Craving international travel? Latin America was one of the first to open up and we’re going to Portillo, Chile! Book with us now to this unforgettable destination and improve your skiing. Get off that intermediate or advanced plateau finally and reach a new comfort level in all conditions and terrain. Its one of our favorite international ski training playgrounds, as the immense Andean mountains offer long, steep runs, and the hotel offers luxurious accommodation and sumptuous dining. Call to discuss if this is the trip for you, space is limited and quickly fills with returning NASTC students. August 7-14. Travel overnight Aug 6-7 and 14-15.
Author: Ski NASTC
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ASPEN JAN 12-15, 2027
Travel days: Jan 11 and 15 or 16/ Ski days: Jan 12-15 Price: TBA by Sept 1, 2026 (includes 4 nights lodging, 4 full days small group instruction, tech talks and no-host group dinner planning)
Reservations: open now, very popular NASTC location only offered every few years. Deposits hold spot. Level 7-9.
Aspen Snowmass doesn’t need much of an introduction to the serious skier. The four mountains of Aspen, Highlands, Buttermilk and Snowmass have just about every kind of terrain and excellent snow consistency. NASTC will give you the insider look to these exciting mountains, you will ski the nooks and crannies that only locals know about. You will polish your technique, work on skill blending and tactics and log in lots of mileage skiing a variety of terrain. Your coach will oversee your progress during the whole week and provide you with individual feedback and coaching. We will be staying in one of Aspen’s many lovely hotels, near the mountains and town (call for details). Aspen is a charming town with lots of world class dining options but also has a thriving art scene and home to the Aspen Institute. Its heartbeat is defined by the collective love for the mountains and mountain lifestyle!
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PORTILLO TRIP IS ON!
AUGUST 7-14, 2021 WE ARE PLANNING TO GO (depart Friday Aug 6 and arrive home Aug 15)
Portillo is South America’s premiere ski resort, famous for its majestic setting and deep snow. Once you go, you’ll never want to leave. NASTC will be celebrating its GOLDEN+1 ANNIVERSARY 26th season at Portillo. There is a reason we keep going back to this friendly, exclusive and exhilarating resort. Ski down to the glacier-blue Inca Lake or traverse into huge bowls amidst 15,000ft Andean peaks. With 14 lifts, 23 runs and all the snow of a maritime range, Portillo is home to big mountain extremists, world-class racers and everyday carvers; but amidst the social atmosphere of the living room and the late night disco, everyone is equal.The NASTC ski training camp addresses the three major components to successful skiing performance: technique, fitness, and equipment. By addressing all 3 components in a full immersion multi-day ski training program you will make substantial improvements to your skiing. The NASTC staff is comprised of the top ski instructors in the United States, members of the PSIA National Alpine Team and the teachers of teachers. Your skiing will improve in a safe, fun, and highly professional way under their watchful eyes. You will ski in small groups with the same instructor all day, all week. Backcountry tour options exist, as does helicopter skiing on Weds our day off. This is the ultimate ski vacation: a superb mountain, fun-loving people, delicious food, fine wine and a beautiful hotel. You are sure to improve, make new friends, and enjoy yourself. Portillo is everyone’s paradise!
CLICK HERE FOR PRICES AND TO HOLD A SPOT ON OUR TRIP
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ANDERMATT MARCH 8-15, 2025
Join us in Adermatt and enjoy some of the best skiing you’ll ever have in the world at this quintessential Alps resort!
There is no shortage of steep and long runs in this alpine paradise. Apres ski is an equally lively scene and strolling around the pedestrian town is a memorable part of this rich experience. The center of town is at once chic and rustic, with stylish couples rubbing shoulders with the hardiest of mountaineers. To round out the vibe, the old and rickety chalets lend a historic feel that is truly unmatched in mountain towns.
After a hearty traditional breakfast with selections that include locally cured salami, fresh bread, eggs, cereal, yogurt and more you are energized and ready for days of endless skiing that include an itinerary of challenging exercises, one-on-one coaching, situational skiing and an off-piste adventure. Take your mid-day break at one of the slope side chalets and refuel with a delicious bowl of spaghetti bolognaise, goulash or the European skier’s favorite bratwurst and fries. Continue on with the rest of the day and your Swiss alpine adventure with your coach and guide leading the way to exciting, off-the-beaten-path terrain that will fill your memory bank with unforgettable experiences and vistas.
Dates: March 8-15, 2025 (includes travel days)Price: approx $6995 (tba by Dec 1, 2024), includes: 7 nights (dbl occupancy) at a 4-star hotel, breakfast and dinner daily, 6 full days guiding and instruction. Single room upgrades are available. Purchase your own lift tickets online and include evacuation insurance. -
BOOK A BACKCOUNTRY GUIDE HERE
BOOK A PRIVATE GUIDED TOUR OR TAKE OUR INTRO CLASS.
Private: Book your instructional tour on any day of your choice for yourself or your small group. Paypal your deposit below, or email [email protected] with date request. Available for half or full day. Pricing from $115-$495 pp
IBS Class: the Intro to Backcountry Skiing class will give you a solid start using the equipment and learning the skills you need to get out safely. The day includes: use of skins and AT bindings, setting a skin track, basic route finding, avalanche awareness, terrain selection, and how to plan a safe & fun day with your friends or family.
Dates: Thursdays, Saturdays, and Sundays Dec 12 – April 11
Price: $199 pp
Reservations and Deposits: Paypal tab below or email [email protected]
Ski Equipment Rental (boots, skis, skins) $55/day additional
Avalanche Kit Rental (beacon, shovel, probe) $25/day additional
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PRESS: AUSTRIAN INSPIRATION FOR NASTC
CHRIS FELLOWS SKINS UPSLOPE WITH A GROUP OF CLIENTS IN THE BRITISH COLUMBIA BACKCOUNTRY, PHOTO COURTESY NASTCAN ACADEMY INSPIRED BY AUSTRIA
TRUCKEE’S NORTH AMERICAN SKI TRAINING CENTER UPHOLDS THE TRADITIONS GLEANED FROM THE BIRTHPLACE OF MODERN SKIING
If you were to compare the ski world to academics, Chamonix might be Stanford, a place where ski innovators thrive and boundary-pushers shred impossibly steep lines. Austria’s St. Anton, and the nearby Bundessportsheim, in particular, would be the Oxford of skiing—steeped in tradition and dedicated to excellence.
When Chris Fellows landed in St. Anton in 1988 on a trip from Tahoe, his entire outlook on ski instruction changed. He’d been an instructor at Heavenly and Squaw Valley, but ski instruction in the U.S. at that time was not a career. It was more of a couple-year stopover between college and the real world.
In Austria, Fellows gained a new perspective that set him on a path to found and grow the now-26-year-old North American Ski Training Center (NASTC) in Truckee, along with his wife Jenny.
To this day NASTC holds true to its Austrian inspiration in many ways. Chris leads the academy and Jenny handles the logistics and business side of the company. Together, their efforts have built an academy where immersive, technique-driven instruction is delivered by lifelong ski instructors dedicated to the craft. But in other ways, the organization has evolved over the years. Rock climbing courses, avalanche education and trips to the top international ski destinations have become an integral part of the training center’s growth.
Through skiing’s evolution on the West Coast, NASTC has been a mainstay, standing today as one of the oldest remaining founder-run ski and guiding outfits in the area—a testament to the dedication and vision of founders who saw a need for a higher level of ski training in the market.
“It’s taken a lot of heart and soul,” says Jenny.
EAST COAST, TAHOE, EUROPE
Chris Fellows grew up skiing on a 240-foot-tall bump in the landscape in northern Massachusetts, where a T-bar ferried skiers up the slope. His parents would drop him off after school on icy evenings that always ended in a familiar ski position—not as a matter of technique, but simply as a result of his 1970s teenage outerwear and frigid New England winters.
“By the end of the day your leg was in a permanent flex because your blue jeans were frozen,” says Fellows.
Frozen jeans aside, Fellows fell in love with the sport. He became a ski instructor on the East Coast before eventually moving West, first to surf and then to ski. He taught skiing at Heavenly in 1985 and then moved to Squaw Valley in the late ’80s.
By then Fellows was considering his next move, which likely would involve leaving the mountains for a real job. But then he went on a trip to Austria with the Professional Ski Instructors of America.
When he landed in St. Anton, commonly referred to as the “birthplace of modern skiing,” he saw fully certified ski guides and instructors treating ski instruction like a lifelong endeavor. Clients came back year after year for the high-caliber instruction and the magnetism of the overall mountain experience. Guides owned the lodges, and made a full career out of their profession.
“That gave me the idea,” says Fellows. “I said, ‘I wonder if this can be done in the States?’ I didn’t see that type of setup here.”
FROM LEFT, NASTC FOUNDERS CHRIS FELLOWS, JENNY FELLOWS AND MIKE SODERGREN, PHOTO COURTESY NASTC
Fellows returned to the Tyrolean Alps for the better part of two winters. He taught the sport in the cradle of modern skiing history, but more importantly, he absorbed everything he could take in.
“You have to humble yourself,” says Fellows. “I felt comfortable in my skiing skills, but here I was in the birthplace of skiing, and I was humble and really open to learning.”
At the Bundessportheim, the pinnacle of professional Austrian ski instruction, Fellows saw instructors breaking down ski technique into fundamental movements and using repetition and muscle memory exercises to build beginners into confident, all-terrain skiers.
Fellows returned to the States determined to recreate what he had seen in Austria for American skiers. He had found a kindred spirit in Mike Sodergren, a fellow Squaw Valley ski instructor who shared his vision for a true European-syle ski academy.
Meanwhile, Chris met and married Jenny, who was taking a year off after graduating from Amherst College—and racing on its ski team—to explore Tahoe.
In 1994, Chris and Jenny Fellows founded the North American Ski Training Center with Sodergren as a key partner and head instructor. They dedicated themselves to the highest level of instruction and attracted instructors who shared that vision.
“We hired the PhDs of ski instruction,” says Jenny.
GROWING THE AMERICAN SKI MODEL
In 1994, the American ski industry was still maturing and finding its way. The American Mountain Guide Association had conducted its first ski guide exam and course only a year earlier, spearheaded by another Truckee guide, the late Bela Vadasz of Alpine Skills International.
While NASTC at first embraced a technical, resort-oriented focus on ski instruction, as opposed to Alpine Skills International’s backcountry bent, NASTC soon began offering all types of ski instruction, including avalanche education and mountain guiding both locally and as far away as the Himalayas.
CHRIS FELLOWS LEADS A GROUP ON THE SCENIC SPEARHEAD TRAVERSE IN BRITISH COLUMBIA IN 1994
During the mid-1990s, American ski guides were putting their own unique stamp on the sport—and the tension between them and their European counterparts was apparent from the earliest days.
Doug Robinson, the first president of the American Mountain Guide Association (AMGA), recalls a hilarious, ill-fated attempt at cross-pond communication between the fledgling American organization and its European colleagues in an article he penned on the AMGA’s history.
“At first, the AMGA had no letterhead, which led us into conflict with the UIAGM (Union Internationale des Associations de Guides de Montagnes). In 1980, I wrote them a simple message: Hi, here we are, how can we join your club? But I sent it on my personal letterhead,” wrote Robinson in an article in the AMGA Guide Bulletin.
Robinson’s letterhead sported a photo of him bouldering in the Buttermilks outside of Bishop, “shirtless, dirty shorts, long hair flying.”
The buttoned-up European guide executives did not find the photo amusing. Their terse reply, complete with the letterhead photo repasted atop their response, read: “This is not a mountain guide. This is a monkey who works without a net.”
That letter became known as the infamous “Monkey Letter,” and American guides began a long-running joke that the missive, signed by Secretaire General Xavier Kalt, was the European guide establishment giving the Americans the “Kalt Shoulder.”
But despite the cultural missteps, American guiding desperately sought the legitimacy, and structure, of international guide association inclusion. This happened slowly over the mid-90s. By 1997, the AMGA was officially accepted into the IFMGA (International Federation of Mountain Guides Association).
“At long last, representatives from the IFMGA member countries voted unanimously to admit the AMGA into the IFMGA. Because they had already received their Alpine, Rock, and Ski certifications before AMGA was accepted, Mark Houston and Bela Vadasz were also named IFMGA guides at this time,” wrote John Cleary, former AMGA president, in the association’s Guide Bulletin. “This was the most significant event in the history of the AMGA.”
Cleary was instrumental in the growth of NASTC as well. As a founder of Sierra Mountain Guides, he held the permits for a large swath of the Sierra Nevada. When he decided to leave guiding and pursue his other passion, geology, he sold the permit for the Tahoe area to NASTC. Sierra Mountain Guides, now under the ownership of Howie Schwartz, continues guiding in the Eastern Sierra under the Inyo County permits.
Twenty-six years later, it doesn’t surprise Cleary that NASTC is still thriving in the Tahoe area, especially as he has seen their program at work over the years on guiding trips.
“They are good guys, always professional, focused on everyone having a good time,” says Cleary. “Some of the most fun I ever had was working with those guys.”
The maturation of American guiding and the rise of companies like NASTC solved one of the issues Fellows saw early in his career: Ski instruction and guiding was once a temporary seasonal job staffed by college grads before joining the real workforce, or a career that forced serious guides to move to Europe to make a living in the industry. Because of the work of AMGA pioneers and American ski visionaries, instructing became a viable career. This benefitted both the guides and their clients.
LOSS AND LONGEVITY
Owning and growing a ski academy has presented intense challenges as well as deep rewards to the Fellows. The clients, guides and partners have been the highlight of a long career teaching generations of skiers.
“It is a really good industry to be in,” says Jenny Fellows. “The mountain sports world is full of very good, very generous people.”
MIKE SODERGREN, AKA SODY, AT BLACKCOMB, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CIRCA 1995, PHOTO COURTESY NASTC
One of those people was Sodergren, who helped guide the early vision of NASTC from idea to reality. “Sody,” as he was known, dedicated his life to skiing, working with NASTC in the North American winter and then chasing snow in the Southern Hemisphere the rest of the year.
In the summer of 1997, Sodergren’s pursuit of snow brought him and his wife Mariam to Thredbo, Australia, to teach skiing as they had in years past. The Tahoma couple were staying in a lodge at the base of the ski resort when a landslide let loose and buried the lodge in dirt and debris. The Sodergrens died in the tragic accident, along with 17 others.
“That was a life-changer, having your best friend perish like that,” says Chris Fellows. “He was our main guy. He was the first coach.”
Despite the devastating loss, the Fellows soldiered on, continuing to build NASTC into the company that Sodergren envisioned. For the Fellows, that means leaving clients with the skills that will transform their skiing for the rest of their lives.
“A lot of ski services bring people into terrain and put them on fat skis and say, ‘Go for it.’ But we’ve been more focused on perfecting technique,” says Fellows.
Fellows’ approach to lifelong ski progression can be seen in his writing, a passion that has resulted in three published books, including Total Skiing, which retired World Cup alpine racer Marco Sullivan says breaks down skiing to its “simplest and purest form.”
That dedication to the craft of skiing has resulted in clients who went on NASTC ski trips 26 years ago and still come back for the training and experiences today.
“That is the only reason we have been able to stay in business, because that core client trusts us and believes in us,” says Fellows.
Through it all—droughts, a global pandemic that shut down international travel and personal tragedy—NASTC has continued to adapt, evolve and innovate, while always staying true to those immersive academy roots inspired by a trip to Austria more than 30 years ago.
“We still occupy the niche we were founded on,” says Jenny, “which is advanced ski camps at the best resorts in the world led by the best instructors.”
David Bunker is a Truckee-based writer and editor.
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BACKCOUNTRY SKIING (TAHOE/TRUCKEE)
Are you new to the backcountry? This one-day will give you a solid introduction to the equipment and skills you need to get out safely. Meet at the trailhead and spend a full day immersed in this beautiful landscape away from the crowds. The day includes: putting on and taking off your skins, setting a skin track, basic route finding, avalanche awareness, terrain selection, and how to plan a safe & fun day with your friends or family.
Available by private booking, either individual or group
Price: $199-$479 depending on group size
Reservations: email [email protected] or Paypal $199 to [email protected] and you’ll receive an email confirmation.
Avalanche Kit Rental (beacon, shovel, probe) – from us at $25/day
Ski Equipment Rental (skis, skins, not boots) – reserve at local ski shops
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ARE YOU BACKCOUNTRY READY?
NASTC’s certified guides are available to take you out safely backcountry skiing. This is a great way to enjoy skiing, get good exercise, and remain socially distanced. What a better season to learn, or deepend your skills! NASTC offers daily intro BC, Intermediate BC, and BC tours in the Truckee-Tahoe area. We also offer overnight experiences (with a roof over your head!) And we offer AIARE L1 adn L2 avalanche education courses, which include 2 ski tours. Need gear? No problem, we can set you up! Ratios of 4:1 or fewer with your family and friends maintains the safety of all and ensures a great skiing experience. Call or text NASTC anytime with questions!
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TAHOE NAT’L FOREST UPDATE
Wondering What’s Up in the TNF?
Hike/Run:
Day use is currently open in all local National Forests in the Lake Tahoe/Truckee area. Be aware of specific closures due to fires, including the Fork Fire (Wright’s Lake), North Complex (Quincy-Oroville), and Loyalton Fire (Loyalton-Dog Valley).
In the Eastern Sierra, please be aware that portions of the Inyo National Forest are currently closed to all use due to ongoing fire, including the Hoover, Ansel Adams, and John Muir Wildernesses, Devil’s Postpile, and the South Tufa area.
Backpacking:
Campfires and camp stoves are currently prohibited outside of designated campgrounds.
Backpack camping is currently only allowed in Granite Chief Wilderness and within 500 feet of the PCT within the Tahoe National Forest (north of Barker Pass). The El Dorado National Forest is currently not open to backpacking, including the PCT south of Barker Pass and Desolation Wilderness.
Backpack camping is permitted as normally allowed on the Humboldt Toiyabe National Forest (Nevada, Mt Rose area). Be aware of campfire restrictions! Camp stoves are currently allowed at this time on HTNF lands.
Camping:
Camping outside of designated campgrounds is currently prohibited on all local National Forests. Designated Campgrounds in the Truckee area which are currently open include:
Upper and Lower Little Truckee, Prosser Family, Silver, Granite Flat, Goose Meadows
Camp stoves are currently allowed in designated campgrounds, although campfires are still prohibited.
For more information visit the Tahoe National Forest and the National Forest Region 5 websites.