Ski Kind Archives - Winter Wildlands Alliance Working to inspire and empower people to protect America’s wild snowscapes. Tue, 25 Feb 2025 23:51:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://winterwildlands.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/cropped-Solstice-Trees-Logo-e1657728223845-32x32.png Ski Kind Archives - Winter Wildlands Alliance 32 32 183875264 Which Way To Snowplay? https://winterwildlands.org/which-way-to-snowplay/ Wed, 08 Jan 2025 21:54:09 +0000 https://winterwildlands.org/?p=39754 Snowplay areas provide a gateway to winter fun for families and help connect communities to wild snowscapes.

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Which Way to Snowplay?

Snowplay areas provide a gateway to winter fun for families and help connect communities to wild snowscapes.


From Kerry McClay, National SnowSchool Director (1/8/25)

What is a snowplay area?

An un-developed snowplay area is one of those things where you know it when you see it— Imagine driving down a snowy mountain road and coming upon a small pullout tightly packed with a few too many parked cars. On the slope just above it, families are trying out a diverse array of sleds and bumpy sledding routes down the hill. There’s a handful of bundled up adults drinking hot coffee and watching a group of kids build a snowman. There’s a few snowballs flying through the air and even a couple of dogs happily running amok through the fresh powder. As you pass in your car you slow down, partly for safety’s sake, but also so you can get a closer look at the scene. Yes it’s borderline chaos, but they are all definitely having fun. 

Why Snowplay Areas Matter

With populations surging in mountain communities across the Western US, the need for more designated and adequately developed snowplay areas has become increasingly obvious. It seems that new residents to the region are interested in experiencing their local public lands and wild snowscapes, but many have not yet acquired the equipment, skills, or interest in taking on a more specialized winter recreation activity (such as cross country skiing, snowshoeing, snowmobiling or winter camping). Designated snowplay areas managed by the USFS or other land agencies typically provide plowed parking and basic bathroom facilities to help families and friends simply get outside in the winter on public land. 

“Families in California’s Central Valley gaze up at the snow-covered Sierra Nevada from their own communities, but often don’t know the safest and best way to enjoy winter recreation opportunities there. Snowplay is the most accessible form of winter recreation, but users need to know where they can go to take advantage of those opportunities. This picture is from Pinecrest Lake. It is not designated as a snow play area technically but the FS maintains bathrooms, trash service and parking for hundreds of cars.”

– Megan Fiske, WWA California Stewardship Manager

Snowplay areas can be a great first wild winter experience for families, or a great next step for kids after a SnowSchool field trip. In fact, one of the most commonly expressed sentiments we hear from kids after a first-ever snowshoe adventure at SnowSchool is a desire to return and bring their families.  So if we know where snowplay areas are then we can help direct people to appropriate places for winter fun. And if we know where new snowplay areas are most desperately needed, we can focus efforts on working with land managers in those areas to accomplish this goal.

Help People Find Snowplay Areas

To help with this we are compiling a list of known snowplay areas near our mountain communities, Winter Wildlands Alliance members, and SnowSchool sites. Help grow our list by telling us about your favorite snowplay area near you! 




ADD YOUR FAVORITE PLACE TO PLAY TO OUR LIST

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Winter Wildlands Alliance is a national nonprofit organization working to inspire and empower people to protect America’s wild snowscapes.

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Ski Kind Stewardship in Action https://winterwildlands.org/ski-kind-stewardship-in-action-2023/ Sun, 05 Nov 2023 22:05:47 +0000 https://winterwildlands.org/?p=35227 Learn more about our Bridger Mountains Sign and Weed Treatment Project, made possible by a grant to our Ski Kind Stewardship Fund.

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Ski Kind Stewardship In Action

We’re working with a wide variety of recreation, conservation, and land management partners in Bozeman, MT to improve stewardship in the Bridger Mountains – putting the Ski Kind principles into action!




Winter Wildlands Alliance has been working with a wide variety of recreation, conservation, and management stakeholders in Bozeman, MT to improve, and reduce impacts from, outdoor recreation in the Bridger Mountains.

The Bridgers are just north of Bozeman and provide excellent winter (and summer) recreation opportunities of all types. Our stakeholder group, called the Bridger Infrastructure Committee, includes backcountry skiers and local ski area representatives, hikers, mountain bikers, motorized users, backcountry horsemen, local conservation organizations, Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks, Gallatin County, the Custer-Gallatin National Forest, local residents, and more.

Together, we identified a need to improve signage across the Bridger Range to better mark the trail system and provide visitor education regarding etiquette, travel management, and wildlife conservation. We also all agreed on the need to do more to manage invasive weeds throughout the Bridgers.

With support from our Bridger Infrastructure Committee partners, Winter Wildlands Alliance applied for and received a grant from the Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks Trail Stewardship Program to implement the project ideas the group collectively developed. This grant represents the biggest cash infusion into our Ski Kind Stewardship Fund to date.

Bridger Mountains Sign and Weed Treatment Project

When our Bridger Mountains Sign and Weed Treatment Project is complete, every trailhead in the Bridgers will have a kiosk displaying a backcountry etiquette sign and visitor use map with travel management designations clearly marked (which will be swapped out for semi-annually for winter signs and maps at the primary backcountry ski and snowmobile trailheads), all of the trail junctions throughout the Bridger Range will be well-signed, the most heavily-used summer trailheads in the range will be equipped with boot brush weed stations, and we’ll have treated invasive weeds along several miles of multi-use trail.

We are halfway through our first year of this two-year project and excited about the progress that has been made to-date. We worked with our Bridger Infrastructure partners to design the backcountry etiquette signs – which are also translated into Spanish and will likely be the first bilingual signs on public lands in the state of Montana.

With significant help from Bridger Bowl Ski Area employees, Bridger Ski Foundation coaches, and Forest Service staff, we inventoried almost every trail in the Bridger Range over the summer, noting where new or additional directional or travel management signs are needed.

In early November we installed two of three weed boot brush stations. And we just placed an order for all of the trailhead kiosk etiquette and visitor use map signs. We also contracted with a weed spraying company to complete the first two of four rounds of weed treatments.

Over the winter we’ll be reviewing the trail inventory and placing an order for the necessary new trail junction signs and installing the winter etiquette and map signs once they’re printed. Next summer we’ll be completing the trail inventory, building additional trailhead kiosks where they’re needed, installing all of the new signs, installing the final boot brush station, and completing the weed treatments.

This ambitious project wouldn’t be possible without our partners – the Custer Gallatin National Forest’s Bozeman Ranger District, Gallatin County, Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks, Bridger Bowl Ski Area, Southwest Montana Mountain Bike Association, Bridger Ski Foundation, Citizens for Balanced Use, Crosscut Mountain Sports Center, Gallatin Valley Backcountry Horsemen, The Wilderness Society, Bridger Canyon Property Owners Association, and the Custer Gallatin Working Group.

It truly captures the Ski Kind spirit – no matter how you enjoy the backcountry we can work together to keep it open, accessible, inclusive, and protected.


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David Page Takes Lead as WWA Executive Director https://winterwildlands.org/david-page-takes-lead-as-wwa-executive-director/ Fri, 03 Jun 2022 13:28:53 +0000 https://winterwildlands.org/?p=30817 The Winter Wildlands Alliance Board of Directors wishes a warm welcome to a true friend of the mission, David Page, who will be taking the executive director leadership position on June 3rd, 2022.

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David Page Takes Lead as WWA Executive Director



Not 4th of July. Photo by David Weinstein.

The Winter Wildlands Alliance Board of Directors  wishes a warm welcome to a true friend of the mission, David Page, who will be taking the executive director leadership position on June 3rd, 2022.

We have known David since he joined WWA in 2016. At that time, he was a writer (and skier) who had parlayed a BA, MA, and MFA into 8 awards including Outdoor Writer of the Year, and published articles like “Rituals: The Last Run” in the New York Times, and “The Human Factor” in Powder Magazine.

Since then, he has lent more than 6 years of his eloquence and environmental values to the core mission of our stakeholders. As our Advocacy Director, David has earned the respect of both public and private sector actors, managed passionate groups of public land users, and found solutions in the backcountry where people (and animals) thought there simply might not be any.

As Policy Director during the founding years of Outdoor Alliance California, he helped create an important place at the table for the human-powered outdoor recreation community on a broad range of topics from sustainable recreation management to climate resilience to equitable access. David also led WWA through our critical initial winter recreation planning processes in California, where those plans are now poised to serve as models for the significant work ahead across the nation. As these slow and contentious processes have unfolded, he also, critically, won the respect and support of our staff. This means a great deal to us as we believe our team is the strongest it has been in the 22 years since we were founded.

With more than a dozen years of non-profit leadership and governance experience, David’s boots are firmly on the ground. His experience working on the front lines in Washington D.C., in County Commissioner offices, at our SnowSchools with our kids, in our Film Festivals, with our grassroots groups, with our Outdoor Alliance partners, with our partners in the Forest Service, and of course high in the cirques and chutes of the Sierra Nevada and Teton Range — sets him up to break some solid new skin track for WWA without a missing a step.

David, thank you for all you have already given the mission and our members. We are delighted to have more of your voice, thoughtfulness, and now leadership in the era ahead. Your commitment to the wild inspires us all. Onward!

Keep Winter Wild,

The Winter Wildlands Alliance Board of Directors

Hal Hallstein, President
Megan Birzell
Jennifer Bock
Tony Ferlisi
Michael Fiebig
Robin Harms
Erik Lambert
Rich Meyer
Jennifer Miller
Jaime Musnicki
Jason Pouncy
Denis Tuzinovic
Scott White
Laura Yale



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The Local Advocate https://winterwildlands.org/the-local-advocate-friends-of-plumas/ Wed, 01 Sep 2021 21:14:24 +0000 https://winterwildlands.org/?p=25164 Learn more about Friends of Plumas Wilderness and their work in forest planning for their local winter wildlands!

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The Local Advocate

Learn more about Friends of Plumas Wilderness and their work in forest planning for their local winter wildlands!




Photo Credit: FoPW (On the ancestral lands of the Mountain Maidu and other Nations)


WWA grassroots group Friends of Plumas Wilderness (FoPW) is currently deep in the trenches on a forest planning project, and this kind of local grassroots advocacy rarely sees the limelight it deserves.

With WWA’s relentless focus on winter landscapes, sometimes forest planning doesn’t get the sexy status it could, whether on a local or national scale. 

What does forest planning mean?

The National Forest Management Act of 1976 requires every national forest to develop and follow a Land Management Plan, also known as a forest plan. The process for the development and revision of plans, along with required content, is outlined in a federal regulation known as the 2012 Planning Rule. The Forest Service is currently revising many forest plans across the country.

A forest plan is similar to a comprehensive plan that helps guide land use and development city- or county-wide. Such a plan lays out where particular uses may occur; forest plans describe how different areas of the forest will be managed and what uses are suitable in different parts of the forest.

A forest plan has many layers. At the top is forest-wide direction — things that apply across the entire forest. Below that, the forest is first divided into management areas or geographic areas, with specific management direction for each of these areas based on its unique geographic, topographic, cultural, and recreational attributes. Then there are other layers, like special designations to protect sensitive plant species, potential Wilderness areas, and wildlife habitat. For people who recreate on the forest, a layer of particular interest is the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum, which guides what types of recreation uses and infrastructure are suitable across the forest. 

A Local Advocate’s Impact in Forest Planning

FoPW is a grassroots conservation group that since 1974 has been studying, exploring, and maintaining the integrity of natural ecosystems where the Sierra and Cascades meet. WWA works with grassroots groups across the country to protect winter wildlands and a quality human-powered snowsports experience on public lands. By joining and pooling interests with WWA, grassroots network members not only become part of a national movement for sustainable recreation, but also gain access to a variety of resources for increasing awareness and effectiveness of their organizations.

Since 1970, Friends of Plumas Wilderness has been dedicated to studying, exploring and maintaining the integrity of natural ecosystems in the Northern Sierra and Southern Cascades of California, instrumental in gaining Congressional designation of the Bucks Lake Wilderness in 1984. Thirty-three years before, Wilbur Vaughan, the “Father of the Bucks Lake Wilderness,” and David Brower, a fellow 10th Mountain Division infantryman and then-president of the Sierra Club, had the idea of permanently protecting the area.

FoPW has worked closely with WWA and other allied conservation groups to protect snow sanctuaries on the Lassen and Plumas National Forests by developing alternatives for Over-Snow Vehicle (OSV) use designation (also referred to as winter travel planning / management).

Darrel Jury, FoPW President, says that by engaging local human-powered winter recreation enthusiasts in winter travel planning, his group can actualize what he calls place-based conservation. 

“Grassroots groups like ours share knowledge of our local wildlands and have connections with conservation and winter recreation communities. Where the Sierra and Cascades meet significant investments have been made in winter motorized recreation and snowmobilers are well organized,” Jury explains. “Few people know that skiing in America originated here when Norwegian gold miners brought the knowledge of skiing to the Lost Sierra during the California Gold Rush. Other than the Plumas Ski Club, which focuses on the deep ski history of the region, human-powered winter recreationists were unorganized until our group stepped up.”

WWA helped us a great deal with policy, advocacy, and outreach and education. With their support we were able to sponsor events to raise awareness and rally human-powered winter recreation advocates. Event highlights include collaborating to host the showing of the Jeremy Jones film “Ode to Muir” and members of our board hosting the Backcountry Film Fest at the Sierra Nevada Brewing Company Big Room,” he said.

Friends of Plumas Wilderness is working to protect more wild places, building on the foundation original members built 40 years ago, and is developing Conservationist Alternatives for local Forest Plan revisions. They aim to designate the Middle Fork of the Feather River, Mill Creek and Forest Service lands adjoining Lassen Volcanic National Park as Wilderness. In partnership with WWA and Snowlands Network to enhance quiet winter recreation opportunities on the Lassen, Plumas and Tahoe National Forests.

“By developing conservationist alternatives for winter travel plans on the Lassen and Plumas National Forests we were able to move the needle and keep the majority of Inventoried Roadless Areas, Research Natural Areas, and Special Interest Areas non-motorized year-round,” Jury says. “These gains will help us as we move forward to create a 30×30 vision for our region.”

“Being an advocate at the local level is often voluntary and driven by the passion to protect your home,” explains Jury. “I‘m fortunate to live in a community surrounded by public lands. Although these lands have been abused by past mining and logging practices and are in poor health as a result, and are critically threatened with biodiversity loss and climate change, there is the promise of creating a network of linked wildlands that can weather these combined crises.”

“The fact that national and state leaders recognize the need to conserve 30 percent of lands and waters by 2030 gives me hope.”




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A Season of Ski Kind https://winterwildlands.org/a-season-of-ski-kind/ Wed, 01 Sep 2021 20:03:11 +0000 https://winterwildlands.org/?p=25148 What has been the impact of the Backcountry Responsibility Code and why we need more seasons of skiing kind: take the pledge today!

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A Season of Ski Kind

What has been the impact of the Backcountry Responsibility Code and why we need more seasons of skiing kind: take the pledge today!




Photo Credit: Rick Jenkinson (On the ancestral lands of the Wabanaki, Abenaki, Pequawket, and other Nations)


The Ski Kind Backcountry Responsibility Code was launched in 2020 as a way to bring a sense of community and humbleness to a ski season that seemed to be in jeopardy from every angle. Conceived as a set of guidelines to promote responsible winter recreation, Winter Wildlands Alliance (WWA) joined forces with Granite Backcountry Alliance (GBA) to bring the Code to the backcountry community all winter long.

Backcountry participation numbers skyrocketed due to resort restrictions and people looking for COVID-safe activities, and our beloved ways of getting outdoors to enjoy nature experienced a surge that no one could have predicted as people have been taking solace in the outdoors and outdoor recreation.

“We kept having conversations last spring about how to address the impact of increased pressure on backcountry trailheads,” said Todd Walton, WWA’s Executive Director. “The concept of ‘Ski Kind’ came from Tyler Ray who runs GBA, one of WWA’s grassroots partners, and through the course of the conversation the basic tenets of this unique campaign arose.”

David Page, Advocacy Director at WWA, worked closely with the team at Recreate Responsibly to integrate a winter version of their efforts. With the goal to have double the impact with double the results, Page worked to also launch Ski Kind in the same fashion as Recreate Responsibly with an open toolkit for users to share and learn from. 

Tangible, Local Impact

Greg Peters is the volunteer board president of Montana Backcountry Alliance (MBA), a statewide group representing human-powered winter recreationists. Like so many other places, Montana is seeing a big increase in backcountry skiing, especially last winter during the pandemic,” he began to explain. “Avalanche classes had wait lists, parking lots were full, and gear shops were sold out of backcountry equipment. We’re thrilled to see interest in backcountry skiing grow, but here in western Montana, access is limited to a handful of spots, so more people were hitting the same spots. It didn’t help that winter was a bit late to arrive this last season.”

“The Ski Kind campaign provided a great set of messages that we shared with our members and the broader community. I think it helped people be a bit more patient with folks new to backcountry skiing and it encouraged more experienced users to be role models for those new to the sport,” Peters said. 

Greg Maino, Director of Communication for Catamount Trail Association (CTA) in Burlington, Vermont, agrees that “Ski Kind was important for our community last season because it embodied the type of awareness, consideration, and mindset required of users, both old and new, that allowed everyone to share our outdoor spaces in a safe and responsible way. It was an easy way to highlight important aspects of etiquette for new users, and served as a helpful reminder to existing users that they have an important role to play in welcoming new users and helping to educate them in a respectful way.”

“We’ve experimented with similar messaging in the past, but it was hard for us to track how that did or didn’t impact the backcountry skiing and riding community,” continued Peters. “Having a ready set of messages and materials made it easy to incorporate this type of messaging into our work more regularly and more directly. With such a big bump in new users combined with a lot of new people moving to Montana, it was important for us to be proactive in both welcoming new skiers and riders and in sharing how we respectfully and safely treat the backcountry and other users. Montana is different from places like Utah, Colorado and California. We don’t have lots of access to high mountain passes, the weather is rough, and the skiing can be difficult (we have a lot of trees, variable conditions, and complicated terrain). With so many new folks coming to Montana generally, and so many new backcountry enthusiasts, the timing was perfect for a more concerted campaign like this.”

The Future of Ski Kind

There is no doubt that the Ski Kind mentality (alongside all of the other advocacy campaigns that came out of the boom in outdoor recreation last year) is here to stay. The real question is how this code of ethics will play into future policymaking and conservation work.

Said Peters: “Ski Kind will continue to play an important role in our outreach. Montana remains a popular place to move and backcountry skiing and riding continue to grow, so maintaining consistent messaging about backcountry ethics and responsibility will remain a key aspect of our messaging. Our follower-base continues to grow and it’s important that we keep sharing messages like this to both new users and those with years of experience. It can be annoying and frustrating when your local stash gets a lot more use than it used to, so we want to keep reminding all of our users that everyone has a place in the backcountry and patience, kindness, and humility are as important to bring to the trailhead as a beacon, shovel, probe and skins.”

Maino agrees: “Doing your homework, being prepared, and showing respect to those you encounter on the trail isn’t exactly groundbreaking. However, last season was a weird year. Everyone wanted to be outside, but you weren’t supposed to gather with others. Additionally, in-person clinics and courses were mostly cancelled making it much more difficult for new users to access resources and information that would assist them in becoming responsible users.”

“Last year we knew we were going to see an influx of users, both new and old, and a concise code of ethics was an easy way to communicate what someone should be thinking about when engaging with our public outdoor spaces,” added Maino. 

With luck many of the people that discovered backcountry skiing last year will stick with it, and hopefully we continue to see similar trends in interest in the outdoors,” Maino said. “That said, if these trends do continue it will take time for infrastructure to catch up with the demand. Being prepared and showing others respect isn’t going to go out of style, and with trends as they are we see this type of advocacy being an important part of our communication goals for the foreseeable future.


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