Hey all, a quick correction on this video: around 1:48, we mentioned that the green/blue/black rating system has become a "widely recognized standard worldwide." We should have clarified that "worldwide" does not refer to every region, and that several areas in Europe, South America, and Asia abide by different standards. This system is really used in the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand-and to a certain extent in Scandinavia, with greens and blues being easier than in other countries. Thanks for watching!
@lioevr Жыл бұрын
Don't be ashamed of making a mistake, but also don't try to talk it good. This is the worst excuse since "the several areas" have many more ski resorts than the US lmao. So its basically just a small part that uses the system yall talked about compared to the world...
@JayCRossi Жыл бұрын
Yeah, in Europe it s simply a question of the colour. (Green), blue, red and black. And to add: in Europe the slopes are almost always signed with that colour on posts aside the whole slope.
@70fu Жыл бұрын
A "green" Skii run on a certain mountain would be considered a pretty advanced run here in BC for snowboarding.
@007tobler Жыл бұрын
One thing you didn’t mention is that on a lot of black 3 diamonds you need to know how to repel with a rope
@growtocycle6992 Жыл бұрын
I'm from NZ.. what about red diamond, between black and blue?
@texan_2ocho965 Жыл бұрын
Who else can’t wait for ski season to start???
@LoomerCuber Жыл бұрын
First one for me.
@brunokaplan7258 Жыл бұрын
Meeeee
@Cablebet Жыл бұрын
Yep sleeping giant and red lodge here I come.
@GustavManning Жыл бұрын
Meeee
@RedFacePyro Жыл бұрын
Same!
Жыл бұрын
These are actually not the same worldwide. In most of Europe Blue (no specific shapes used) means about the same as Green Circle in America, Red corresponds to Blue Square (not just to Double Blue Square) while Black is similar to Black Diamond (but typically groomed.) A few European countries use Green for very easy. Some use Orange or Yellow for expert or off-piste (ungroomed) itineraries, corresponding to Double Black Diamond terrain.
@Der.Preusse Жыл бұрын
Yeah stating this was worldwide is just good'ol US-defaultism
@matteocerbai Жыл бұрын
True usually all the runs in europe are groomed and the blue marking is used also for the begginner areas (only in some bigger and more international ski areas green is used), in some places i know (know from other people that i know not from my personal expience) that brownish colors are used for a middle ground betwenn red and black, black runs in europe are much steper than black diamonds in america and car reach 75%+ but they are still groomed
@moin9764 Жыл бұрын
In some ski resort in europe, there are also diamond shapes used to indicate ungroomed runs
@PeakRankings Жыл бұрын
Thanks. We have pinned a comment outlining a correction here.
@Der.Preusse Жыл бұрын
@@PeakRankings Much appreciated.
@CoreyGary Жыл бұрын
Here are some tips I gathered from skiing out West for a few years. If you typically ski alone and want to venture into double black/extreme terrain, wait at the Avy Gate for other people to ski in first. Don’t flag people down, but if someone else stops politely ask if you can ski with them on the particular run. Nine out of ten times people will be kind and receptive. More eyes on the variable terrain the better for everyone as long as you keep a safe distance from others. Plus, it’s often easier to execute a line if you see someone else do it first. Always know how to self rescue and self arrest. Go into avy gates with a charged phone or walkie talkie. Know where to stop above and to the side of a fall line. Make sure your boots are tight. Take your time. Don’t speed run if you aren’t confident in where you’re going, even if you’re a good skier. Traversing often makes skiing down extreme terrain easier, but don’t get cliffed out. Practice your kick turns on easier runs. Stay clear of tree wells. If you found a powder stache, that’s great. Make sure you know how to get back to the defined tracks because a powder Stache can appear before cliffs. Make sure your skis are the proper width and underfoot for extreme terrain (rentals might not cut it depending on the mountain). Use powder baskets on polls. Wear a helmet. If nothing I said here made sense, google is your friend and maybe find a ski instructor for your first time!
@sc100ott Жыл бұрын
Great tips! 👍🏼
@PebusGalacticus Жыл бұрын
this is some of the worst advice I've ever seen. NEVER EVER go into avy terrain unless you are trained and have a beacon and rescue gear and know how to use them and you are with a partner. if you get caught in an avalanche and burried without an avy beacon your chances of survival are near 0. Additionally you shouldnt be going into avy terrain if you cant read terrain and know the avy forecast.
@jonasbrownell5591 Жыл бұрын
Bro went off😛
@BrianForUtah Жыл бұрын
"powder stache" Favorite neologism of the year for me.
@pollall279310 ай бұрын
I have 2 hours until my engineering midterm, and here I am watching a video about ski resort terrain levels. I have no regrets.
@Sky-0603 ай бұрын
How did it go?
@pollall27933 ай бұрын
@@Sky-060 Got an 87! Am in my 3rd year now.
@Sky-0603 ай бұрын
@@pollall2793 that’s great!! I hope u keep doing so well ;D
@pollall27933 ай бұрын
@@Sky-060 Thanks! Am looking forward to starting up my career when this is done.
@Sky-0603 ай бұрын
@@pollall2793 good luck!
@Wynton25 Жыл бұрын
2:57 I was thinking “that tree looks familiar 🤔” then I realized it was the same one i almost hit learning how to snowboard at Tahoe 😂
@NetheriteBunny18 күн бұрын
haha
@markdisanzo3796 Жыл бұрын
Also remember that the green/blue/black designations vary from hill to hill and are relative to that hill only. A black diamond in the east will likely be very different than a black at the western slopes.
@jvwMUSIC Жыл бұрын
Very different between small local slopes and actual resorts too. Even within the same state.
@chiefflats2949 Жыл бұрын
Yeah a double black at Breck is way different than a double black at Crested Butte. Waiting to drop into a Crested Butte double black is the only time I've ever been afraid to drop into a run. Shit was a fucking wall. My brother almost died cause he almost fell off an unmarked cliff. Crested Butte is a different fucking breed
@hudson5610 Жыл бұрын
yeah - that is one of the things that creates a great deal of danger in skiing. They could come up with a universal marking that uses some type of average slope % so you know what to expect when you get on a trail regardless of where you are. But this would make too much sense.
@erock5b11 ай бұрын
@@jvwMUSICyeah. The one I would go to was smaller, and the black diamonds are close to a double black at a larger place I frequent. Conditions play a big part too. Powder makes it way easier and funner.
@hopsterbb25719 ай бұрын
@@hudson5610double black is double black…you better be ready for anything and everything….and if you aren’t sure, go with someone who’s done it…ski responsibly…and don’t fall on double blacks
@teacherguy5084 Жыл бұрын
Rather than "beginner, intermediate, advanced," the colored symbols are often described as denoting "easier", "more difficult", "most difficult". This helps make clear that they are explanatory of RELATIVE difficulty among various runs for that particular resort and do not provide information related to other resorts. My daughter, raised skiing and riding Washington State, with some experience at resorts in Canadian and Oregon, found herself at a small resort in upstate New York during grad school and came away with the observation that a black run there was the same steepness as a steep green in the Pacific NW.
@daneg10 ай бұрын
aye. very true. tbf, a lot of resorts in southern VT/MA/NY are very liberal about labeling things Diamond and even Double Diamond that places like Killington, Stowe, etc. might label Square. Personally, I think DD needs more objective criteria relating to pitch, trail width, and technical skill as gauged by something more than comparing it to other runs on the same resort. but that's simply not how it is.
@newagain99644 ай бұрын
This is why they should post grade info of slopes!
@Nobody-dc8dp Жыл бұрын
I remember once my novice friends decided to try a black diamond trail that was like 6 feet wide and was almost straight down. We tried it on our snowboards and we ended up sliding on our butts the whole way down and that was when I decided the mellow runs are actually way more fun and chill, plus less chance for hurting yourself.
@newagain99644 ай бұрын
I’m looking 4 super chill blue runs. Or long greens. Can u recommend any resorts in VT or cali or Utah that fit bill? I ski & Board.
@SaraNightfire12 ай бұрын
You were very lucky and sensible about the mistake. One kid on a ski trip I took decided on a dare to take a wooded trail. Double black diamond by himself on his last run of the day, barely could ski a diamond, that’s what my dad (a chaperone who’s an expert skier) told me. He ended up with a cracked collarbone, a furious counselor, and a three hour hold up for everyone on the trip. I still say he was lucky he was that safe. Considering what he did.
@Youonly_dieonce15 күн бұрын
skiing is way better than snowboarding on a narrow run
@Inbal_FeuchtwangerКүн бұрын
When I started snowboarding I learnt on the bunny slope and it was a huge pain. There was a bunch of fresh powder and you couldnt get any speed going at all, making balancing more difficult. Talked to some more experienced people and they said I was better off learning on a more difficult run than that and they were spot on. My first half of the day spent failing did help some, but I was able to quickly pick things up once I went to a true beginner slope and was able to get a bit of momentum.
@bluegryp16 сағат бұрын
Yep even as a skier I wouldn’t recommend the bunny slope for more than an hour or two. It’ll help you kind of get the feel for what you’re doing but after a while it just doesn’t benefit you. You can’t make good turns on it, because it’s too short and too flat. If you want to learn, you gotta just suck it up and get on something steeper.
@bluegryp16 сағат бұрын
I remember back in the 80s as a kid skiing a double black run at Aspen Highlands called “The Wall”. This thing was like a vertical drop with heavy moguls. It was a brutal slope for an adult much less a kid, and we struggled to get down it. My mom was in the lodge and on the tv for all to see they had a live video of us trying to get down this ridiculous trail. She said people were all standing there watching us. I remember being half embarrassed and half proud when she told us. Good times.
@mikekelly7862 Жыл бұрын
Wow, that Disney connection to the trail ratings is really interesting... Ive skied my whole life and never once asked myself where the system came from. Thanks for including that!
@zaphod4245 Жыл бұрын
Brings a whole new meaning to the way of descibing ski resorts in America as "Disneyland on snow"
@joshualoveless42374 ай бұрын
This makes way more sence than what I initiallythought. Thought it was base one the slopes degree of pitch. thinking about the other slopes ive been to thiough, makes way more sence. They kinda rate the trails how ever they want ive been on some black 45° slopes and ive been on some blue 45° slopes
@augustinbelliard9812 Жыл бұрын
I grew up skiing in the Alps and after moving to the USA and skiing there a bit, I've found that I still prefer the European designation of trails. The green slopes there are your bunny hills/easier greens, the blues there are trails that are steeper than greens but are still groomed and don't have bumps. Reds are trails that are steeper than blues but still groomed with the introductions of some bumps; this is what I find blues to be like at least on the east coast. Then blacks are ungroomed, steeper terrain which is equivalent to black diamonds here and then there are expert blacks which are your double blacks and above. In addition, I've found that resorts in the Alps at least all have trail markers along the way with the color or grade of the run and number markers every so often. This helps a lot not get lost when conditions are bad and I think I've only seen something similar once at Hunter mountain (which you featured earlier in the video =) ). I wish more resorts did that.
@pnkdrmz11 ай бұрын
black runs in europe are nearly always groomed and ungroomed ones are usually specifically marked as mogul/ungroomed, at least everywhere i've skied so far
@shmonyx11 ай бұрын
The majority of resorts i've skied in the Alps have groomed black runs.
@lorenz0710 ай бұрын
In Austria every slope is groomed. What's not groomed are the routes that are marked with a red diamond. In Switzerland It would be a yellow
@JackTheBeast8828 күн бұрын
Agreed, blacks are groomed. Actually I would say in Europe off-piste skying is generally forbidden outside designated areas
@ryanroggenbuck94225 күн бұрын
I considered myself a great skier… went down a double black diamond once… I found out very quickly that I was not him 😂
@owenmcneill774615 күн бұрын
lol, all it takes is practice and taking it slow at first.
@robynsutherland4115 Жыл бұрын
An under-rated trail sign in Canada is "easiest way down", which can frequently use green or perhaps skip green when snow or grooming is poor (especially in spring melt) to denote where snow conditions (and not only angle) are in fact the safest way to the base
@mrvwbug4423 Жыл бұрын
I remember seeing that in Whistler, they do that for both their ski resort and for their bike park in summer.
@joeyenniss9099 Жыл бұрын
Those signs are all over snowbird regardless of the conditions lol
@Rhyno01234511 ай бұрын
Yes! Most resorts I’ve been to have this. Although my last time out on my first run I followed the “easiest way down” sign and there were Definitely easier runs down than that so I guess use at your discretion haha
@talkingweevil317210 ай бұрын
Ya the only problem with this tho is they often rate blue runs green so they can say it is the easiest way down however u have been to a few hills where they had it blue and it still had the easiest way down sign but it is rarer and usually only on harder chairs. Most of the hills I’ve been to tho don’t change they usually stay where they are but I could see bigger hills like kicking horse maybe doing that I didn’t really pay attention when I was there.
@SaraNightfire12 ай бұрын
You can also call the Ski Patrol or the attendant at the top of the chairlift. My brother got trapped at the top of the mountain his first month (he took a wrong chairlift), and the ski patrol helped him down. The signs are an amazing idea anyway because of people who do get lost and need help down.
@sampitrone7879 Жыл бұрын
Content is evolving and I’m all for it, keep it guys I absolutely love the videos!
@lovesosa4751 Жыл бұрын
^
@ezOqekuRitusohI Жыл бұрын
I tried Blue once, and my life flashed before my eyes! I'll stick with Green, thank you very much.
@bartholemew436211 ай бұрын
noob
@charlotte-carmen11 ай бұрын
@@bartholemew4362Bro don't be rude, I was terrified when I went on my first blue but I just got over it. My friend gave a tip if you're really stuck... shimmy your way down. If that sucks then roll your way down
@bartholemew436211 ай бұрын
@@charlotte-carmen you noob too
@legendkyd247410 ай бұрын
@@bartholemew4362I’m a proud newbie
@talkingweevil317210 ай бұрын
Ya blue sometimes feels like a big jump from green, at my home hill the main face is all blue and I sometimes see people struggling to get down don’t worry there is nothing wrong with not doing blues. I know lots of people who can do black diamonds but just don’t want to.
@Bombardier_Cinematics5 күн бұрын
I love that most of the footage is from Colorado and I can recognize almost every run!
@Bombardier_Cinematics5 күн бұрын
8:48 I almost broke my arm there
@RealRaizo Жыл бұрын
I've never been skiing, nor do I know if I will ever ski in the future, and still got this in my recommended for some reason. And you bet your bottom I'm going to watch the entire thing.
@SFS_Rocketry Жыл бұрын
In Austria, Germany and Switzerland, we have a blue, red and a black circle. For trails there is a red diamond or for the hard ones a red diamond with black edges.
@Madmaxxu692 Жыл бұрын
Same in sweden
@Royal_tanker11 ай бұрын
Yes. In France it is green for beginner/easy, blue for slightly difficult, red for hard and black for extremely hard. Some blacks can be easier than others
@MaxTheFireCat10 ай бұрын
Vive la France@@Royal_tanker
@talkingweevil317210 ай бұрын
What abt colour blind people……..
@Royal_tanker10 ай бұрын
@@talkingweevil3172 not sure. I think they have shaped
@mbtravel7294 Жыл бұрын
Whenever i visit a new mountain i always start with the green and work my way up the levels so there are no surprises.
@mdc86720 күн бұрын
Pretty smart tbh, warmups help but more importantly runs are rated relative to the rest of the ones on the hill. Meaning a black in the mid-west could be the same difficulty as a green on bigger mountains
@orans_ Жыл бұрын
Best channel on yt, hands down.
@couchpotatoinc Жыл бұрын
been snowboarding since like 9 but still thoroughly enjoyed this. I would add on to the end: terrain park features are usually individually marked with a size from S to XXL, some resorts also have XS. The sign at the entrance to a park will say "this park has S-L features", for example.
@KillmonAlfonso Жыл бұрын
I was genuinely enlightened by the content in the video.
@aidanmoore5412 Жыл бұрын
I love how you showed my home mountain Stowe so much
@will3057 Жыл бұрын
How do you keep making these videos so entertaining. Keep up the amazing work and are you going to visit eroupe any time
@PeakRankings Жыл бұрын
May visit Europe this season - TBD!
@wanderingnoble Жыл бұрын
I've been skiing for 14 years and still found this video very helpful
@svenzockt649111 ай бұрын
Be aware that the green circle, blue square and black diamond system is mostly unique to the USA. For example in most of europe the slopes are classified with blue for easy, red for medium, black for hard, yellow/orange for off-piste and in some countries green for very easy. (Heck, even to describe slopes Americans need their own measuring system xD)
@BobbyJCFHvLichtenstein Жыл бұрын
I'm like 400miles from the nearest resort, and i still watch this with genuine interest lol
@cadenglick7783 Жыл бұрын
I'm going snowboarding on my first snow-trip this coming January in Colorado. I'm super stoked, and hope to accomplish a blue square or two by the end of the trip. We'll see if I'm being overly ambitious LOL
@the1madspirit38710 ай бұрын
It’s interesting how different it is in Europe and America
@seanaugustinemarch1 Жыл бұрын
as a former AASI level 3 instructor, I think this video should be the new compulsory orientation video for all newcomers.
@MegaLokopo9 ай бұрын
I wish they had more specific ratings, I would love to see some dedicated high speed well groomed routes. 3 basic ratings is not enough.
@guilhermefaleiros4892 Жыл бұрын
As someone who has never seen snow, I think this is cool
@THEAilinАй бұрын
I'd love for a video comparing Europe's to North America's levels, what corresponds to what etc.
@Fano2311 Жыл бұрын
I would rate myself a blue square 🟦 snowboarder but it’s still so much fun! I love it
@Tre.Britton26 күн бұрын
11:04 I took that exact same photo at breck on peak 6, getting ready to drop into 6 senses
@stanstanstancooking5011Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing with me! I'm going to ski during December so this is a big help.
@ericlane3256 Жыл бұрын
Vail tends to underestimate their trails. Greens at Vail, I’ve found, we’re more like blues everywhere else and some blues are more blacks.
@TheShreddingHand Жыл бұрын
All your content is fantastic, love this channel! I’d be interested in a video going over the ski gear you use Sam, how you maintain it, and how often.
@PeakRankings Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Great suggestion
@tyresr Жыл бұрын
I’ve only seen snow twice in my life but this video was very entertaining
@David12scht Жыл бұрын
This is so interesting! It seems that American resorts are very different from European resorts in several ways. For one, basically all marked runs are groomed and cleared of obstacles in Europe. There are some ungroomed free terrain runs, but they are a rarity. Many of these double and triple black diamond runs seem like they would involve quite a bit of avalanche risk? I wonder if they are closed a lot of the time? Especially with the american approach to liabilty, it would seem many of these are a lawsuit waiting to happen (not saying that's right). In Europe, anything in a forest or dropping off a cliff or something like that would be considered off-piste, which is something many skiers consider something of a diviving line that many are hesistant to cross.
@evandonovan8410 Жыл бұрын
It's mitigated by Ski Patrol. So if there's a high avalanche danger or not enough snow they'll close it off.
@snt03 Жыл бұрын
they set off bombs to set off any potential avalanches after it snows
@mack.attack Жыл бұрын
Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming (and probably other major ski industry states) actually have laws specifically making ski areas not liable for injury or death resulting from "the inherent risks of skiing." If the avalanche risk is too high, they will close the terrain and possibly shell the slope with artillery to trigger avalanches or they'll just wait to open it. The ski areas in the Rockies and Sierra Nevada get so much snow that they kinda just have to be able to evaluate and mitigate avalanche risk. 🙂 Also, if you are injured or require search and rescue because you entered closed terrain, you (or your family) will be required to pay for all costs associated with that and you may be prosecuted. If you are injured within a ski area on terrain that was open, you will not have to pay for ski patrol services (but you will have to pay for your medical bills because America 😂).
@mrvwbug4423 Жыл бұрын
@@mack.attack Different states treat SAR differently. Colorado law specifically prevents you from being charged for SAR services if you're outside a resort, though closed in bounds terrain may be different. Wyoming may bill you for SAR services outside a resort. Utah has mandatory minimum $10,000 rescue fee if you have to be SARd outside a resort.
@benshappell6339 Жыл бұрын
Another great video, well done!
@jrbm670 Жыл бұрын
In Chile 🇨🇱 we use green for beginner. blue for intermediate. Red for intermediate/expert. Black for expert
@lorenz0710 ай бұрын
That's like worldwide standard. No idea what the guy in the Video is talking about. Americans being Americans🙄
@parkerjai1510 ай бұрын
As a person who’s completed a black diamond and is looking to do a double black diamond this is quite helpful👍
@Cheese_master12328 күн бұрын
I’m on Wilmot ski team and this helped I will definitely try a double black or triple black when I head to deer valley
@vidpromjm Жыл бұрын
Im a mug skier but ended up on the double black birds of prey at Beaver creek. I didnt realise it was meant to be expert till afterwards. Nice and steep but wide enough to make turns and snow was soft enough that you could hold an edge. OTOH some of the gladed blue runs there were well beyond my comfort level and the black tree runs would have killed me!
@misham6547 Жыл бұрын
Yeah ratings are relative to the Resort and are not Standardized at all
@campbell9825 Жыл бұрын
Interestingly enough that run is used for racing whenever beaver creek hosts international competitions. It’s one of the only groomed double blacks I’ve ever seen on a resort, definitely a unique one, it can get pretty icy at times but otherwise it’s a fun one to bomb down
@vidpromjm Жыл бұрын
@campbell9825 It was fun watching the world cup with some non skiing friends and casually telling them I've skied the same run that the race was on! Not sure they really believed me!
@vidpromjm Жыл бұрын
@@misham6547 That's sort of the opposite of the point I was trying to make! Within the one resort some blacks were easy for me as they were wide and or groomed and or good conditions but other blacks icy, bumped, tight trees etc were way out of my comfort range.
@ljg3productions630 Жыл бұрын
I’m just here to see the crazy expert terrain these guys shred.
@yc1094Ай бұрын
Some amazing slopes in this video! Here in Europe we use a slightly different system of green for the bunny slopes, blue for beginner slopes (your green), red for intermediate, black for advanced but generally groomed and black diamond for very advanced /ungroomed. But the type of slopes you show under double and triple diamond basically don't exist here as marked slopes. In general these would be considered "off piste" and would be undertaken at your own risk / just following what other skiiers have done. Personally I've never come across a marked trail with tightly packed trees or anything like that (although while I have skiied about 1-2 dozen resorts across the alps fully, I have by no means skiied anything like all of them).
@Elliott_Elliott Жыл бұрын
@ 1:50 these ratings are not used worldwide. In Europe (at least the Alps GER/CH/AT,) they are different as we use blue (easy), red (intermidiary) and black (expert). Also there are no shapes attached to them.
@PeakRankings Жыл бұрын
Thanks. We have pinned a comment outlining a correction here.
@Sofi-v8z11 ай бұрын
Depends on the conditions also. Rode a bkue black run. But that day the trail was more of a black diamond. Came back 3 weeks later same trail with more snow the trail was significnatly easier to ride.
@Tocsj Жыл бұрын
Besides the incredibly informative video, the quality is amazing. Some of these shots, especially at the triple black diamond trails, were so crisp.
@allyparker2636 Жыл бұрын
Always thought double black and EX marked trails were the same difficulty and have definitely treated them indiscriminately. Good to keep in mind for the future!
@Mojytowjy Жыл бұрын
I have never been skiing in my life but I watched the whole video
@mrvwbug4423 Жыл бұрын
The system works well enough that it has been extended over to the mountain biking world to rate MTB trails. The orange freeride circle has also extended over to MTB to designate a trail with jumps, drops, etc.
@CustomcrowdMitroc Жыл бұрын
one thing to keep in mind is that the ratings are more often than not based around sking not snowboarding, trails that are rated to be hard are usually more easy on snow boards. im not sure how true this is but ive been told this alot
@ethandavis7310 Жыл бұрын
They're easier to do poorly on a snowboard, but much harder to do well. Most snowboarders will slip through an entire double black and scrape all the snow off. Sure they could get down easily and safely, but it's not polite. I've skied and boarded a few of the double blacks in this video, and proper boarding is more difficult than proper skiing at those levels
@katherinet-mb6so Жыл бұрын
OMG I LOVE BEAVER CREEK SO MUCH I KNEW THAT’S WHERE YOU WERE!!
@cmoons256Ай бұрын
I can’t wait to ski
@garrettlanger4048 Жыл бұрын
Interesting video! I didn't realize Colorado mandated the EX terrain. Would be interested to hear how that came about in another video. And if possible, would you be able to throw a small label in the corner denoting which mountain each video clip is from? I find myself enviously wanting to visit the amazing places shown in your videos, but don't always know which mountain they are from. Thanks!
@PeakRankings Жыл бұрын
Thank you! We'll try in future videos but may be awhile, since the editing for that is pretty time consuming. If there are any trails you specifically want to know about, I'll dig them up!
@garrettlanger4048 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for considering it! I like your channel for both the info you provide and also to get inspiration for future trips. In particular I'm interested in the locations starting at 0:00, 0:53, 4:39, 5:21 and 9:06. Thanks again!
@PeakRankings Жыл бұрын
@@garrettlanger4048 here you go: 0:00: Jackson Hole Rendezvous Bowl 0:53: A-Basin North Pole Hike 4:39: A-Basin Dercum's Gulch 5:21: Jackson Hole Laramie Bowl 9:06: A-Basin 2nd Notch I think we can tell what two mountains you need to visit!
@garrettlanger4048 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I had no idea those were the same two resorts in those clips. I'm certainly going to check them out!
@SleepyMongoose3 ай бұрын
As a CO skier I was like "what's a triple black diamond?" Then you mentioned that we call it extreme terrain. I was all excited thinking I could find a new challenge.
@m.hoffman2889 Жыл бұрын
compared to European runs: green circle = groomed blue runs (and green runs France) blue square = groomed harder blue or easy red run double blue square = groomed red run black diamond = ungroomed or groomed black runs or yellow mogul runs double black diamond = ungroomed black runs, yellow mogul runs or unmarked routes (usually only trails found on fatmap, other apps or by guides) triple black diamond = ungroomed unmarked routes in harsh steep terrain with rocks/cliffs (usually only trails found on fatmap, other apps or by guides)
@lgeiger11 ай бұрын
In Austria there are circles for prepared slopes and diamonds for unprepared ski routes. In Austria there are no green slopes as far as I know, only blue, red and black. I have seen green slopes in France and also lots of unprepared black slopes that simply had a black circle. The only thing you can really trust are the colors.
@jackbarnhart7394 Жыл бұрын
5:59 that's paradise at MRG!!! That is the one part of it to avoid if you like your skis, the rock is always exposed. It would probably be labeled as double black to extreme most places. 7:37 is a mandatory cliff! I love that bit!
@coolbrotherf127 Жыл бұрын
Snow sports are so fun, but I live pretty far away from any good places to do it regularly. I do try to go at least once a year and always have blast even though I'm pretty nooby.
@dabdanielpro7739 Жыл бұрын
Europe, Japan, and Australia all have a red trail before black and after blue.
@MisterTMH11 ай бұрын
There are no red trails at Falls Creek. I did n't see any Perisher. The Blue runs at both places are steep enough to make learners' snow plough technique unsuitable for the terrain IMHO.
@vickicudlipp7259 Жыл бұрын
Why am I watching this from Australia
@lego102lego6 ай бұрын
Australia uses the same rating system
@SupYo23 ай бұрын
No he means cause there is no snow
@shrekthemancool6680Ай бұрын
Come here😠and ski
@coocatoАй бұрын
i’m in a region of texas with no mountains and no snow, i guess it’s like the joy of learning
@jjmeara2627 күн бұрын
New zealand ain’t too far away
@TinToastCan10 ай бұрын
Hey I recognise some of those trails from Briançon! What an awesome mountain
@theanti-come7 күн бұрын
I've been boarding for over 15 years, and I can say I'm about a high level intermediate to low advanced rider that is comfortable riding black diamond terrain switch. I've never had friends to ride with, but always venture into ungroomed, back country terrain. If you're a solo rider looking to do the same, take it slow and use common sense. Back country terrain isn't about how fast you go or "go big or go homeless." It's making it down without going down that you should aim for.
@slimaque727 Жыл бұрын
In Poland we grade difficulty only in colour. Bunny slopes are green. Easy slopes are blue. Medium are red and hard are black
@monalisahota Жыл бұрын
This was quite informative and accurate to my knowledge. I ski the intermediates or easy blues starting with the greens at the start of the season. I go to different resorts in East Coast, west coast and also in Europe. The ratings of terrains are definitely relative across resorts, so much that I can ski 'black' in a small ski area. However varies the blues and blacks are, the easy ones are always good for beginners in the USA. But to my surprise, I found the Stubai Glacier in Austria to be rated quite differently. I literally got stuck at one easy run as it was steep like a blue in the USA and very long. I hit it by mistake and it was my first day skiing in the season. I couldn't do it. I had to be helped down by another very kind and expert skiier and I fell a lot, which I never do even during the blues. (My legs were not in the best shape strength wise tbh but I never fall regardless). I did write to the resort to share my experience and ask if the trail was rated accurately and they said that it was an easy trail and marked as such. I cannot agree with that but I don't know enough about their rating system. How are the ratings different across the European resorts compared to the ones in USA?A video comparing ratings internationally would be great because I plan to skiing in different countries.
@stefxc11 ай бұрын
In Canada, specifically Ontario. Double black diamond runs can be very easy. They just use the title's reputation to get attention and attract customers.
@frag2 Жыл бұрын
good video! well done
@FoodForBreakfast_Real10 ай бұрын
I’ve never skied before and I might go skiiing in 2 weeks so thanks for this video😊🎉
@Youtuber-ku4nk Жыл бұрын
The system is only like that in the US and maybe Canada. Europe utilizes the colors differently and the specific countries have small variations.
Ай бұрын
I've been skiing for most of my life. I like to ski down Red slopes once I've warmed up.
@vewy123abc28 күн бұрын
are you in vail for the strat of th video/beaver creek
@Gingerbread32329 ай бұрын
I’ve done all of these, and I’m on a ski trip rn in Colorado doing ex’s, there so much fun
@Imjackonpurpose9 ай бұрын
I wonder if there will ever be a quad black diamond
@techdeth11 ай бұрын
In the 90s copper mountain had a blue called Bouncer that was my entire childhood. Crazy jumps in and out of the woods off the main run. Man I miss those days with my family.
@JunkEdits29 ай бұрын
Well this video sure helped me. I went on Eldora’s hardest blue my first day ever skiing. My second day I successfully went down a black diamond!
@whyzzzcatАй бұрын
In Big Sky MT our runs are rated 2 Levels lower, Our Blues are Double Blacks to other resorts. All The hardest runs require approved ski Patrol access, Gps Locator, and Shovel. People come all Season and never get off the bunny slopes.
@diver344429 күн бұрын
Overstated but ok😂
@whyzzzcat29 күн бұрын
@@diver3444 Misunderstood? Tiny Brain? No Skill? Whats the problem? We have people die on the hill every year. What I said In one sentence. Is Just because you see a certain shape does not mean you'll get down our runs Just fine. First thing in the morning with Damfs on the internet, who cant read and use context clues to figure out what a string of words means. Seriously In Montana I'm legally allowed to carry a fire arm and use it to stand my ground. Don't Play with me Peasant.
@probablyabott9108 Жыл бұрын
I tore my ACL on a double blue when I was 15 😅 Be careful out there, a bad injury can really happen anywhere!!
@EquuleusPictor11 ай бұрын
In France terrain parks are designated with XS, S, M, L, XL (similar to clothes sizes), not sure if any other country uses this system.
@Whytho2000 Жыл бұрын
It makes me happy that I recognized every single run minus the greens in this video.
@matfhju Жыл бұрын
Here in Norway we also have a red marcker. It is in betwean blue and black
@brandonm1708 Жыл бұрын
I recently went to Copper Mountain and found the rating system quite… off. 2 of the hardest runs for me were single blacks, the Extreme Terrains felt somewhat underwhelming, and I found an ungroomed blue run harder than a couple double blacks! Maybe a part of that was my expectations, but it was the first time I’ve not understood multiple trail ratings at one resort
@tedthurgate Жыл бұрын
Conditions can change the character of a run. This past season was a huge snow year in California and some runs that are normally quite difficult narrow chutes were wide open runs.
@brandonm1708 Жыл бұрын
@@tedthurgate it was early January, so before a ton had really filled in. But the two single black runs were definitely a lot steeper than most of the other runs there
@wesleychaffin4029 Жыл бұрын
I went to copper for the first time in late January and as I was heading back toward the car with my friend we decided to hit a run called Indian Ridge because it was only marked single black, how hard could it be? Well the whole thing was >30° pitch with a ton of deep moguls and hidden obstacles. Learned my lesson that day
@brandonm1708 Жыл бұрын
@@wesleychaffin4029 Indian’s Ridge was one of the runs I had in mind lol. And from the pitch other runs there have been measured as, I believe Indian’s Ridge is much closer to 40° than 30
@ethandavis7310 Жыл бұрын
I had that experience as well. Additionally at winter park I experienced the opposite. Many of the runs labeled as black smelled to me like blues, but what was interesting was that the slope conditions showed that everyone else was treating these runs as extremely difficult. The resulting mogul pattern made the runs more difficult even though it was a shallow grade.
@novy1198 Жыл бұрын
During my first time skiing 3 years ago, in two days of skiing with family i started from learning how to properly stand or walk with skies, to going down the really steep slope. I was scared as hell when i saw how high it really is close up, but after i did it my confidence sky rocket, ive been on that resort 2 times (now it will be my third) and no matter what i still love that, small, long, high slopes, after one year of pause everything feels like i learn it again but with a little more confidence, its great
@bdrokin10 ай бұрын
Same I also scared sometimes on First time in Skiing in 5 days ago, I’m not a fan of skiing cause I’m terrible at it. So you figure out already
@sc100ott Жыл бұрын
Great content! Keep up the good work!
@mrmuffins9512 ай бұрын
This is a super detailed guide, and I wish more resorts used a more detailed rating system like what you’ve described instead of just a simple 3 symbol system. That’s why I love Telluride in Colorado because they use - single green - double green - single blue - double blue - single black - double black - extreme double black so you have a very clear and gradual progression
@-jackkeith11 ай бұрын
The Little at Big Sky was absolutely nuts. Next to corbets I think it’s the hardest run in America
@Kentrellmybeloved10 ай бұрын
Wait in the US you just have one big resort associated with a skiing park? or are there multiple? I'm curious cause i ski on the alps and usually there are many types of accomodation near by the slopes, but the ski park is separate from the resorts or houses.
@steven7650 Жыл бұрын
Notably missing is BC skiing. Probably worth it's own video but highlight that you should be skiing nearly all inbounds terrain comfortably, and have taken your AIARE, and WFR course in addition to rope handling skills if you're entering crevasse terrain plus ice climbing skills using screws and crampons. It is not a linear progression.
@CwilesplayАй бұрын
I have a fun story for you guys. So we’re at beech mtn. NC and it’s our second day skiing, we also never took any lessons so we just kinda taught each other we are also with 2 other families so we ski and do blues and greens and we all really like it, but then my dad said, “hey we should do the black diamond”, and I was scared at first but eventually was like “ok” so we ride the chairlifts up there and we’re really high up and the slope was very steep but we started going down it anyways, and I’m skiing with my friend that came with us and helping him go left and right and I’m looking at him and all of the sudden my other friend comes down n the slope at 200 MILES AN HOUR and he’s bending down and he hits the one I was helping in the feet and crashes down the hill, but the first friend had fell backwards reallly quick and been knocked out. (Just so you know there both about 8 and 9) so the parents come over and there all freaked out and then he just gets up, completely fine doesn’t remember what happened and anyways we just finish skiing down the hill like nothing happened. So yeah that’s one of my fav. Stories to tell people Thanks for reading👍
@xygomorphic4410 ай бұрын
First place I ever skied was the little place of Badger Pass near Yosemite. I was hauling ass down their beautifully groomed blue square runs and feeling like I could take on the world. Then I went to Bald Mountain at Sun Valley, Idaho thinking their blue square runs were just as easy. Boy was I wrong.
@Noname-ic3su Жыл бұрын
2:00 Hunter mt? Belt pkwy
@Eugor08 Жыл бұрын
Palisades has gone back to listing runs as double blacks on their trail map.
@racegraff5961 Жыл бұрын
One thing I think anyone whose not a true expert should note is that condition will make a big difference in how difficult a run is the most difficult run at a mountain on a powder day could be relatively tame compared to the same exact run when it’s wind blown and icy
@andrewmaclean9810 Жыл бұрын
I've never skiied in the US and the difference is so interesting. In Europe they groom all the slopes daily even the blacks which is extremely nice. I consider myself a pretty advanced skiier so while moguls dont really present a challenge they really hinder how fast you can go which is a bummer. However the fact that the US has marked trails through woods like that is sick, every place I've skiied in Europe you gotta go off the marked trails for that which inevitably increases the risk of tree wells and crevasses and such.
@born2drum1 Жыл бұрын
The fact that you only have 15k followers is criminal!
@PeakRankings Жыл бұрын
Tell everyone you know to hit that subscribe button!
@artorias937 Жыл бұрын
12:55 that has to be timberline oregon, ive been on that exact trail its so fun.