For two years I have been keeping an eye on the Tetons in hopes if hitting a good mid winter window that would allow me to get into the hart of the Tetons and ride some big classic lines in winter conditions.
That window finally presented itself last week so Chris Edmands and I drove out to hook up with Teton staple Bill Dyer and one of my favorite shred companions Sage Cattebriga-Alosa to recon some potential zones to film later in the year when the snowpack stabilizes.
Here is the blow by blow for two of the 5 days we were there.
4 AM start. Hiking with down pants and two down jackets.
Hit a wind slab at 9AM an hour from the summit of our objective and are forced to turn around.
10 AM Find good snow and ride good lines.
1PM Sage hits a huge air….lands perfect on a small tranny and rides away clean.
4:20PM watch the sunset from a high ridge.
6 PM realize we are running low on fuel.
7:05 PM Sage saves the day, finds water.
Day two.
4AM start. Snowing hard.
5 AM ride low angle powder in the dark.
7:45 AM Sun comes out as we are standing on our first lines of the day.
10:15 AM start an avalanche on a face next to us as we skin up a ridge to our lines.
10:30 Drop 3 cornices, start three slides, and go back down our skin track to ride a mellow shoulder.
1:45 Ride an isolated spine line at lower elevation.
2:30 Ride threw a natural arch.
3:20 PM Edmands falls in a river with 8 miles left to skin.
7PM make it back after a hellish traverse that resulted in 2 gnarly falls on my split.
7:15 calculate we covered 20 miles today.
Recap.
Tetons are very big. Remind me of Europe with out the ice. Tetons are very cold. We would have to ride with water bottles under coats, Clif Bars would have to go under your armpits before they could be eaten and whiskey does not freeze.














Just because the whiskey won’t freeze doesn’t mean it won’t give you frostbite =)
Comment by nothingmuch March 21, 2010 @ 3:16 pm
Looking forward to Deeper!
Comment by Dax March 22, 2010 @ 9:36 am
I love the Teton reports because they’re so pure. Self-supported, camping, lots of hiking. I particularly appreciate that you talk about how much you and your companions back off lines, Jeremy – - that is something that is not focused on enough in today’s ski films.
Comment by samh March 22, 2010 @ 9:58 am
[...] the entire article here. Amazing [...]
Pingback from Jeremy Jones Does the Tetons | Liftshack Media March 22, 2010 @ 10:25 am
super cool shots and update…
Comment by Luc March 22, 2010 @ 4:52 pm
4.20pm – watching the sunset from a HIGH ridge. Sounds awesome
Comment by Alastair Purves March 22, 2010 @ 9:32 pm
i love the tetons. my wife grew up with a view of them out her window. i worked at targhee and learned to board there. even though i now live in haines, grandtarghee.com is still a daily hit for me on the web and i still dream about the pass.
great pics again!
Comment by Allgood March 28, 2010 @ 9:38 pm
Lived out in Victor, Id in 07′ Worked at the ghee. Miss the Valley; getting $ and knee back in order, and heading back out! There is so much stuff to shred if your willing too put in the work. Defiantly planning on doing more of that, and investing in a good pair of skins instead of a sled. Jeremy is doing a great thing by showcasing what Real Snowboarding is all about! 4:20 sunsets are cool too.
Comment by PabLo September 1, 2010 @ 3:03 pm