Impressive Pinnacle Landing
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Mrs Miggin's
Age: 47
Posts: 102
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Impressive Pinnacle Landing
I haven't tried posting a link before so please be nice if I cock it up!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rd8AJdcnw4A
The vid shows an Evergreen AS350 and I was wondering if the Pilot or anyone invovled in the filming of 'First Descent' could give us some background if they visit the forum,i.e is this just a bread and butter day or was this as out of the ordinary as the film suggests?
For those who don't won't to listen to the 'dudes' the heli bit is around 36 -40 seconds.
Also does anyone have any other Heli ski/snowboard links,photos worth seeing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rd8AJdcnw4A
The vid shows an Evergreen AS350 and I was wondering if the Pilot or anyone invovled in the filming of 'First Descent' could give us some background if they visit the forum,i.e is this just a bread and butter day or was this as out of the ordinary as the film suggests?
For those who don't won't to listen to the 'dudes' the heli bit is around 36 -40 seconds.
Also does anyone have any other Heli ski/snowboard links,photos worth seeing.
"First Descent" is a classic snowboarding vid, and Terje is a snowboarding legend
Another clip from the DVD here, with two shots of him running into his own avalanche at 3min 40sec, and 4 min 15 sec, which are amazing! This clip is better, being in the original 16:9 format, so the peaks aren't quite so steep.
The helicopter stuff isn't so bad, either
Another clip from the DVD here, with two shots of him running into his own avalanche at 3min 40sec, and 4 min 15 sec, which are amazing! This clip is better, being in the original 16:9 format, so the peaks aren't quite so steep.
The helicopter stuff isn't so bad, either
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Mrs Miggin's
Age: 47
Posts: 102
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
You weren't lying John, excellent video, thanks for the link,just wish my snowboarding was up to that standard,I'd also have to grow some balls to do those sort of runs though.
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Whitstable, UK
Age: 53
Posts: 105
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Squishy truthes...
The frame is squashed along the horizontal, notice that everybody looks like a pin in the video.. the peak is about half as steep sided as you think it is.. certainly overhyped - there's nothing special about the boarding, the only good bit is the heli drop off.. but someone was already there to cut out the landing.. pause and look. Don't believe everything you see 'dudes'. Take it from someone who has been in the pro boarding business for 15 years. I can't stand these doctored videos and 'dude i'm so good commentaries' that the internet is flooded with. It wouldn't sell in real format. All that vid shows is a normal/good heliboarding day out. Anyway these days 'impressive' would be a 50ft air drop with a flip or something, not just a lazy carve down a chute and nice powder field. Other wanabee video tricks to look out for... speeding up a carve, slowing down an air.. tilting the camera to make a hill or wave look higher...and the squishing you have just seen Rock on dudes....
Rant over.
Rant over.
Guest
Posts: n/a
If you want a crazy 'extreme sport' video. Check this lot out!
http://www.biertijd.com/mediaplayer/?itemid=4262
http://www.biertijd.com/mediaplayer/?itemid=4262
Originally Posted by K48
The frame is squashed along the horizontal, notice that everybody looks like a pin in the video.. the peak is about half as steep sided as you think it is.. certainly overhyped - there's nothing special about the boarding, the only good bit is the heli drop off.. but someone was already there to cut out the landing.. pause and look
This clip is better, being in the original 16:9 format
Originally Posted by K48
It wouldn't sell in real format. All that vid shows is a normal/good heliboarding day out
Another clip here shows some better footage of the initial helicopter drop, and some aerial footage too
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: canada
Posts: 184
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
That's a fairly straight forward landing for any decent mountain pilot, conditions looked about as good as they were going to get. It's really not that hard, particularly given the relatively low altitude, and capabilities of the B2.
That decent however, was epic. Been watching that guy for 15yrs, he's quite something, was as a teenager. THAT, was impressive.
RH
That decent however, was epic. Been watching that guy for 15yrs, he's quite something, was as a teenager. THAT, was impressive.
RH
Crazy Scandihooligan
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Damn, some mountain goat is nibbling my ear ;-)
Age: 52
Posts: 482
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Awesome footage of the pinnacle landing...no doubt it woud have been more extreme if the pilot had to do a "toe in" and the boarder had a drop instead of psyching himself at the top of the drop... but what can i say... the boarder was Norwegian... say no more..... Lunacy rules ok, on Boards or ski's, But professionalism, rules ok ;-) Great flying and great mountain skills by the man... Terje!!! GO TERJE!!
MD... just fighting and keeping mediocraty at bay
MD... just fighting and keeping mediocraty at bay
Originally Posted by K48
...Anyway these days 'impressive' would be a 50ft air drop with a flip or something...
Prize for the first muppet to shout "FAKE"
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Western US
Posts: 29
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I didn't fly the job, but know who did. That shoot was done up around Valdez, Alaska. Evergreen was working with Valdez Heliski Guides, founded by the late Doug Coombs. VHG usually runs two B-2s out of the Tsaina Lodge.
It was a prepped LZ. Sometimes up there you may have to toe-in (ie film shoots), drop the guide, let him prep it, and come back in once the pad is done.
The terrain up there looks a lot more challenging on film than it is to actually fly around. It isn't particularly high, most of the LZs are from 6000' to 7000' so a B-2 does quite well. There are some drawbacks to the area, there isn't a lot of definition to the terrain when the light goes flat (rocks/snow, no trees) and it can get pretty windy, especially around the Thompson Pass.
(I flew for a different operator up the road)
It was a prepped LZ. Sometimes up there you may have to toe-in (ie film shoots), drop the guide, let him prep it, and come back in once the pad is done.
The terrain up there looks a lot more challenging on film than it is to actually fly around. It isn't particularly high, most of the LZs are from 6000' to 7000' so a B-2 does quite well. There are some drawbacks to the area, there isn't a lot of definition to the terrain when the light goes flat (rocks/snow, no trees) and it can get pretty windy, especially around the Thompson Pass.
(I flew for a different operator up the road)