Interstate 96, which bores across the state about a half mile north of the ski area. The timelines match, as this section of I-96 was built between 1956 and '57, just before Brighton opened in 1960. This circa 1962 article from The Livingston Post, a local paper, fails to mention the source of the dirt, leaving me uncertain as to whether or not the hill is related to the highway:Why you should ski StoweFrom my April 10 visit last winter, just cruising mellow, low-angle glades nearly to the base:I mean, the place is just:I love it, Man. My top five New England mountains, in no particular order, are Sugarbush, Stowe, Jay, Smuggs, and Sugarloaf. What's best on any given day depends on conditions and crowding, but if you only plan to ski the East once, that's your list.Podcast NotesOn Stowe being the last 1,000-plus-vertical-foot Vermont ski area that I featured on the podYou can view the full podcast catalogue here. But here are the past Vermont eps:* Killington & Pico – 2019 | 2023 | 2025* Stratton 2024* Okemo 2023* Middlebury Snowbowl 2023* Mount Snow 2020 | 2023* Bromley 2022* Jay Peak 2022 | 2020* Smugglers' Notch 2021* Bolton Valley 2021* Hermitage Club 2020* Sugarbush 2020 with current president John Hammond | 2020 with past owner Win Smith* Mad River Glen 2020* Magic Mountain 2019 | 2020* Burke 2019On Stowe having “peers, but no betters” in New EnglandWhile Stowe doesn't stand out in any one particular statistical category, the whole of the place stacks up really well to the rest of New England - here's a breakdown of the 63 public ski areas that spin chairlifts across the six-state region:On the Front Four ski runsThe “Front Four” are as synonymous with Stowe as the Back Bowls are with Vail Mountain or Corbet's Couloir is with Jackson Hole. These Stowe trails are steep, narrow, double-plus-fall-line bangers that, along with Castlerock at Sugarbush and Paradise at Mad River Glen, are among the most challenging runs in New England.The problem is determining which of the double-blacks spiderwebbing off the top of Fourrunner are part of the Front Four. Officially, the designation has always bucketed National, Liftline, Goat, and Starr together, but Bypass, Haychute, and Lookout could sub in most days. Credit to Stowe for keeping these wild trails intact for going on a century, but what I said about them “not being for the masses” on the podcast wasn't quite accurate, as the lower portions of many - especially Liftline - are wide, often groomed, and not particularly treacherous. The best end-to-end trail is Goat, which is insanely steep and narrow up top. Here's part of Goat's middle-to-lower section, which is mellower but a good portrayal of New England bumpy, exposed-dirt-and-rocks gnar, especially at the :19 mark:The most glorious ego boost (or ego check) is the few hundred vertical feet of Liftline directly below Fourrunner. Sound on for scrapey-scrape:When the cut trails get icy, you can duck into the adjacent glades, most of which are unmarked but skiable. Here, I bailed into the trees skier's left of Starr to escape the ice rink:On Vail Resorts' leadership shufflesTwelve of Vail's 37 North American ski areas began the 2024-25 ski season with a different leader than they ended the 2023-24 ski season with. This included five of the company's New England resorts, including Stowe. Giorgio, in fact, became the ski area's third general manager in three winters, and the fourth since Vail acquired the ski area in 2017. I asked Giorgio about this, as a follow up to a similar set of questions I'd laid out for Vail Resorts CEO Rob Katz in August:I may be overthinking this, but check this out: between 2017 and 2024, Vail Resorts changed leadership at its North American ski areas more than 70 times - the yellow boxes below mark a new president-general-manager equivalent (red boxes indicate that Vail did not yet own the ski area):To reset my thinking here: I can't say that this constant leadership shuffle is inherently dysfunctional, and most Vail Resorts employees I speak with appreciate the company's upward-mobility culture. And I consistently find Vail's mountain leaders - dozens of whom I have hosted on this podcast - to be smart, earnest, and caring. However, it's hard to imagine that the constant turnover in top management isn't at least somewhat related to Vail Resorts' on-the-ground reputational issues, truncated seasons at non-core ski areas (see Paoli Peaks section below), and general sense that the company's arc of investment bends toward its destination resorts.On Peak ResortsVail purchased all of Peak Resorts, including Mount Snow, where Giorgio worked, in 2019. Here's that company's growth timeline:On Vernon Valley-Great GorgeThe ski area now known as Mountain Creek was Vernon Valley-Great Gorge until 1997. Anyone who grew up in the area still calls the joint by its legacy name.On Paoli Peaks versus Perfect NorthMy hope is that if I complain enough about Paoli Peaks, Vail will either invest enough in snowmaking to tranform it into a functional ski area or sell it. Here are the differences between Paoli's season lengths since 2013 as compared to Perfect North, its competitor that is the only other active ski area in the state:What explains this longstanding disparity, which certainly predates Vail's 2019 acquisition of the ski area? Paoli does sit southwest of Perfect North, but its base is 200 feet higher (600 feet, versus 400 for Perfect), so elevation doesn't explain it. Perfect does benefit from a valley location, which, longtime GM Jonathan Davis told me a few years back, locks in the cold air and supercharges snowmaking. The simplest answer, however, is probably the correct one: Perfect North has built one of the most impressive snowmaking systems on the planet, and they use it aggressively, cranking more than 200 guns at once. At peak operations, Perfect can transform from green grass to skiable terrain in just a couple of days.So yes, Perfect has always been a better operation than Paoli. But check this out: Paoli's performance as compared to Perfect's has been considerably worse in the five full seasons of Vail Resorts' ownership (excluding 2019-20), than in the six seasons before, with Perfect besting Paoli to open by an average of 21 days before Vail arrived, and by 31 days after. Perfect's seasons lasted an average of 25 days longer than Paoli's before Vail arrived, and 38 days longer after:Yes, Paoli is a uniquely challenged ski area, but I'm confident that someone can do a better job running this place than Vail has been doing since 2019. Certainly, that someone could be Vail, which has the resources and institutional knowledge to transform this, or any ski area, into a center of SnoSportSkiing excellence. So far, however, they have declined to do so, and I keep thinking of what Davis, Perfect North's longtime GM, said on the pod in 2022: “If Vail doesn't want [its ski areas in Indiana and Ohio], we'll take them!”On the 2022 Sunrise Six replacement for the tripleIn 2022, Stowe replaced the Mountain triple chair, which sat up a flight of steep steps from the parking lot, with the at-grade Sunrise six-pack. It was the kind of big-time lift upgrade that transforms the experience of an entire ski area for everyone, whether they use the new lift or not, by pulling skiers toward a huge pod of underutilized terrain and away from longtime alpha lifts Fourrunner and the Mansfield Gondola.On Fourrunner as a vert machineStowe's Fourruner high-speed quad is one of the most incredible lifts in American skiing, a lightspeed-fast base-to-summit, 2,040-vertical-foot monster with direct access to some of the best terrain west of A-Basin.The highest vert total in my 54-day 2024-25 ski season came (largely) courtesy of this lift - and I only skied five-and-a-half hours:On Stowe-Smuggs proximity and the proposed gondola and a long drive in winterAdventurous skiers can skin or hike across the top of Stowe's Spruce Peak and ski down into the Smugglers' Notch ski area. An official ski trail once connected them, and Smuggs proposed a gondola connector a couple of years back. If Vail were to purchase sprawling Smuggs, a Canyons-Park City mega-connection – while improbable given local environmental lobbies -could instantly transform Stowe into one of the largest ski areas in the East.On Jay Peak's big snowmaking upgradesI referenced big offseason snowmaking upgrades for water-challenged (but natural-snow blessed), Jay Peak. I was referring to this:This season brings an over $1.5M snowmaking upgrade that's less about muscle and more about brains. We've added 49 brand new HKD Low E air-water snowmaking guns—32 on Queen's Highway and 17 on Perry Merrill. These aren't your drag-'em-out, hook-'em-up, hope-it's-cold-enough kind of guns. They're fixed in place for the season and far more efficient, using much less compressed air than the ones they replace. Translation: better snow, less energy.On Perry Merrill, things get even slicker. We've installed HKD Klik automated hydrants that come with built-in weather stations. The second temps hit 28 degrees wetbulb, these hydrants kick on automatically and adjust the flow as the mercury drops. No waiting, no guesswork, no scrambling the crew. The end result? Those key connecting trails between Tramside and Stateside get covered faster, which means you can ski from one side to the other—or straight back to your condo—without having to hop on a shuttle with your boots still buckled. …It's all part of a bigger 10-year snowmaking plan we're rolling out—more automation, better efficiency, and ultimately, better snow for you to ski and ride on.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us. Get full access to The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast at www.stormskiing.com/subscribe
Bonjour à toutes et à tous, et bienvenue dans Horizons Marines, la chaîne des podcasts de la mer, du fait maritime et de ses acteurs. Dans cet épisode d'Écho réalisé en partenariat avec l'Institut FMES, on met le cap sur une région du monde devenue, ces derniers mois, l'un des théâtres les plus tendus du commerce et de la sécurité internationale : la mer Rouge. Couloir vital entre Méditerranée et océan Indien, passage obligé du pétrole, du gaz et des grandes routes commerciales, cette mer intérieure concentre aujourd'hui toutes les tensions d'un monde fragmenté : attaques de drones et de missiles, blocus partiels, missions de protection navale, rivalités d'influence entre puissances régionales et globales. Mais derrière l'actualité brûlante, que révèle vraiment la mer Rouge de la compétition stratégique mondiale ? Comment ce corridor maritime, longtemps périphérique, est-il devenu un espace de confrontation entre logiques économiques, militaires et politiques ? Et que nous dit la mission européenne Aspides sur la manière dont l'Europe entend désormais défendre ses intérêts en mer ? Pour en parler, nous avons le plaisir d'accueillir Camille Lons. Vous êtes chercheuse au European Council on Foreign Relations, spécialiste du Golfe et de la mer Rouge, et vous êtes notamment l'auteure d'une étude intitulée “Anatomy of a Chokepoint – Mapping Power and Conflict in the Red Sea”, qui analyse en profondeur les enjeux de cette région charnière. Bonne écoute !Vous en voulez plus ? Retrouvez l'intégralité des publications du Centre d'études stratégique de la Marine sur notre site : Centre d'études stratégiques de la Marine (CESM) | Ministère des Armées Voici les productions de l'Institut FMES : Publications - Fondation Méditerranéenne d'Études StratégiquesDécouvrez l'article "Anatomy of a Chokepoint – Mapping Power and Conflict in the Red Sea " ici : Anatomy of a chokepoint: Mapping power and conflict in the Red Sea | ECFRN'hésitez pas aussi à vous abonner au podcast et à nous faire part de vos retours à l'adresse mail : podcast.cesm@gmail.com
In this episode of Mining in the Comments, Coach Daniel takes a deep dive into a powerful question from Couloir, who wrote about their struggle with sleep after stopping benzodiazepines. It's been two months since the taper ended and now the question is:
Aujourd'hui, Antoine Diers, Fatima Aït Bounoua et Jérôme Marty débattent de l'actualité autour d'Alain Marschall et Olivier Truchot.
durée : 00:04:22 - Le Reportage de la rédaction - Au moins 28 000 personnes dans le monde attendent leur exécution… et probablement bien davantage, dans l'oubli des prisons iraniennes ou chinoises. Aux États-Unis, ils sont plus de deux mille. Keith LaMar est depuis plus de trente ans dans le couloir de la mort.
durée : 00:04:45 - Le Grand reportage de France Inter - Alors que Robert Badinter entre au Panthéon, au moins 28 000 personnes dans le monde attendent leur exécution… et probablement bien davantage dans l'oubli des prisons iraniennes ou chinoises. Dans l'Ohio, Keith LaMar est depuis plus de trente ans dans le couloir de la mort. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
durée : 00:04:22 - Le Reportage de la rédaction - Au moins 28 000 personnes dans le monde attendent leur exécution… et probablement bien davantage, dans l'oubli des prisons iraniennes ou chinoises. Aux États-Unis, ils sont plus de deux mille. Keith LaMar est depuis plus de trente ans dans le couloir de la mort.
Out of Collective Podcast – E21 – Going Big w/ Jake Hopfinger Jake Hopfinger is a professional freeride skier and filmmaker known for pushing boundaries both on snow and on screen. From his East Coast racing roots to earning legend status with the first-ever double backflip into Corbet's Couloir, Jake's [...] The post Out of Collective Podcast – E21 – Going Big w/ Jake Hopfinger appeared first on Out Of Collective.
Avec : Périco Légasse, journaliste. Carine Galli, journaliste. Et Pierre Rondeau, économiste. - Accompagnée de Charles Magnien et sa bande, Estelle Denis s'invite à la table des français pour traiter des sujets qui font leur quotidien. Société, conso, actualité, débats, coup de gueule, coups de cœurs… En simultané sur RMC Story.
durée : 00:05:45 - Les Cartes en mouvement - par : Delphine Papin - Cette semaine, dans Les Cartes en mouvement, Delphine Papin du journal Le Monde revient sur le couloir stratégique du commerce mondial autour de la mer Rouge.
Dernière émission avec Marilou Blain, fidèle animatrice du Palmarès musical du jeudi de 15h à 16h! Au menu: Alice Riopel démystifie la musique traditionnelle au Québec et Attends Arthur présente son nouveau single, Couloir. Liste de chansons jouées: Lou Phelps - Jungle - Chèlbè É.T.É. - La courailleuse - Le boire des minuits Bon Débarras - Fille d'avocat - Bon Débarras Les Tireux de roches - St-Laurent - Tarmacadam Genticorum - Violon guérisseur - Nagez Rameurs Thaïs - Tromper l'ennui - Personne Attends Arthur - Couloir - Single Jeanne Côté - Mousse mémoire - Nos routes pleines de branches Ponteix (feat. Laurence-Anne) - partir pour revenir - Le canadien errant
durée : 00:59:19 - Entendez-vous l'éco ? - par : Aliette Hovine, Bruno Baradat - Selon Donald Trump, le contrôle du canal de Panama revient aux Etats-Unis, qui ont finalisé sa construction. L'occasion de revenir sur les coûts de ce chantier pharaonique, d'abord supportés par des travailleurs Caribéens, et les difficultés que rencontre cette route stratégique aujourd'hui. - réalisation : Françoise Le Floch - invités : Paul Tourret directeur de l'ISEMAR, l'Institut Supérieur d'Économie Maritime; Samuel Poyard Professeur agrégé d'histoire-géographie, doctorant en histoire à l'EHESS, rattaché au laboratoire Mondes-Américains
Avec : Benjamin Amar, enseignant et syndicaliste. Anne-Sophie Simpere, militante associative. Et Frédéric Hermel, journaliste RMC. - Après le succès d'audience rencontré cette année, Estelle Denis repart pour une nouvelle saison. Toujours accompagnée de Rémy Barret et sa bande, Estelle Denis s'invite à la table des français pour traiter des sujets qui font leur quotidien. Société, conso, actualité, débats, coup de gueule, coups de cœurs… En simultané sur RMC Story.
Today we look at the iconic resort of Jackson Hole, find out how Saas Fee are celebrating the 40th anniversary of Wham!'s ‘Last Christmas' and learn about ‘The Last Ride' film project. We also have snow reports from Verbier, Les 2 Alpes and La Plagne, an update on the latest ski racing action from Matt Garcka and your feedback. Host Iain Martin was joined by Jess McMillan from Jackson Hole and Jon Moy from ‘The Last Ride' project. Intersport Ski Hire Discount Code If you're heading to the Alps this winter, then you can save money on your ski hire by using the code ‘SKIPODCAST' at intersportrent.com, or simply take this link for your discount to be automatically applied at the checkout. SHOW NOTES Jon was skiing on sand dunes in the Atacama Desert in Chile (2:00) Iain will be in Tignes for Christmas (3:00) He will be travelling in a luxury minibus from Vans For Bands (3:15) Jen Tsang from That's La Plagne reported from La Plagne (4:00) Dave from SnoPros Ski School was in Verbier (6:40) Alexandra Armand from TipTop Snow Coaching in Les 2 Alpes (8:45) Find out more about the new Jandri 3S gondola (9:15) Matt Garcka is host of from the ‘Skiing is Believing' podcast (10:00) It is the 40th anniversary of Wham!'s ‘Last Christmas' (12:30) ‘Last Christmas' by Wham! is #1 in the UK charts right now Laila Zurbriggen is from the Saas Fee Tourist Office The Capra offers a special ‘Last Christmas' package for CHF 1170 (16:00) Email ‘Whamtastic!' to reservation@capra.ch Catherine Murphy had just done the WhamWalk (17:30) Did you meet your partner on a ski holiday or doing a ski season, and do you fancy sharing your story? Drop me an email to theskipodcast@gmail.com (21:00) Jess McMillan is Director of Events & Partnerships at Jackson Hole (21:30) Jackson is located in the Grand Teton National Park Find out more about the Mountain Collective pass (28:45) Corbets' Couloir is perhaps the most famous couloir in the world (25:00) Check out Doug Combs taking it on Jackson Hole has a limit on ski ticket sales (26:45) The Golden Ticket means that if you have a season pass you get a 50% discount (27:30) Jackson has featured in ‘Yellowstone' and ‘The Last of Us' (28:45) Jackson Hole recent broke the world record for the most skiers in jeans (29:30) Our Twitter poll was NOT in favour of ‘double denim on the mountain' (30:15) Jon Moy is the Director of ‘The Last Ride' project (32:30) The team have climbed and skied Mt Elbrus, Denali, Aconcagua & Mt McKinley (33:00) Listen to Iain's interview with Arnie Wilson (35:45) Next on the list is Puncak Jaya in Western Papua (36:00) Has altitude sickness been an issue? (37:30) How to keep camera equipment working at low temperatures (39:00) ‘The Last Ride' are using offsetting to counter the carbon footprint of the project (40:15) Louise Paley is a co-founder of the ‘Piste X Code' (44:30) Feedback (43:00) I enjoy all feedback about the show, so please do contact me on social @theskipodcast or by email theskipodcast@gmail.com Jane Michotte: "Love the podcast, the range of topics and different types of people interviewed. My 12-year-old son (just getting into racing) really enjoys the updates from the Carrick-Smiths." Sean Burton: "Thank you Iain for your amazing podcast. I only got back into skiing last January after a 35-year gap! and I cannot get enough of it. Your equipment specials are particularly informative.” Andrea Dalton: “Just listened to this week's episode and loved it as always.” There are now 240 episodes of The Ski Podcast to catch up with. Just go to theskipodcast.com and search around the tags and categories: you're bound to find something of interest. If you like the podcast, there are three things you can do to help: 1) Follow us. Just take a look for that button and press it now 2) Give us a review or just leave a comment on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 3) Book your ski hire with Intersport Rent using the code ‘SKIPODCAST' or take this link You can follow me @skipedia and the podcast @theskipodcast
La nomination d'un premier ministre de gauche pourrait mener à l'abrogation de la réforme des retraites d'avril 2023, qui avait porté de 62 à 64 ans l'âge légal de départ à la retraite.
La nomination d'un premier ministre de gauche pourrait mener à l'abrogation de la réforme des retraites d'avril 2023, qui avait porté de 62 à 64 ans l'âge légal de départ à la retraite.
La nomination d'un premier ministre de gauche pourrait mener à l'abrogation de la réforme des retraites d'avril 2023, qui avait porté de 62 à 64 ans l'âge légal de départ à la retraite.
durée : 00:06:01 - L'invité de 6h20 - Laurence Nardon, spécialiste des États-Unis et responsable du Programme Amériques de l'IFRI, est l'invitée de France Inter, à huit jours du scrutin américain qui met face à face Donald Trump et Kamala Harris.
This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on Oct. 11. It dropped for free subscribers on Oct. 18. To receive future episodes as soon as they're live, and to support independent ski journalism, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription. You can also subscribe to the free tier below:WhoAndy Cohen, General Manager of Fernie Alpine Resort, British ColumbiaRecorded onSeptember 3, 2024About FernieClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: Resorts of the Canadian Rockies, which also owns:Located in: Fernie, British ColumbiaPass affiliations:* Epic Pass: 7 days, shared with Kicking Horse, Kimberley, Nakiska, Stoneham, and Mont-Sainte Anne* RCR Rockies Season Pass: unlimited access, along with Kicking Horse, Kimberley, and NakiskaClosest neighboring ski areas: Fairmont Hot Springs (1:15), Kimberley (1:27), Panorama (1:45) – travel times vary considerably given time of year and weather conditionsBase elevation: 3,450 feet/1,052 metersSummit elevation: 7,000 feet/2,134 metersVertical drop: 3,550 feet/1,082 metersSkiable Acres: 2,500+Average annual snowfall: 360 inches/914 Canadian inches (also called centimeters)Trail count: 145 named runs plus five alpine bowls and tree skiing (4% extreme, 21% expert, 32% advanced, 30% intermediate, 13% novice)Lift count: 10 (2 high-speed quads, 2 fixed-grip quads, 3 triples, 1 T-bar, 1 Poma, 1 conveyor - view Lift Blog's inventory of Fernie's lift fleet)Why I interviewed himOne of the most irritating dwellers of the #SkiInternet is Shoosh Emoji Bro. This Digital Daniel Boone, having boldly piloted his Subaru beyond the civilized bounds of Interstate 70, considers all outlying mountains to be his personal domain. So empowered, he patrols the digital sphere, dropping shoosh emojis on any poster that dares to mention Lost Trail or White Pass or Baker or Wolf Creek. Like an overzealous pamphleteer, he slings his brand haphazardly, toward any mountain kingdom he deems worthy of his forcefield. Shoosh Emoji Bro once Shoosh Emoji-ed me over a post about Alta.
Chaque jour, écoutez le Best-of de l'Afterfoot, sur RMC la radio du Sport ! L'After foot, c'est LE show d'après-match et surtout la référence des fans de football depuis 19 ans ! Les rencontres se prolongent tous les soirs avec Gilbert Brisbois, Daniel Riolo et Florent Gautreau avec les réactions des joueurs et entraîneurs, les conférences de presse d'après-match et les débats animés entre supporters, experts de l'After et auditeurs RMC.
Comment aimer quand l'amour est condamné d'avance ? Peut-on s'aimer sans se toucher ? Danielle va vous raconter son histoire d'amour pour Frank : un amour sans aucun contact, sans caresses, sans baisers, sans pouvoir même respirer celui qu'elle aime. Une histoire sans issue, mais avec de l'espoir. Une histoire dans le couloir de la mort, une histoire EX..traordinaire. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
We discuss the latest ski news from Australia, get an update on summer skiing in Tignes and Val d'Isere and find out about this autumn's London Snow Show. We also look into how SBIT are lobbying for more trains to the Alps and the possible Youth Mobility Scheme, which would be great news for young people wanting to do a ski season. Iain was joined by Australia specialist and founder of the Snowbest.com website, Rachael Oakes-Ash and Diane Palumbo, Sales and Marketing Director at Skiworld and down the line by Alex Irwin, John Yates-Smith and Lindsey Coleman. SHOW NOTES Rachael's vote goes to Whitewater in Canada (2:20) Diane is voting for Jackson Hole (2:45) Check out Corbet's Couloir (3:15) Alex from the YouTube channel 150 Days of Winter was in Tignes (5:20) John Yates Smith from YSE Ski is based in Val d'Isère (7:00) There has been major flooding in Zermatt, which was cut off for 24 hours (8:00) The village of Berarde, in the Ecrins National Park, was devastated by floods (8:15) Lindsey Coleman is Event Director of the National Snow Show (9:15) The show will take place at Excel in London from 19-20 October (10:00) Listen to Iain's interview with Bode Miller (10:45) You can still secure free tickets using the code ‘SKIPODCAST' Snow Travel Expo takes place in Sydney and Melbourne in May each year (14:00) SBiT stands for Seasonal Businesses in Travel (15:45) Find out more about train travel at Ski Flight Free (18:45) Skiworld offer 68 catered chalets and employ 120 staff (20:45) Why we have seen price inflation in UK ski holidays (22:00) Listen to Episode 180 to find out more about how to get a ski job in a ski resort (23:00) A Youth Mobility Scheme has been suggested within the EU (24:00) Rachael was last on the show in Episode 97 (27:45) For info about skiing in Australia check out Rachael's website Snowsbest Australia and New Zealand have seen fresh snowfall this week (30:30) Listen to Iain's episode about Perisher and Thredbo (32:00) Thredbo have opened their new luge (32:30) There's also a new Olympic half-pipe (33:15) Scotty James is an Olympic medal winning Australian snowboarder (34:00) Perisher is owned by Vail Resorts (37:00) Lift queue memes in Perisher (38:30) Listen to Iain's interview with Mike Goar from Vail Resorts (39:45) Climate change is affecting Australian ski resorts (40:00) The slow Aldi ski sale reflects the cost of living pressure on Australian skiing Feedback (44:00) I enjoy all feedback about the show, I like to know what you think, especially about our features so please contact on social @theskipodcast or by email theskipodcast@gmail.com Lozza (Apple Podcasts): "Every episode is a little ski holiday" Richard Sideways (Snowheads): "Good interview with Stu Brass. I remember the old SCUK forum days.” Alex Hayman: "Really enjoyed the chat with Paddy Graham last month." If you like the podcast, there are three things you can do to help: 1) Review us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 2) Subscribe 3) Buy Me A Coffee at www.buymeacoffee.com You can follow me @skipedia and the podcast @theskipodcast. There are 220 episodes of The Ski Podcast to catch up with. Just go to theskipodcast.com and search around the tags and categories: you're bound to find something of interest to you.
Dans ce tout nouvel épisode des Meurtres et du Vin, Sara va nous raconter l'incroyable histoire de Manuel Pardo, le Roméo du couloir de la mort qui, certains pensent, a été l'inspiration pour la série à succès, Dexter.Et pour nous accompagner pendant cet enregistrement, on a bu une bouteille de rosé, le Ultimate ProvenceAlors prenez votre verre et enjoy!Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Aujourd'hui Barbara Lefebvre, Etienne Liebig et Bruno Pomart débattent de l'actualité autour d'Alain Marschall et Olivier Truchot.
durée : 00:29:45 - Une histoire particulière - Contre toute attente, l'Espagne remporte le 13e Concours de l'Eurovision en 1968. Mais dès le lendemain, des rumeurs de triche viennent entacher le vote. Le régime de Franco est-il coupable de corruption et pourquoi ? - invités : François-Xavier Gomez Journaliste musical à Libération; Isabelle Aubret Chanteuse; Thierry Liesenfeld Auteur; Luis García Gil Biographe de Joan Manuel Serrat; Nicolas Tanner Présentateur de l'Eurovision à la télévision suisse; Montse Fernandez Villa Réalisatrice de films documentaires
durée : 00:29:45 - Une histoire particulière - Contre toute attente, l'Espagne remporte le 13e Concours de l'Eurovision en 1968. Mais dès le lendemain, des rumeurs de triche viennent entacher le vote. Le régime de Franco est-il coupable de corruption et pourquoi ? - invités : François-Xavier Gomez Journaliste musical à Libération; Isabelle Aubret Chanteuse; Thierry Liesenfeld Auteur; Luis García Gil Biographe de Joan Manuel Serrat; Nicolas Tanner Présentateur de l'Eurovision à la télévision suisse; Montse Fernandez Villa Réalisatrice de films documentaires
« Tu préfères » la place hublot ou couloir ? Aujourd'hui, Emmanuelle Dancourt répond à Estelle Denis dans ce podcast quotidien et exclusif d'Estelle Midi. Et vous ? Que préférez-vous ? Répondez tout de suite à notre sondage sur X (Twitter)
Season 8 of The Fine Line begins with a story from one of the most recognizable features of the southern Teton range, and a ski line that makes even the bravest skiers buckle their boots a little bit tighter: Cody Peak's Central Couloir. On Saturday March 18, 2023, skiers Will Brown and Jacqueline Dickey dropped into Central after hiking out to the top of Cody from the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Aerial Tram. What happened next forever changed their relationship to skiing and big, complex mountains. We also hear from Jackson Hole Ski Patroller Jeff Burke, who helps explain how different responding agencies come together to perform rescues in the JHMR backcountry—and how a pair of skis took the long road to get back to Jacqueline. If you are looking for mental health support, please visit the Jackson Hole Community Counseling Center, or dial the national crisis and suicide prevention hotline at 988. As we hear in this episode, mental health is a backcountry safety issue. Interviews and writing by Matt Hansen. Editing and sound by Melinda Binks. The interviews were recorded in the studios of KHOL 89.1 FM. The Fine Line theme song is by Anne and Pete Sibley, with additional music provided by Ben Winship. Original artwork by Jen Reddy. The Fine Line is presented by Stio, with additional support by Roadhouse Brewing Company and KHOL.
«Car le sommeil, ayant fermé leurs paupières, fait oublier à tous les hommes les biens et les maux», écrivait Homère dans L'Odyssée. Pour s'initier aux mystères du sommeil, les Grecs s'adressaient à deux dieux: Hypnos, dieu du sommeil, frère jumeau de Thanatos, dieu de la mort, tous deux fils de Nyx, déesse de la nuit. L'un est apprécié, l'autre craint. Ensemble, les deux génies ailés partent accomplir leur mission.Alors qu'elle commençait une nouvelle vie, Amélia s'est retrouvée face à Thanatos. Mais qui sait comment une nuit peut finir, quand la frontière entre le sommeil et le repos éternel est si fine?L'histoire d'Amélia a été recueillie par Adélaïde Ténaglia.Transfert est produit et réalisé par Slate Podcasts.Direction éditoriale: Christophe CarronDirection de la production: Sarah KoskievicDirection artistique: Benjamin Saeptem HoursProduction éditoriale: Sarah Koskievic et Benjamin Saeptem HoursPrise de son, montage et habillage musical: Victor BenhamouMusique: Moon Rider - Camille BallonL'introduction a été écrite par Sarah Koskievic. Elle est lue par Aurélie Rodrigues.Retrouvez Transfert tous les jeudis sur Slate.fr et sur votre application d'écoute. Découvrez aussi Transfert Club, l'offre premium de Transfert. Deux fois par mois, Transfert Club donne accès à du contenu exclusif, des histoires inédites et les coulisses de vos épisodes préférés. Pour vous abonner, rendez-vous sur slate.fr/transfertclub.Pour proposer une histoire, vous pouvez nous envoyer un mail à l'adresse transfert@slate.fr
Les épisodes JE RÉVÈLE MES COULEURS sont destinés aux acteurs de la couleur végétale qui veulent se faire connaitre en moins de 3 min sur le podcast Art Eco Vert: Nous découvrons : 1) Martine Degoumois Retrouvez Martine sur : creavegetales_martine2) Solène Chilard Retrouvez Solène sur : projet_barbicheEt sur les épisodes podcast Couloir du festival de la couleur de Pau
Le projet a été inauguré en décembre dernier (2023) sur l'isthme de Tehuantepec, la partie de terre la plus étroite du pays. Une voie ferrée de 300 kilomètres pour relier l'océan Atlantique et l'océan Pacifique. Les travaux d'aménagement se poursuivent. Les voies ferrées sont installées depuis plusieurs mois, mais sur le terrain, il manque encore des gares et des centres de contrôle pour rendre le train opérationnel.C'est un vieux projet de la société mexicaine. Angel Manuel Lopez Obrador le concrétise avec l'espoir de voir le PIB augmenté de 3 à 5. Il s'agira de transporter des passagers, mais surtout des marchandises. En 2028, le corridor Interocéanique de l'isthme de Tehuantepec pourrait voir transiter 300.000 conteneurs, et 1,4 million en 2033, quand il fonctionnera à plein régime.En période de sécheresse du Canal de Panama, le projet est présenté comme une alternative, mais selon l'économiste Roberto Duran, il aura tout de même du mal à le concurrencer. En revanche, le projet pourrait aussi être utile pour le développement économique du sud du Mexique. Même si des voix s'élèvent dans des communautés locales des États de Oaxaca et de Veracruz pour dénoncer le manque de consultations et des travaux qui ne respectent l'écosystème. L'inquiétude des associations contre l'infertilité aux États-UnisPour la Cour Suprême de l'Alabama, les embryons congelés sont des « enfants ». Une décision dénoncée par la Maison Blanche qui parle d'un chaos auquel elle s'attendait depuis le renversement de l'arrêt Roe contre Wade sur l'avortement en 2022.Le jugement de la Cour Suprême de l'Alabama pose aussi de nombreuses questions pour les futurs parents et le personnel de santé, notamment sur la pérennité des procédures de fertilisation. L'ONG Alima lance une mission d'urgence en HaïtiElle sera opérationnelle d'ici 15 jours et travaillera sur 3 axes principaux : les soins de base pour les déplacés, le suivi des femmes enceintes, et la lutte contre l'épidémie de choléra. La résurgence de la violence dans le pays a considérablement détérioré les conditions sanitaires en Haïti. Pour Carlotta Pianigiani, coordinatrice Urgences pour l'ONG, la situation est plus qu'inquiétante, notamment en ce qui concerne l'accès aux structures de santé, pour les populations, mais aussi pour le personnel de ces cliniques et hôpitaux. Le journal de la 1èreL'état d'esprit conquérant des producteurs de vanille de la Guadeloupe avant le Salon de l'Agriculture.
Thanks for checking out the Salt Lake Snowcast! This is our longest episode yet, but it's an important story to hear and I think any backcountry skier or rider will benefit from the accident analysis and discussion had in this week's episode. After a few sunny and calm days in the mountains, we are turning the corner and heading into another active period of weather. I'm already excited to add up the snow totals on next week's episode! In the beginning of today's show, I'll recap a what was a busy weekend for skier triggered avalanches before analyzing one of these events.In the second part of the episode, I'll turn the podcast over to Zack Little and Billy Haas to tell the story of a rescue in Lisa Falls from this past Saturday where they helped facilitate a helicopter evacuation of a solo skier they saw get avalanched 1500 feet down the couloir. Using this accident as a case study, we dissect travel etiquette in the Wasatch, the dangers of ignoring red flags, the importance terrain management, communication, and next steps for our backcountry community. I'd like this to be an ongoing conversation, so don't be shy and send us an email or reach out to us on Instagram.
C'est un sage, un champion tellement inspirant que je vous propose d'écouter dans ce nouvel épisode de Belletrace.Dés le début Stéphane nous parle du sport comme un équilibre de vie, un régulateur d'humeur qui est un enjeu de santé publique.On replongera dans son enfance et de ses débuts dans l'athlétisme dont la motivation a toujours été la passion de la course et surtout la recherche de sa propre excellence et non un combat contre ses adversaires. Lui qui a été accompagné pendant 16 ans par Fernand Urtebise son coach qui avait pour objectif de faire grandir ses athlètes.Stéphane Diagana déclare d'ailleurs qu'il adorerait être coach ! A bon entendeur...Nous avons bien sûr parlé de ce fléau du dopage, ainsi que de ce titre de champion du monde en 2003 en relais et de ses doutes sur sa participation.Dans cet épisode vous découvrez également ses autres passions…Bref une superbe belle trace inspirante. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Le PK5, ce quartier populaire, commercial et culturel, a été durement frappé pendant la crise militaro-politique de 2013. Considéré comme le poumon économique de la Centrafrique, c'est là que transitent tous les produits venant du Cameroun, du Tchad et du Soudan. Le coup d'État de 2013 de la coalition Séléka contre l'ancien président François Bozizé, a plongé ce quartier cosmopolite dans la violence. La paix est revenue, mais les habitants se souviennent de cette page sombre de l'histoire. De notre correspondant à Bangui,KM5. Nous marchons dans la rue Dido, autrefois appelée « Couloir de la mort ». Malgré l'ambiance qui y règne actuellement, l'endroit porte encore les stigmates de la crise.Quelques herbes ont poussé dans les allées bordées de magasins abandonnés, de maisons partiellement détruites, des impacts de balles sur des bâtiments et sur des poteaux électriques. Ousmane Dida, habitant du KM5, se remémore : « Les événements de 2013 étaient dramatiques. Il y avait le couvre-feu entre 20h et 5h du matin. Chaque soir, on entendait des coups de feu, on signalait des cas de braquages, d'assassinats, de viols et de pillages contre des musulmans, tout comme les chrétiens. Entre décembre 2013 et les mois de janvier, février et mars 2014, les milices Séléka et anti-Balaka semaient la désolation ».« Une prison à ciel ouvert »Au temps forts de la crise, les armes circulaient très facilement. Le KM5 échappait au contrôle des forces loyalistes. Certaines personnes le surnommaient « Poudrière » ou encore « Vatican », autrement dit un État dans l'État. Magalie est une habitante de PK5 : « J'ai perdu des parents, des amis et des proches. À cette époque, KM5 avait mauvaise réputation, presque toutes les écoles étaient fermées. Les commerçants et même les habitants étaient rançonnés par les groupes d'auto-défense. On vivait comme dans une prison à ciel ouvert, sans savoir de quoi demain serait fait ».Chapelet en main, grand boubou de couleur jaune, Aoudou Maïkano mâche la cola en sortant de la mosquée centrale. Même si aujourd'hui, il se promène librement, en 2014, il avait quitté le quartier pour se réfugier au Tchad : « KM5 était un quartier dangereux. Les gens étaient kidnappés, tués ou disparaissaient, tout simplement. Les commerces étaient fermés. À cause de l'insécurité, j'avais quitté le KM5 avec ma famille pour trouver refuge ailleurs. Mais aujourd'hui, je suis heureux de réintégrer ma communauté. Je ne souhaite plus revivre ce genre d'événements au KM5 ».Entre 2013 et 2015, plusieurs centaines de personnes avaient perdu la vie dans ce quartier. La crise avait aussi provoqué d'importants dégâts, estimés à plusieurs millions de FCFA. Plusieurs chefs de groupe d'auto-défense ont été tués, d'autres ont été condamnés, et d'autres encore ont fini à l'hôpital psychiatrique. À lire aussiCentrafrique: les habitants du PK5 se souviennent avec mélancolie de la belle époque de leur quartier [1/3]
Last week, Trevor Kennison & Level 1 founder & director, Josh Bermann, came to Western Colorado University for our Blister Speaker Series for a follow-up conversation about their new film, Full Circle. We discussed what life's been like for both of them since the film premiered; we take questions from the audience; and Trevor answers the big question: is he glad the injury happened?We'll also be posting a video of this Speaker Series conversation, so if you'd like to watch while you listen, head over to our Blister YouTube channel to check it out, as well as a rapidly-growing number of new videos.TOPICS & TIMES:Sending Corbet's Couloir w/ T. Rice (2:49)Touring / Showing Full Circle (10:29)Tell the story of your injury (12:14)Why Josh claims Full Circle isn't a ski film (14:37)Dealing with Disappointment (20:29)Making Full Circle (23:51)Plumbing (28:12)When did the sit ski click for you? (28:46)Initial responses to the film? (34:51)The Big Question: are you glad the injury happened? (37:32)How do you hype yourself up for a big line / trick? (43:34)Do you like sit skiing more than you liked snowboarding? (46:13)How has the outdoor industry become more accessible? (47:06)What else should happen in terms of accessibility? (49:24)What are your next goals? (52:01)What does the flow state mean to you? (53:25)Visualization (1:01:29)Schedule of the Full Circle rollout? (1:05:04)RELATED LINKS:Full Circle FilmBecome a BLISTER+ MemberBlister Summit: Learn MoreCHECK OUT OUR OTHER PODCASTS:CRAFTED Bikes & Big IdeasOff The CouchGEAR:30 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
2023 Prayer and fasting crusade (ministry fast) From 16th October - 22nd of November 2023
Trevor Kennison is one of the most remarkable athletes in the world, and like Travis Rice, Candide Thovex, Courtney Dauwalter, and Alex Honnold, he forces us to see things differently and rethink what's possible.Josh Berman and his team at Level 1 Productions have created a film, Full Circle, that premieres this week in New York, and that documents Trevor's incredible story and exploits, and the challenges — and opportunities — of life after spinal cord injury.ALSO: Trevor and Josh are going to be coming to Western Colorado University on Wednesday, November 1st, for a Blister Speaker Series, so if you'd like to come meet Trevor and Josh and hear us dive into a number of topics that we don't touch on in this conversation, well come join us on Wednesday, November 1st, at 7pm at Western Colorado University in Gunnison, CO.TOPICS & TIMES:Impressing Travis Rice (4:59)Barry Corbet / Corbet's Couloir (9:53)Trevor's background with skiing / snowboarding (19:28)2014: The Accident (21:39)Getting Back on Snow (24:44)Motivation (26:50)Big-Mountain Skiing vs Park? (46:05)Mental Health (50:52)Adaptive Gear: Trevor's setup (57:28)Landings (1:02:33)Blister Speaker Series & Where to Watch the Film (1:04:58)RELATED LINKS:Get Yourself Covered: Become a BLISTER+ Member2024 Blister Summit: Learn MoreCHECK OUT OUR OTHER PODCASTS:CRAFTED Bikes & Big IdeasOff The CouchGEAR:30 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Les arrêts passent, le métro se vide et vos corps se rapprochent. Quelle bonne idée tu as eu de lui laisser ton numero la dernière fois que vous vous êtes croisés. Il manie les mots à la perfection, direction : ta jolie petite culotte ! Tu mouilles, tu chauffes, tu trépignes ! Bonne écoute…
Bruce Edgerly, or “Edge,” as he's known to the backcountry community, has been around the block. He cut his teeth in the outdoor industry by writing for Powder and Couloir in the 1980s, and traveling the globe to cover the burgeoning extreme skiing movement. In the early nineties, Edge found himself out of a job and largely unemployable, despite having a degree in engineering. A chance encounter with Bruce McGowan inspired the pair to start BCA and a backcountry icon was born. Edge takes us on a ride through the evolution of BCA, from trekkers to beacons to airbags, and reflects on the growth in backcountry skiing that he never saw coming. This episode of the Backcountry Podcast is sponsored by Salomon. It's also made possible by our listeners. Please subscribe to the pod (and the pub!) if you haven't already. Leave a comment and a review—we'd love to hear from you. Backcountry Access Website | Instagram | Facebook Backcountry Magazine Website | Instagram | Facebook Get the print mag and more…. www.backcountrymagazine.com Host Adam Howard Producer + Engineer Mike Horn
durée : 01:02:26 - Fictions / Théâtre et Cie - Dans le couloir (espace d'attente et de purgatoire), un jeune homme appelé l'Intrus revient à la maison familiale où trois sœurs et un frère l'attendent, après des années d'absence liées à un drame dont il est responsable.
En 2008, Melissa Lucio, 53 ans, est condamnée à mort pour le meurtre de sa fille de deux ans. Pourtant, le dossier soulève de nombreuses zones d'ombre. Le 25 avril dernier, une cour d'appel texane suspendait son exécution, initialement prévue deux jours plus tard. Chaque semaine, le mardi, Lionel Gendron nous adresse une lettre d'Amérique. Un podcast sous forme de courrier audio, posté depuis Manhattan, à New York. Une carte-postale sonore pour nous aider à mieux comprendre cette Amérique à la fois si familière et parfois totalement déconcertante.
En 2008, Melissa Lucio, 53 ans, est condamnée à mort pour le meurtre de sa fille de deux ans. Pourtant, le dossier soulève de nombreuses zones d'ombre. Le 25 avril dernier, une cour d'appel texane suspendait son exécution, initialement prévue deux jours plus tard. Chaque semaine, le mardi, Lionel Gendron nous adresse une lettre d'Amérique. Un podcast sous forme de courrier audio, posté depuis Manhattan, à New York. Une carte-postale sonore pour nous aider à mieux comprendre cette Amérique à la fois si familière et parfois totalement déconcertante.
The consequences of not communicating in the mountains became abundantly clear on January 22, 2022, when skiers Collin Binko and Michael Martin encountered a lone snowboarder at the base of the Sliver Couloir in Grand Teton National Park. All three had eyes on the same prize, but neither party talked to the other. What happened next has been a frequent topic of conversation in the backcountry community, and a growing concern for many heading into the high alpine. Leading off Season 6 of The Fine Line, this episode explores this issue head on, with Martin and Binko giving their account of the day. We also hear from alpinist and licensed therapist Ryan Burke about coming onto the scene and the dangerous role ego plays in the mountains. Jessica Baker, an AMGA-certified ski guide who has more than two decades of experience in the Tetons, walks us through the importance of situational awareness and why communication is so crucial for everyone's safety. This episode does not seek to expose villains or heroes, but rather to shed light on an important lesson everyone can learn from. Interviews by Matt Hansen. Editing by Melinda Binks. Thank you to Roadhouse Brewing Co. for the generous sponsorship of The Fine Line, and to KHOL 89.1 FM for the use of their studio.
Greg Paquin is from Connecticut on the east coast of the United States. He originally started on snow via cross-country gear, but it was through the original Backcountry and Couloir magazines that he began to see some heavier cross-country downhill gear in the late 1980s. This sparked his interest and he started down the path of dropping knees. He's been a PSIA level III instructor in Telemark since 2014 as well as an Educational Telemark Staff Team Member for the PSIA Divisional Clinic Leader program. On top of all those awesome credentials, He the Director of Telemark skiing at Bromley Mountain in Peru VT. It's “The oldest Telemark school in North America.” Hope you enjoyed last week's podcast with Arno Klein Last week. And next week I've got Todd Stuart. Newsroom & Notes: THIS SATURDAY! Jan. 15th at Pine Knob, Michigan. FHL Midwest is teaming up with Motor City Tele for a Telemark Demo Day January 22nd in Caberfae Peaks in Cadillac, Michigan - LOWER PENINSULA PINHEAD REUNION January 22nd in NOZAWA JAPAN - WE TELEMARK EVENT w/ Clinics & Gathering February 26-27, 2022 - VERMONT @ Bromley 36th Kare Anderson Telemark Festival Saturday March 5th! This is the annual World Telemark Day celebration. March 11/12 2022! - Mad River Glen's Free Heel Frolic