Home

What is a gift, anyway?

When working on the Backcountry newsletter last week, my subject line was critiqued. To be fair, it was pretty shit. I changed it to “Stories are a gift.” Originally, it was just a way to tie into the items in the newsletter, but it also got me thinking about the upcoming holidays.

No matter what you celebrate, in the culture I grew up in, a vast majority of people exchange stuff. Maybe you can tell from my word choice, but I’ve never been that inspired by this version of a gift exchange. I’ve been privileged enough to be surrounded by stuff all the time. I don’t need more of it.

But stories—those are a gift. In fact, they might be the gift. Plenty of anthropologists, in one way or another, have argued that point. Stories make us human. They connect us, they divide us. We feed ourselves internal narratives and create external storylines, all of which chan over time. Meaning is lost and refound. Oftentimes, stories are divine.

I’ve fed myself a story that I’m not a fan of gift-based celebration. But it’s just a story. Or maybe, that’s all anything is.

Take some time to tell a story or receive a story. And if you need inspiration, check out some of our stories. After all, they are a gift. —Liam McGee

Get photo annual

There’s an aesthetic to backcountry skiing. Creative uptracks. Clean lines. Blank canvasses. That haggard tree silhouetted against the rising sun. The cold air as it burns in your nostrils. The sparkle of diamond dust and the silence of snow-cloaked mountains. The weightlessness of a perfect powder turn. 

Every once in a while, a photographer picks up their camera, points it into this magical world and clicks. Often, the very best of what they capture ends up in the inbox of Backcountry Magazine Art Director Mike Lorenz. 

After 16 years, he has perused hundreds of thousands of ski photos from every corner of the Earth. And every year, he chooses a selection that draws you deep into the backcountry; that captures that aesthetic. 

Issue 160, The Photo Annual, is about those moments that stop you in your tracks, the frames that freeze them forever and the stories that accompany them. It’s the wisdom of trees and cricket played with avalanche shovels in the Karakoram. It’s the aesthetic impacts of avalanche mitigation in Little Cottonwood Canyon and reflections on learning the ropes from Hilaree Nelson. It’s a career that supports life in a mountain town without limiting your time in the mountains and the sit skier fundraising for Hatcher Pass Avalanche Center.

As the chaos and joy of the holiday season descends upon us, take the time to sit down, wherever you are, and be transported to skintracks near and far. Grab a copy of The Photo Annual, (or a few) and put it in your favorite skier’s stocking. —The Backcountry Team

Subscribe now to make sure a copy is coming your way 📬.


Gear


  • The Scarpa TX Pro: Reviewed

    The Scarpa TX Pro: Reviewed

    The debut of the new Scarpa TX Pro, our 2025 Editors’ Choice telemark boot, marks an exciting, and long awaited, development in telemark gear.

MORE GEAR

The Backcountry Podcast

From legendary athletes to iconic product designers, activists to guides, our world is filled with new views, wisdom, determination and crustiness.

Latest Podcast Episodes

Doug Stoup: The Iceman

From playing NCAA soccer to a successful modeling and acting career to being the top polar explorer of his time, Doug Stoup is an enigma. Host Adam Howard recently journeyed to Antarctica with Stoup and their conversation ranges from Doug’s personal training of A-list Hollywood actors to near death experiences; adventures with Doug Coombs; and taking novice skiers to the South Pole.

Tele Mike Russell: Turns for All

Tele Mike Russell grew up as a sharecropper’s son in Delaware before attending college and becoming an executive in the pharmaceutical industry. Then he watched the second plane hit the World Trade Center and decided he’d better follow another path, this one to skiing in Colorado, where he’d go on to find a family in the National Brotherhood of Skiers and help found its backcountry program.

Eric Blehm: Meet Your Heroes

Eric Blehm’s roots in snowboarding run deep. He started riding during the sport’s infancy, and after college became an editor at Transworld SNOWboarding Magazine. Years later, he was in a lift line when a fellow rider saw the “Craig Kelly is my Co-Pilot” sticker on his board, and asked Blehm: “Who is Craig Kelly?” He was floored by the notion that there were snowboarders out there who didn’t know who Craig was. And this inspired him to write The Darkest White.

The Photo Annual

Subscribe now to get our latest issue!

Mountain Skills


Uphill Travel Guide

Resort Skinning Policies

We’ve compiled a database of U.S. resorts with a little about each individual policy—where and when skinning is allowed, whether or not it’s free during operating hours and the link directly to the resort’s guidelines.

View our resort skinning policies guide »

  • Mountain Skills: Hydrate or Die

    Mountain Skills: Hydrate or Die

    We lose fluids through perspiration (sweating) and respiration (breathing). While ski touring, high elevation and drier air make this even more dramatic. And during the spring, warm weather further exaggerates the amount of fluid lost. Dehydration leads to a drop of performance—in stages from slowing down to bonking to needing medical attention.

  • Mountain Skills: Anticipating Point Release Avalanches

    Mountain Skills: Anticipating Point Release Avalanches

    As the spring approaches, many of us turn our attention to steeper, more technical lines higher in the mountains. The layers of snow that formed throughout the winter begin to gain strength and the avalanche problem is less complicated—it’s ski mountaineering season! But as the temperatures climb, wet avalanches become a more regular, primary concern.

  • Mountain Skills: Take the time to be prepared for early season turns

    Mountain Skills: Take the time to be prepared for early season turns

    It’s late fall and many mountains throughout the U.S. have seen some decent early season snow. As a result, stoke is high and people are itching to ski. Guide Steve Banks shares his thoughts on how to capitalize on the early bounty.

  • Mountain Skills: How to Prepare for Your Level 1 Avalanche Course

    Mountain Skills: How to Prepare for Your Level 1 Avalanche Course

    Beacon. Shovel. Probe. For years, these have been the standard required tools for heading into the backcountry. But what good are they without the proper training in how to recognize hazards and use them effectively? That’s where a 24-hour Level 1 avalanche certificate course comes into play.

css.php