Powder-skiing doyenne Dolores LaChapelle said that if joy is the response of a lover receiving what he loves, then this is the joy we feel when skiing powder with friends. An overflowing gratitude that produces the absurd smiles flashed to each other at the bottom of a run. You never see these kinds of grins anywhere else in life — not on someone leaving a tennis court, a golf course, or a hockey rink; not on someone stepping off a podium from a great speech or leaving a club after a fabulous evening of dancing. Nothing else comes close to the smiles shared in powder because they reflect a life fully lived together in a blaze of reality.
Many are so enraptured by the feeling that skiing powder engenders them, travelling the world to chase it in as many different places as possible. When you pilgrimage to a new land and mountain range in search of snow, you’re looking for more than exotic sliding. What you truly wish for is to mix this with the culture of the moment and the friends of the day — a new experiment in the winter laboratory.
Whether in Europe, Alaska, Canada, Scandinavia, New Zealand, or Japan, the essential ingredients are the same — rock, ice, peaks, slopes, and snow. Yet all are also so deliciously different ¬— a new latitude, unique local light, strange forests, and exciting snow formations.