Skiing in the San Juans

Over new years I spent a week in Ouray, CO, a little mountain town about an hour from Telluride that is famous with climbers for the amazing ice climbing in the area. I did go there mostly to ice climb, but I couldn't resist bringing my skis.

The first day I skied with three snowboarders on snowshoes at Red Mountain Pass. I didn't get as many laps as I wanted, but it was good to be on the skis. My camera somehow froze to my clip and I couldn't get it off of my backpack, so I didn't get any photos.

The next day we drove to Telluride and met Dave Chew, an engineer for Wagner Custom Skis who took us on an amazing ski tour straight out his front door! We climbed over 3,000 feet and were back by lunch.

Vincent sporting the snowshoe look. He now has a mighty fine AT ski set up and will no long have to suffer on the way up! 

Snowboard transitions will be a thing of the past

The views on the hike up kept getting better and better

Dave Chew charging up his backyard playground, something he does almost daily. I'm definitely jealous of this guy. 

Dave doing his usual, waiting for us "lowlanders".


The views from our high point. Spectacular.



Vincent enjoy the view

Dave Chew crushing the downhill as well

Vincent can't help but have a shit-eating grin

Dave Chew getting some airtime in his backyard


After a late night on New Years Eve in the bustling streets of Ouray, Andrew McLean and I get a late start and head to Red Mountain Pass again. There wasn't really any new snow but the conditions were still pretty decent.


The McMillan Peak area has so many amazing looking yurts and cabins. Would definitely be fun to spend a few days back there.

The terrain is seemingly endless. 

Andrew remembering how to skin on his first day out of the season. (First day on a recovered ACL) 

I love the white stuff

An old mining building

Andrew rides out the steepest part of the couloir. It sluffed on me a bit, but was overall really nice conditions. 

Skiing out of the couloir with an audience in the parking lot.
I love the San Juans. I both wish they were closer to Boulder and am glad they are not. If they were any closer they'd be skied and climbed out like everything else in the Front Range, but then I would have better access to them. It's good to have a destination to go to. I will definitely be back. 

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I've worked all over her globe with a diverse set of clients that offer a diverse set of challenges; every one of them a learning opportunity. Whether I'm hanging off a frozen waterfall shooting ice climbing or in a studio working with a model I am adapting, learning, and improving. I've created a mobile studio in the middle of a wild adventure race in southern Patagonia and fought with monkeys to keep my grapes in southern India. Whatever the challenge I will get the shot.

With my photography background firmly formed in the commercial advertising arena, I bring that attention to detail and technical process to adventure photography. And I've spent my entire life adventuring, so I can get any angle you can imagine.

I feel very fortunate to live in such a beautiful place as Boulder, CO. When I'm not shooting for clients I'm out climbing rocks or frozen waterfalls, or cruising down in the backcountry on my skis.

www.dscottclarkphoto.com

1 comment:

  1. Nice talking to you last night at Beyond Talks. I enjoyed checking out some of the pictures you've taken on your website, I dig it! And your blog entries are easy to identify with, too. Skiing the San Juans is on my near future to-do list, and it looks like you had a sweet trip. See you again,
    Joe

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