Powder

Dope Runners

One day not long ago, above a tumbledown gold mining camp at the upper headwaters of the Feather River, a contest was underway. Two contenders— the last men standing in a field of 16—maneuvered to the starting line at the top of the slope. Organizers used red Jell-O to draw a line in the snow, which had become smudged in the sun-warmed slush.

Each man was affixed by means of lace-up leather bindings to a pair of titanic wooden skis more than 10 feet long. The skis were four and a half inches wide underfoot and waxed to run fast with arcane concoctions of what race prep crews called “dope.” Considerable quantities of skill, labor, whiskey, and other encouragements were required simply to get to the starting line, let alone the final round. There, the skiers pointed straight downhill, toes on the red line, a single stout pole staving off the inevitable pull of gravity.

In the outside lane was the Swede, Thomas Lundin. Lundin had traveled over Beckwourth Pass from Reno with his mentor, two-time World Longboard Champion Eric McGrath. Lundin took second the previous year, after McGrath, and this year he wanted the belt. On the inside was the young upstart and local favorite, Max Breedlove. Breedlove owned a handyman business down the hill. He’d learned to ski right on this very slope at California’s Johnsville Ski Bowl in the days—not long ago—when the Poma lift was still running. “I think Max is gonna do it,” confided Phil Gallagher, co-founder of the Plumas

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Powder

Powder1 min read
The Future is Unwritten
We invite you to use the space above to reflect on your own experience as a Powder reader. Share them with us, if you’d like, or with your friends. Or tear this out and keep it for when you need a reminder of who you are, what you are part of, and wh
Powder2 min read
On Uphill Travel
I should still be in bed. It’s so cold, I can’t feel my face. Can your organs get frostbite? Did I pack enough layers or enough snacks? Should I take out this extra puffy so I can carry more water? Isn’t beer mostly water? Okay, here we go! Look at u
Powder3 min read
Pointless Pleasures
CONSIDER THE TURN.The bare-bones, no-frills, functional purpose of turning a ski is to control where you are going, but also, and perhaps more importantly, to manage your speed. Now imagine you had retractable, tail-mounted snow-combs that you could

Related Books & Audiobooks