Author: Ski NASTC

  • Alpine Skier Heath Calhoun has his eyes on Sochi

    Some days we need inspiration to work hard to be ready for the ski season. Here’s a gentleman we can all learn from. In honor of Veteran’s Day, and in the name of skiing as life: http://www.today.com/sochi/iraq-vet-heath-calhouns-new-battle-ski-sochi-paralympics-2D11577316

    We are rooting for you Heath! We’ll see you in Sochi we’re sure.

    –NASTC Nation 

  • Solden Wrap-up

    The World Cup season opener in Solden has come and gone.  While there was good skiing expectedly from the men, one of the interesting things to note was the strong performance by the French men’s team.  Five of the French men’s team placed within the top 10.  France’s golden child Alex Pinturault, skied a great run and placed ahead of last year’s overall winner, Marcel Hirscher.  However it wasn’t fast enough to beat Ligety’s time. Ligety has really mastered the GS technique and line approach, and although many racers have studied his skiing over the summer they are still unable to knock Ligety off the podium.  

    The women’s race was the more exciting of the two races this weekend.  Quite a few surprises took place.  Lara Gut of Switzerland, smoking her competitors and taking the 1st place slot with a 0.84 lead.  This was the first giant slalom win for Switzerland in 10 years.  Lara skied two solid runs, her line line and lack of hesitation allowed her skis to cut through the snow, where some of the other slower skiers threw them sideways.  A dissapointing showing from Tina Maze, who was the favorite to win after her record breaking performance last season.  Tina came in 18th at the end of her second run, her time was 3.03 seconds slower than Lara Gut’s.  In ski racing, 3 second is a really long time.  Tina is not known for sulking, she will take this dissapoint and use it as motivation in her next few training sessions.  No doubt she is probably already on the hill working out what went wrong.  

    The best performance from the U.S Ski Team came from 18yr old Mikaela Shiffrin who finished the race 5th, her best GS performance to date.  Mikaela already has 4 slalom World Cup victories under her belt, along with a World Championship win.  Another shocker during the women’s race, was Julia Mancuso’s failure to qualify for a second run.  After a disqualification due to illegal equipment from one of Japan’s team members, Julia squeaked into the second run.  Let’s hope the U.S women have a better showing in Lake Louise and Beaver Creek.

     

     

  • NASTC Going to La Grave, France!

    The southern Alps boasts some of the best skiing for strong intermediate to expert skiers.  The Hautes-Alpes as this area is known, is home to some of the largest resorts in Europe.  The expanse of terrain available to ski is mind blowing.  You can spend an entire week exploring the resorts of Alpes d’Huez, la Grave, Serre Chevalier and Les Deux Alpes without ever skiing the same run twice.  This is what we intend to do!
     
    This course will have two groups.  One of the groups will focus on building technique, learning tactics and logging mileage on the vast variety of terrain that the region has to offer.  This group will explore the The Alpes d’Huez, descend down La Sarenne which is the world’s longest run at approx 10 miles.  Explore the gladed valley of Serre Chevalier and then make their way over to Les Deux Alpes.  
    The second group is geared towards the adventure seeker and and providing the ultimate free-skier experience and will spend the majority of their skiing time at La Grave.  La Grave is not for rookies, it has notably some of the most exciting and challenging lift served terrain in the world. 
     
    The southern Alps are known for being wild and rugged, you will not find the carefully constructed alpine charm that you would as some of Europe’s more well known resorts.  Here it’s just you and the mountains.  If you want to see glaciers up close, be inspired and awed by the raw and jagged faces of the mountains, feel the crisp alpine air on your face and take in the silence that comes with being at 10-12,000ft, this is your trip.  If you want the rush and excitement of skiing off-piste snow, and challenging terrain with a an expceptional scenery as the backdrop for your turns, the NASTC La Grave course is for you. 
     
    La Grave is located in the most southerly aspect of the Alps.  The famous Provence region is to the South, and the cities of Grenoble and Lyon lie to the west and Geneva, Switzerland to the North.  The village of La Grave is different from other typical alpine villages as the buildings are made of stone.  Due to the harshness of the landscape the village is constructed out of stone and built into the mountainside in a labyrinth of cascading terraces.  The people that populate this little village are the locals and people who share a strong passion for the mountains, adventure, the alpine lifestyle and of course the passion for having your skis cut and float through freshly fallen snow. 

    Our hotel for the week is Auberge Edelweiss, a charming alpine style lodge that immediately makes you feel at home.  With the traditional stonework architecture and colorful linens and furnishings you can’t help but feel warm and cozy in the relaxed and informal atompshere of the hotel.  Centrally located, Hotel Edelweiss also offer exceptionally good food and an extensive wine list.  Meals are served in the softly lit dining room that has a log fire roaring in the hearth every evening.  Bread is baked fresh every day and seasonal local produce are the focal point in the daily selections.  The Auberge Edelweiss also hosts an apres ski at the end of the day, with complimentary tapas to go with their broad selection of libations.  On top of delicious food and warm hospitality , the hotel also offers a stunning panorama of La Meije from every room, a breathtaking sight at sunset.  

    Pricing is based on a double occupancy room (single upgrades are available) and includes breakfast and dinner daily.  $4395 ground, all inclusive ski week (no airfare)

  • NASTC NEWS The Season Has Officially Started in CO

    NASTC NEWS The Season Has Officially Started in CO

     

    Hello NASTC Skiers and Friends,

    You may have heard the news already, Arapahoe Basin has started turning its chairs for the public.  On Sunday, October 13th, A-Basin fired up the engines on one of their main chairs to let guests make their first turns of the season.  Much of ski country in the Western United States(CA, CO, UT)and the Pacific Northwest has seensome good early snowfall.  The crisp temps and early ! snowflakes are favoring a good season.  We can hardly wait till the roads and trees are covered in white and the chairlifts are spinning in our neck of the woods.  Make sure you send in your registration for the Early Season Jumpstart course, Dec 4-7.  Maximize your skiing by starting off the season with some good coaching.  The Early Season Jumpstart course will be held at Squaw Valley/Alpine Meadows, one of the largest resorts in the U.S.  Complete with slope side lodgingand a village full of excellent dining options,Squaw Valley is an ideal destination for our Jumpstart camp.  If you can’t make the Early Season Jumpstart, NASTC offers another great opportunity to ski at Squaw Valley during our All Conditions/All Terrain Ski Improvement Camp in February.  Squaw Valley give us access to extensive terrain that is both fun! and technical.  This is a great mountain to hone in your! all-mountain free-skiing skills.  Under the warmth of the Calfornia sunshine, you will make changes in your skiing that will allow you to ski more of the mountain and raise the fun-meter.

     

    Snowbird, UT – February 1-5

    NASTC will return to Snowbird again this winter.  Snowbird has to be one of our most thrilling winter playgrounds in North America.  This mountain is not for the meek, it is a place that feeds the adventure and excitement that advanced skiers look for.  If you want to improve your steep and off-piste skiing skills, attempt to ski chutes with more confidence, learn how to deal with variable terrain and ski big vertical then click here to register:  https://skinastc.com/all-courses/80

     

     

    Alpine Meadows, January 26-28

    A definitive favorite among NASTC skiers and it’s easy to see why.  Alpine Meadows has been the locals’ favorite mountain for many years.  Ask anyone who has skied there and they will tell you how fun and what a great mountain it is.  Although not nearly as big as it’s neighbhor and sibling Squaw Valley, Alpine Meadows skis like a big mountain.  This is your authentic, original recipe skiing experience.  You will not be distracted by crazy amounts of signage directing you everywhere but where you want to go or having to walk through the commercial gauntlet before your ski boots touch the snow.  You will be likely greeted with a friendly good morning and left to go alo! ne about your business.  There is a gentle sense of serenity here, an unspoken respect for the purity and the enjoyment you get from your skis slicing through the snow.  At Alpine, NASTC will carefully  build up your skiing skills with a focus towards skiing all conditions and all terrain so you can get greater enjoyment out of your skiing experience.

     

    NASTC Dryland Training Kit – Do you have yours?

    This is a kit of essential tools that will help you develop better balance, mobility and agility and help improve your skiing skills.  It’s no secret that you have to put in some time off the snow, in order to do better when you’re on it.  The Dryland Kit includes the SkiA Sweetspot trainer  which is a balancing tool, mini-bands to help turn on your glutes and develop better mobility, an agility ladder with a DVD of exerc! ises and a copy of Total Skiing to use as your guide through y! our off-snow training process.  The Dryland Kit can be ordered through the NASTC Pro Shop

    NASTC Uniform Jackets FOR SALE!!  You can get your very own Patagonia NASTC trainer’s jacket.  A limited stock is available, please email us at [email protected] for sizes, models and prices. 

    Audi Birds of Prey – the guns have been turned on at Beaver Creek on the Birds of Prey and Raptor runs in anticipation of the Audi Birds of Prey World Cup event.  Beavercreek is the only stop in the U.S on the World Cup circuit.  The Birds of Prey run is legendary and a premier event on the World Cup Circuit.  New ! this year is the Raptor run for Women’s events which begin November 29 through December 1st, The Men’s speed events and GS will be held December 6-8. 

    Dryland Training Tip: We are big proponents of foam rolling.  Every skier should have a foam roller in their closet, regardless if they are weekend warriors or serious pros.  We found this good read on foam rolling from Outside Mag, because you can never hear it enough and from several different voices. 

    Definitely foam roll before your workout, and after if you want to.  According to Dr. Mike Clark, CEO of the National Academy of Sports Medicine. If you foam roll  correctly before exercising, rolling should help prevent injuries.

    WHAT TO DO

    “If you want to get your body ready for a workout session, foam roll your calves, the outside of your IT band, your piriformis, you adductors, and your mid and upper back,” Clark says. But instead of rolling back and forth constantly, as many athletes do, he says to roll until you find the most tender point in each area, then keep the roller on that spot for 60 seconds. Concentrating on sensitive spots will help relax your muscles, which Clark says is the first step in a proper warm up, followed by stretching any tight muscles, and then performing dynamic exercises like prisoner squats and lunges.

    WHY ROLL FIRST

    You have two major receptors in your muscles, Clark says. One is your muscle spindle, which makes the muscle contract. The other is called the Golgi tendon organ, which makes the muscle rel! ax. “They both should be in balance with one another, which allows the tissue to work without getting injured,” Clark says.

    If you have any muscular imbalances, and all you do to warm up is dynamic or static movements, your body will be continuously compensating for your problem spots, Clark cautions. “Stretching stimulates the muscle spindle and makes it more overactive. Deep pressure stimulates the Golgi tendon organ, which then overrides the muscle spindle, which allows the tissue to relax, which prepares it for stretching,” Clark says. Foam rolling before stretching and exercising is like taking the parking brake off before you start driving your car, he says.

    Clark says 900 soccer players at the University of North Carolina practiced his recommended warm up program under his supervision—foam roll! , static stretching, dynamic stretching. “They had a significant ! reduction in injuries by following that exact system,” he says.

    As for more scientific evidence to back a brand new trigger-point-releasing warm-up regimen, there’s not a lot. But studies like this one touting the foam roller’s ability to increase range of motion without interfering with muscle force are beginning to emerge.

    To view the article in its original format: http://www.outsideonline.com/fitness/fitness-coach/Should-I-Foam-Roll-Before-or-After-a-Workout.html?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=tweet

     

     

  • Getting the Nutrition Formula Right can Improve Your Ski Training

    Getting the Nutrition Formula Right can Improve Your Ski Training

     

     

    OUTSIDE MAGAZINE, MARCH 2013 
    THURSDAY, MARCH 07, 2013

    THE SECRET FOOD OF ATHLETES: INSIDE THE OLYMPIC TRAINING CENTER’S NUTRITION LAB

    A rare look inside the nutrition lab at the Olympic Training Center reveals how America’s best athletes eat to win

    By: 
     

    olympic training nutrition olympic training center OTC ice cream jesse thomas phil southerland joel parkinson scott jurek training secrets nutrition secrets

    The Olympic Training Center’s specially formulated low-fat ice cream. Photo: Benjamin Rasmussen

    “You think just because you’re burning 4,000 calories in a workout, you can eat whatever you want. And we’re here to say, um, actually no, you can’t.”

    Secrets of the Pros

    Top athletes share their meal strategies.

    “You’re only as good as your last meal.”

    Nowhere is this idea more ingrained than at the United States Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, where hundreds of elite runners, triathletes, wrestlers, water-polo players, and other aspiring Olympians spend weeks, months, or, in some cases, years on their quest for gold. About 130 athletes live at the center, while another 15,000 visit annually for short-term camps, most of them teenagers who rank in the top 10 percent of their sport.

    Athletes come here for the center’s state-of-the-art training facilities—to tweak their strokes in the aquatic center’s 50-meter pool, learn more about their bodies in the physiology lab, or nurse injuries in the world-class physical-therapy department. But perhaps the most important building an athlete will visit is the food-court-size cafeteria on the north end of the sprawling 35-acre grounds.

    The Caf, as the residents call it, is the OTC’s nutritional nerve center, where all meals are eaten and where new thinking about food is giving America’s top-tier athletes their high-performance edge. This past summer, the U.S. Olympic Committee sent a staff of chefs and dietitians from Colorado Springs to London, where they re-created the menu Team USA had been living and training on back home. The result: Americans won more medals than in any previous Olympics.

    I’ve often wondered what might happen if recreational athletes put the same emphasis on nutrition as Olympians do preparing for the Games. As a fortysomething outdoor athlete, I’ve jazzed around over the years with numerous dietary programs—the Zone, paleo, the Blueberry Muffin Diet (not recommended)—in hopes of improving performance, but nothing stuck, except to my waist. I was confused. If you trained hard enough, didn’t it all burn up in the lactic-acid fire anyway? Hoping to gain deeper insight into high-end performance nutrition, I made a pilgrimage to the OTC.

    A lot of stories trickle out during every Olympic Games about the eating habits of the stars, like Michael Phelps’ reported 4,000-calorie breakfast—including a five-egg omelet, French toast, and chocolate chip pancakes—or the 16 bananas Jamaican sprinter Yohan Blake supposedly eats every day. But as my OTC guide, 32-year-old registered dietitian Jennifer Gibson, assured me, the real secret to performance nutrition is keeping things simple. Gibson has worked with everyone from skiers to wrestlers to professional soccer players, but she says the OTC’s nutritional principles can be applied by anyone, from age-group experts to enthusiastic neophytes.

    I spent a day with her and put together the following eight-step peak-performance nutrition plan based on what I learned. I also discovered that, when it comes to eating right, the stars, well, they’re just like us. “We can’t follow our athletes around constantly, but we do try to be the voice in their head,” Gibson told me. “You think just because you’re burning 4,000 calories in a workout, you can eat whatever you want. And we’re here to say, um, actually no, you can’t.”

    STEP 1: KNOW YOUR NUMBERS
    Before any dietary interventions take place, OTC nutritionists put their athletes through an extensive clinical screening. This includes urinalysis to assess hydration, skinfold tests to determine body composition (your fat-to-muscle ratio), resting metabolic rate, or RMR (how many calories you burn at rest—dietitians rarely want their athletes to consume less than this in a day), and blood work to identify nutrient levels and deficiencies like anemia. “If there’s anything systemically wrong, we need to fix that before we can go to the next level,” Gibson says. Clinical testing provides the baseline data to help measure progress (or lack thereof). Olympians are rescreened as frequently as once a month. Being tested a couple of times a year by a doctor or sports nutritionist should suffice for the rest of us, she says.

    STEP 2: ADDRESS YOUR ISSUES
    One of the biggest problems Gibson has worked to correct in athletes is iron deficiencies. Iron is essential for helping your blood transport oxygen to hardworking muscles. Female athletes are particularly susceptible to iron loss through menstruation. High-mileage runners may also suffer something called foot-strike hemolysis, where hemoglobin cells are destroyed by stride impact. And a growing body of research suggests that chronic inflammation may trigger a hormone that blocks iron absorption. “Optimizing iron is huge for us here,” says Gibson. “As many as 90 percent of my female athletes, and 50 percent of the males, have low readings when we first test them.” Iron supplements usually correct the problem, says Gibson. Vitamin D is another keen area of interest. Compelling evidence suggests that vitamin D helps reduce inflammation, increase VO2 max, boost immunity, and promote stronger bones. In 2008, when Olympic marathoner Deena Kastor broke her foot at the Beijing Games, it turned out that she had only half the recommended vitamin D levels (normal measures are 35 to 55 nanograms per milliliter). Gibson told me that 80 to 90 percent of the athletes she has screened have turned out to be low in vitamin D, in some cases despite training for hours outdoors (sunscreen blocks vitamin D absorption). She recommends supplements to help bring D levels back up to baseline.

    STEP 3: EMBRACE WHOLE FOODS
    Gibson and the other dietitians at the OTC push a whole-foods philosophy for an athlete’s core diet, with a heavy emphasis on organic, sustainably produced fruits and vegetables, lean proteins (like chicken and fish), healthy fats (like avocados and olive oil), and complex carbohydrates (like steel-cut oats and sweet potatoes) that ensure a steady stream of nutrients to training-ravaged bodies. The quality and quantity of vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, fiber, and phytochemicals provided by fresh whole foods simply can’t be matched by processed alternatives, no matter how sophisticated that protein shake may appear. This is where the Caf comes in. A sign at the entrance outlines the three commandments: 1) Get more veggies, nuts, and seeds in your diet. 2) Adjust the amount of carbohydrates you’re eating based on activity level. 3) Add a lean protein to every meal. The Caf line progresses through a salad bar, soup station, vegetable side dishes, and entrées, like baked tilapia and pad Thai, that vary every day. Each item has a full nutrition panel accompanying it, along with an Athlete’s Plate diagram, a pie chart showing exactly what your plate should look like, with appropriate portions of vegetables, protein, and carbs. (Many athletes go so far as to take photos of their plates to send to their trainers.) This spring, as part of its makeover, the OTC will open a gourmet demonstration kitchen to teach athletes how to prepare meals at home. “We lay it out to make it as appealing as possible, to ensure they’re getting enough good food,” says Jacque Hamilton, the OTC’s senior executive chef. “Generally speaking, at this level there are very few athletes who do the low-carb or no-carb thing. It’s just not conducive to performance. You need carbohydrates if you’re going to perform at 100 percent.”

    STEP 4: MAP OUT YOUR MEAL PLAN
    “A meal plan isn’t static,” says Gibson. “It’s based on activity, so nutrition will vary according to activity level or phase.” This interplay—what some athletes call nutritional periodization—is a functional way of scheduling when, what, and how much you eat. That may involve raising or lowering total calories; manipulating ratios of proteins, carbs, and fats; or timing food based on energy output. Gibson produces detailed eating guidelines for some of her athletes, so they simply follow the plan. Others manage their regimens more intuitively. “I typically try to front-load my food,” says Olympic triathlete Gwen Jorgensen, 26. “I do my workouts throughout the day, so I try to get a lot of calories early. That’s usually a hearty breakfast of oats mixed with peanut butter, raisins, bananas, cinnamon, honey, and poached eggs, which I stir right into the oatmeal. During the off-season, I’ve been trying to put on a little muscle mass, so that means getting a complete meal with protein soon after a workout. These are the kinds of things you’re always working on.”

    STEP 5: ADJUST THE LAST ONE PERCENT
    The final tier is sports nutrition, when athletes dial in race-day fueling, adjust ergogenic aids—any substance that enhances physical performance, like caffeine—and might try supplements like beta-alanine, an amino acid that fuels muscles during exercise. “This last stage is dictated entirely by your sport, your activity level, and your goals,” says Gibson. These tweaks make up a small fraction of an athlete’s total caloric intake but help you get the most from your body in training and competition. Once you’ve committed to eating whole foods consistently, Gibson recommends that you experiment to see what kind of sports nutrition works best for you—carbohydrate loading the night before a race, for example, or drinking beetroot juice, a high-octane energy booster, before a hard training day. She warns against relying on shakes, bars, pills, gels, and drinks, however. “It’s the Wild West out there,” she says. “Everyone’s an expert about nutrition, and everyone’s got a product for you. But we’re not flashy or trendy here.” Olympic triathlete Lukas Verzbicas, 20, restricts caffeine until the day of a race to feel its maximum effect. He’s also a big fan of chia seeds, a complete protein that contains antioxidants and anti-inflammatory flavonoids. Triathlete Jorgensen tries to get in good fats by gulping down a spoonful of coconut oil after a hard workout or race.

    STEP 6: HYDRATE OR BONK
    Gibson calls hydration “the other macronutrient” and says it’s too often neglected in a high-performance diet. She tests the composition of her athletes’ sweat and formulates custom sports drinks—with water, sodium, and sometimes potassium, as well as glucose, fructose, or maltodextrin for carbs—to replace the appropriate amounts of sodium and electrolytes. (She also occasionally flavors them with lemonade or Crystal Light packets.) Recreational athletes may not have access to such precise lab analysis, but they can approximate their needs by weighing themselves before and after a race or a hard training session. You should be hydrating enough to lose less than 2 percent of your body weight during exercise. If your clothes are marked with white salt rings, your sweat has a fair amount of sodium in it, so experiment with an existing sports drink, adding sodium as needed to replenish the salt.

    STEP 7: CHANGE YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH FOOD
    “Nutrition is ultimately behavioral,” says Gibson. “Athletes are under a lot of stress, and sometimes food is the only thing they can release with. A lot of them don’t drink, and they don’t have much of a social life because they’re training all the time. So, like a lot of busy people, they’ll turn to food for comfort.” One trick Gibson and others use is to avoid demonizing foods, since designating something off-limits makes the temptation greater. The key is to emphasize the value of healthy foods and how they’ll improve performance. This begins to override the mindless emotional eating that can derail the hard work athletes put in every week.

    STEP 8: COMMIT
    For weight-class competitors like boxers and wrestlers, managing weight while continuing to improve performance is the holy grail of any diet program. “Sweets are my kryptonite,” says wrestler Adeline Gray, 22. “And I love sweets.” Gray, who has her sights set on a gold medal in Rio De Janeiro in 2016, is one of the full-time OTC residents. A couple of years back, she was working with Gibson to optimize her nutrition when she had a particularly depressing Oreo bender. “I was lying to myself about it. I’d eaten a whole box of them, then tried blaming it on my roommate,” she says, laughing now. The bingeing was making it tough to reach her weigh-in targets. After the Dark Night of the Cookie, Gibson had her quit sweets cold, filling her diet with vegetables, lean proteins, and good fats like avocados and almonds. “I logged everything into my phone. I drank two glasses of water before every meal and a gallon throughout the day. I started losing a kilo a week. It wasn’t that I didn’t want an Oreo. I just wanted a gold medal more.” She adds, “The main thing is commitment and consistency. Until I decided that this is what I was going to do, it didn’t happen.”

    View the article on outsideonline.com: http://www.outsideonline.com/fitness/nutrition/The-Secret-Food-of-Athletes.html?page=all

  • 2014 The Season of Comebacks

    2014 is going to be a showcase year for the ski racing world.  Not only do we have the Olympics in Sochi to look forward to, but a number of skiers are making their come backs this year.  This season, Lindsey Vonn will make her return to the slopes as well as Bode Miller, the Austrian powerhouse Klaus Kroell and German slalom star, Felix Neureuther.  On the women’s side, Tanja Poutianen, Marlies Schild and Federica Brignone will also make their returns to the world cup circuit after their injuries last season.

    Injury is almost second nature to ski athletes.  All professional athletes suffer damage to their bodies during their careers.  Ski athletes do tend to have the most surgery rendering injuries.  When a ski athlete falls, they fall hard and often not without consequences.  Many athletes don’t come back after injury, most make it back on the circuit but few are able to perform at the same level prior to injury.  The mental and physical road back is arduous.  When an athlete gets carried off the slope the road to recovery has begun.  It’s a journey that sometimes takes over a year to complete.  These guys are not sitting around by the beach as they recover.  They are spending long hours with a physical therapist, they pretty much move in to the nearest gym and then there are the countless doctor visits pre and post op.  Athletes are well guided and supervised on their physical recovery, it’s the mental recovery that they are all alone in.  Sometimes the extent of the mental trauma doesn’t show up until they are back on snow.  So when these guys and gals get on the podium or finish within the top 15, it’s a testament to their hardwork, determination and passion.  

  • Red Mountain Cat Skiing with NASTC

    Come cat skiing at Red Mountain this year with NASTC January 16-19! This is going to be a new, fun, adrenaline-filled, powder skiing adventure! Red Mountain is the world’s largest cat skiing operation, running 4 cats daily of intermediate, advanced and expert levels. All this just 2.5 hours north of Spokane, in Rossland, BC! Call or email us here at NASTC for more information today!

  • AIARE Level 2 February 7-10, 2014

    American Institute of Avalanche Research and Education (AIARE) Level 2 to be offered Feb. 7-10 here at NASTC, a great opportunity if you have your Level 1 to get deeper knowledge of how avalanches form, what the snowpack is doing, what to look for, route finding and navigation, use of rescue equipment, and trip planning. This is a must-have for anyone venturing into the backcountry often, especially if other skiers or riders are depending on your leadership.

  • Cedar House Sport Hotel

    NASTC’s Tahoe home, the Cedar House Sport Hotel (www.cedarhousesporthotel.com) is #3 in the west! Check it out: http://travel.usnews.com/Hotels/review–Truckee-California-40160/ and come stay with us here!