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It's
A Wonderful Lifestyle: The Kids are Alright at K2's Snow Job Festival:
by
Billy Miller
Photos by Rio Davidson
4/24/99
The most conspicuous item at the base of Mt. Hood Meadows may not
have been the skateboard ramp, demo booths or stage surrounded by
thousands of sunburned fans. Instead it was the
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Myles
Hallen follows up the US Open Win with a Snow Job Win.
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giant, inflatable Marine-part of the US Corps' traveling recruitment
booth. With their Humvee, chin-up challenge, and custom-made dog
tag shwag, there was military in the mix of On Board Entertainment's
third annual action sports/rock n' roll cocktail.
Even the music underscored the point with Metallica's "For Whom
The Bell Tolls" the day's unofficial theme. In the Bud Light tap
room, MC Russell Winfield quizzed Staff Sergeants Jones and Rehkpof
about current events, and why they would market their mission to
fun-lovin' shredboarders. "We want to get out information about
Marine Corps' opportunities," Jones said, "I've been in the service
for eleven years-enlisted right out of high school. I had never
seen snow until I was stationed out here in Portland. Adventure
is what the Marine Corps provided for me, the chance to do and see
other things."
And kill them?
"We sponsor the X-Games," Rehkpof said with diplomacy. "So our
office thought this would be great as well. Usually at a major event
we get one or two recruits signed up."
"They did an outstanding job organizing this, I'm having fun,"
Jones smiled.
Any Marines storm the slopes?
"My executive officer just got done snowboarding as well as marketing,
promotions and the supply sergeant. They were all lovin' it," Rehkopf
said.
"Look at it this way-" Jones defended their position, "I'm done
working in twenty years-retiring at 38."
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Goldfinger
rockin' those alright Northwest kids.
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Such is the theory. But for now Snow Job is a work day. It's not
easy entertaining a restless crowd of five thousand, but On Board
Entertainment was up to the Lollapaloozian task. There was an all-day
embargo on boredom in place, the hardest thing was keeping up with
what went on. Local act American Girls opened the stage in the morning
and Zebrahead, Goldfinger and The Flys (in heavy rotation on Portland
radio) kept the swells high for crowd surfers, once past the posted
disclaimer, "Enter Mosh Pit At Own Risk."
Industry demo booths had brisk business keeping the hordes hooked
up.
A talented turnout of skateboarders livened up the debut of Red
Bull's custom Vert Ramp. Even Burnside locs were coaxed from out
under the asphalt to the mountain, prompting one photographer to
note, "They won't go anywhere for anything, but they'll come up
here for free beer."
Indeed, the hopheads of St. Louis, Missouri kept thirsty VIPs from
parching in the spring sun.
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Aussie
Jake Brown stayin' cool.
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Jake Brown from Sydney, Australia made the stop to skate while
touring the states, "That was a fun ramp," he said, "I'm just up
here to show the snowboarders what skateboarding is all about."
And how did he find the venue?
"I like skating out in the snow because it's cooler," Brown said.
"Plus we got to snowboard for three or four runs, we had some fun.
It just takes a while to learn edge control. After that you can
do anything you want."
Especially with the thick La Niña snowpack at Mt. Hood Meadows.
In T-shirt weather under cloudless spring skies, Hood was heavily
layered in corn and mashed potatoes. The riding was so good it made
it hard to sit around and watch. It's a Snow Job life for us.
"You got to hold onto that board! This ain't rollerblading!" Russell
Winfield roasted competitors in the OBE Big Air Series final, which
included stops on the east coast and in Tahoe. "I'll take it in
the qualifiers but in the finals you gotta hold onto that thing."
Travis Parker didn't seem to have a problem as he charged through
a variety of tricks, "It was fun. Went by quick. Everything was
perfect about it, the weather, super-steep landing, which doesn't
happen very often on park hits-and I landed two solid tricks."
That included a solidly stomped frontside 900 to the delight of
his mom Carol, and the Stimilon judges working with special guest
Tim Windell. "I like to save the practice for powder kickers," Parker
said "I've only landed a couple frontside nines-glad I stomped one
in the contest. I don't know the secrets of judging, I just try
to do progressive tricks and have a good time." Chances of that
improved greatly when Parker placed second.
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The
Borg: doing business.
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Alaskan Jason Borgstede, on top of a few big air comps was fresh
off the King Of The Hill in his home state. After leading the field
with a second on Race Day and first on Freestyle Day, Borgstede
claims judges misinterpreted his moves on Extreme Day, the results
of which landed him a disappointing eighth. "It's pretty rough.
A little bit of a heartbreak when you have it that close and it
slips away," he said.
From there it was back to work at Snow Job, where Borgstede hoped
experience would score him better, "By way of good results, big
air is my specialty. That's why I did the King Of The Hill-to prove
I'm a freerider, not just a jumper, and to bring the title home
to Alaska."
From the looks of the highly charged, multiply spun finals, other
riders worked more aggressively, but none had Borgstede's solid
stompings or confidant poise during spins or flips.
"I have a trick, the backside 900 tail-grab I use that in qualifiers
to get one under my belt," Borgstede said "It's still up there as
far as tricks, it feels good. It's nice to get a landing out of
the way and get more used to the jump. It's not that challenging
anymore because I've done it a lot. And they start to score you
lower because they've seen it, which is unfortunate but it happens."
That it does-winning in big air can be elusive-a combination of
strategy, crowd approval and the constant push for progression.
For not pushing another rotation beyond one of the hardest tricks
you can do, Borgstede ended up in third behind Travis Parker and
winner Myles Hallen-whose style the east coast judges perhaps found
more familiar.
In the women's division, Kim Bohnsack was the only girl to take
on the big air ramp at Vegetate a few weeks earlier. But even her
smooth, stuck method-to-fakies were no match for another big air
specialist, Jamie McCleod who simply flipped the crowd's lid.
"I'm not one bit mad at you rodeo girl," Winfield said of her stomped
roundhouse 540. The same could not be said for passengers on the
Yellow Chair which ran beside the course, past a gauntlet of snowballs
from every direction. Even the Bud Man refused to take flight, cowering
by the judges' stand even when he said his red and blue costume
was "snowball-proof."
Though headliners The Flys threw down a cover of Marilyn Manson's
"The Dope Show," a snowball may have been the most malevolent weapon
on hand. Along with brother Adam, lead singer Joshua Paskowitz (youngest
of "the freaky Paskowitz family tribe of eleven surfing Mexican
Jewish nomads"), revealed that even a jaded L.A. band on the road
wasn't immune to the on-snow festival's charms. He also confirmed
my suspicion since hearing the band on even sponsor 94.7 NRK-that
they're Black Flys family.
"We came in from Austin this morning so we're so dejected, tired
and embroiled in bitterness-a tight acrid ring of bitterness around
my xiphoid," he said. "Then the kids come out and it's real genuine.
It was really great with the mountain, the people-all the beautiful,
little people. It always seems like the kids save it."
Awash in the sun, snow and fun, I had an idea: Arm the Trenchcoat
Mafia with long boards. Send NATO in to take the Kosovars heliboarding.
Poach Serb powder lines with Apaches.
Maybe it was sunstroke, but I could've sworn we had a few recruits
of our own. "I haven't tried snowboarding yet but I'm going to try
it and I might like it," Staff Sergeant Jones told us earlier. "I
might become a professional snowboarder after I leave the Marine
Corps, who knows?"
Who knew? I certainly didn't when I signed up at an early age.
I hope to never retire. I asked the Marines if they could imagine
a world where sideways adventures replaced all the military ones.
"Oh wow!" Staff Sergeant Rehkpof marveled. "That would be a wonderful
life, man."
Not life, dude. Lifestyle.
OBE Big Air Series Finals, presented by Bud Light
Men's Big Air Results
1. Myles Hallen
2. Travis Parker
3. Jason Borgstede
Women's Big Air Results
1. Jaime Macleod
2. Kim Bohnsack
3. Jacqui Berg
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