Reading Time: 2 minutes

I was stoked to learn there would be a magazine dedicated to backcountry snowboarding. To find out I was IN the Winter 2012 premiere issue made it all the more sweeter! Kronicle is published by Height of Land Publications, the same folks who bring us Alpinist, Telemark Skier and Backcountry magazine.

OK, so they made me an ‘After Thought’ – the last page of editorial in the magazine. In the shot I’m doing a Method Air, which was still sorta cool in 1985 (I suppose a reverse rocket would’ve been cooler). Fellow bitness writer, photog and best bud Jason snapped the picture when we were kids on a back-hill in our home town of White Plains, New York. The point of the article is that local hills are where backcountry snowboarding began.

The contents of this premiere issue of Kronicle, both the editorial and the imagery, are top notch. Kronicle covers two topics in this issue that were both on the table for future bitness.com articles – split boards and ‘No-boarding’ (snowboarding without bindings) and frankly, they just made our research a little easier.

Hit your local Barnes & Noble, EMS, REI or local board shop to see if they carry Kronicle, or order it online and subscribe. If you enjoy snowboarding and don’t do backcountry (but maybe like to hit the glades) it’s well worth the read and the images are guaranteed to get you amped for the coming season – I’m already booked for Utah in 2 weeks!

Posted by: Lawrence

Reading Time: < 1 minute

When you or one of your friends drops in a halfpipe, wave, downhill single-track or chute you pull for them to make something special happen. It’s called spreading the stoke and for a little over a year Stokelab has done just that and done it beautifully with incredible imagery and digestible stokey nuggets of editorial.

Stokelab.com

Issue N° 5 does not disappoint, capturing images of athletes at the pique of their sport, whether it be kayaking, surfing, climbing, mountain biking, snowboarding, skiing or other core sports.

This issue features an interview with Geoff MacDonald and Chris James of Meathead Films. The two discuss their 11th film project, Prime Cuts and also their working dynamic, what it takes to make it as a filmmaker and what it means to be ‘core’ and not controlled.

Check out Stokelab Issue N° 5 and other back issues for all the core sports porn your eyes can handle. If the pictures and articles don’t get you amped out of your skin, you might want to try methlab.com – just kidding… Don’t do drugs.

Posted by: Lawrence