By Edie Thys Morgan
St-Germain scores first Canadian gold in 31 years.
Špindlerův Mlýn is a charming resort in the Czech republic that holds special memories for Mikaela Shiffrin. She made her World...
By Lori Knowles
The first Alpine Olympians had a lot to learn.
Imagine the courage. The excitement! The adventure! Being young and spry and Canadian in the pre-war 1930s, devoted to an obscure,...
Alaskan Native forest ranger was the Renaissance man of ski resort development.
Among the characters who pioneered skiing in New Mexico—and there were plenty—one of the most colorful was a powerful,...
By Seth Masia
The Hotel St. Bernard came down last summer. For 64 years, it served as the center of social life in Taos Ski Valley. The new, larger version, scheduled to open in 2025, will contain a...
By Kirby Gilbert
Football star and broadcaster turned ski-school director and promoter.
Joe C. Jones grew up in Vallejo, California, participating in school sports in his youth. After two successful...
By Lori Knowles
Charlie Locke's wild ride as one of Canada's few remaining independent ski area owners
We give names to eras: Elizabethan. Georgian. Victorian. Edwardian. One wonders if the final...
Jeff Blumenfeld, a regular contributor to this magazine and since 2017 our vice-president for communication, needs a kidney from a healthy live donor.
Jeff has worked in the ski business since 1972,...
Member Profile: Klaus Obermeyer, who celebrated his 100th birthday on December 2, 2019, embodies skiing’s history in the 20th century. Klaus was raised in Oberstaufen, Bavaria, hard up against the...
By Seth Masia
There's a thin line between avid reader and dedicated bibliophile.
The oldest known informed account of skiing for European readers was written by Olof Månsson, a Catholic prelate...
A force of nature on the racecourse, Hermann Maier now enjoys a slower way of life.
By Patrick Lang
Austrian Hermann Maier is such an outsize presence in our memory that it’s hard to wrap one’s...
By Steve Threndyle
After a century, it's still the peak of Vancouver.
Settlers to the young city of Vancouver at the end of the 19th century became enthralled by the beauty and challenge of an...
By Seth Masia
How old are these skis? Who made them, and where?
"How old are these skis?” We get this question via email several times a year, often from a non-skier who found a dusty pair of fossil...
Historical gem still a political football.
Gunstock, one of the nation’s oldest ski resorts, suffered a near-death experience over the summer. Management pulled off a heroic last-minute save, but...
How Vermonters, Austrians and Swiss launched skiing below the Mason-Dixon Line.
Yankee skiers often assume that Mount Washington is the highest peak in the eastern United States, but it ain’t. More...
After 86 years, the magazine slashes its print run and hopes to persevere online.
After more than a decade of battling losses in subscribers and newsstand sales, SKI recently announced it will...
How a Seattle kid persevered and lived his dream.
Ed King is well known among Sun Valley locals as the only African-American ski instructor in the history of the resort. Considered by most ski...
Lifetime Achievement Award to Jeff Leich
Ullr Awards
Skiing in the Eye of the Artist, by E. John B. Allen
Celebrate Winter: An Olympican's Stories of a Life in Nordic Skiing, by John Morton
Thirty...
They spent almost an hour in line, yet more and more skiers came, bonding as they waited ... and waited.
Lift lines have been part of the ski experience as long as there have been lifts. Is there...
Ski lift evolution is dotted with failed experiments.
(Photo above: The Mount Hood Skiway launched in 1951. The enormous weight of the buses meant the lift hauled 72 skiers per hour—when a chairlift...
There was more to Willy Schaeffler than stern disciplinarian.
By PETER MILLER
During the 1970-71 World Cup season, the men of the U.S. Alpine squad clashed with their coach, Willy Schaeffler. After...