Kitzbühel’s Karl Koller formalized short-ski instruction for beginners, reshaped children’s learning, fostered terrain-based teaching, and was a dominant force in Interski.
By John Fry with Barbara...
Next winter, the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame will induct up to eight new honored members, selected from a ballot of 15 nominees. But the ballot of 15 was chosen from a list of 71 skiers...
Installed at a small New York ski area, the world’s original high-speed detachable quad had the right idea with the wrong execution. BY JEREMY DAVIS
The opening of the Doppelmayr Quicksilver...
Who needs powder? A Minnesota resort goes to the mat for its future. By Greg DiTrinco
There is an annoyingly capricious component of the sport of skiing. It’s called snow. Both skiers and resort...
In this historic Swiss resort town, visitors are immersed in the wellspring of winter sports. By Everett Potter
A case can be made that the origins of modern winter sports lie in the Swiss resort and...
The cover of New Love Magazine (February 1948) celebrated the intimacy of riding uphill on the relatively new T-bar, famously known as a He-and-She Stick Artist: Gloria Stoll Karn.
By John Fry
Skiing...
A new coalition of volunteers, ski areas and landowners team up nationwide to restore historic ski trails—and launch a backcountry movement. By Jeremy Davis
The power of the people is gaining...
Skiing has always been a perilous journey for public companies.
By SETH MASIA
If you had put $1,000 into Vail Resorts stock in 2004, your investment would have grown to $14,000 by August 2018. Vail...
In a poll of Skiing History readers, 59 percent put Stenmark first.
Lindsey Vonn’s decision at the beginning of February 2019 to retire, four victories short of Ingemar Stenmark’s 86 World Cup wins,...
In a talk to Park City's annual forum on leadership, Vail chairman/CEO Rob Katz explained his take on running North America's largest ski resort enterprise. Katz is an impressive guy, but his take on...
Getting dragged across the snow by horses, planes, reindeer and dogs is a unique sport that’s at least 1,000 years old.
By Jay Cowan
Skijoring, one of skiing’s oldest activities, has become one of...
The sport underwent a revolution more than a century ago, when skiers gradually shifted from a single shaft to holding a pair of poles.
By Luzi Hitz with Seth Masia
At a military cross country race...
In 1943, Manhattan Project scientists took to the snow. They’ve never quit. By Seth Masia
In July 2018, newspapers around the American Southwest noted the 75th anniversary of the founding of Los...
Who made the first ski boots without laces? Henke in 1955, right?
Wrong. In the postwar years, Joseph Mauron, a 21-year-old Swiss shoemaker, had had it with frozen laces on double-laced boots. He...
Two of the world’s most popular adventure sports have inspired and influenced each other for more than half a century. By Jay Cowan
LIFE magazine was likely the first national publication to...
By John Fry
For 35 years, the National Ski Areas Association (NSAA) has reliably measured the volume of winter visits at U.S. areas. The statistic—one skier or snowboarder on the slopes for one day...
Tomm Murstad (1915–2001) was an outstanding multi-discipline skier, but is principally remembered in his native Norway as the founder of the first ski school for kids—possibly the first such program...
The sleek modern skiwear look, it’s typically thought, originated suddenly in 1952 with the Bavarian designer Maria Bogner’s use of Helanca-modified nylon and wool blend to create the first durable...
Ed Scott may be the most humorous man I’ve ever met. Yet I don’t believe I ever saw him really break up in laughter. Rather, he’ll pursue a line of conversation in a direction that amuses him, and he...
Skiing was a handy punching bag when television searched for laughs. By Jeff Blumenfeld
It was one of the most famous broken legs in modern American history.
When comedian Lucille Ball suffered a...