“I think if you don’t try and fail and allow yourself to do that, it’s hard to progress,” explains Wolken. “In the Classic line we know what we’re doing, we have experience with the numbers, materials, and build—it’s tested and proved. The Concept line is kind of the area where we’re like, this board might be crazy or it might only be good for that one thing, but we’re still going there to see where it takes us.”
Where one could view Korua’s unconventional designs as a cavalier salute to the counterculture from which snowboarding initially grew, the brand is simultaneously renown as the “mature” snowboard brand—a moniker attributed to its refined, stripped-back focus on the most fundamental premise of snowboarding: the turn.
In a sense then, I realized, many of the trees I spend time with have evolved to “like” snow. And if that can’t make a skier love them even more, nothing can.