The Thrill of Snowboarding
Snowboarding, the art of gliding across snowy slopes on a single elongated board, has become highly popular among lovers of winter sports. Even those who don’t like the cold, but love the thrill of physical activity, have found joy in snowboarding. No matter where in the world you live, there is a dreamy snowboarding location nearby. Before you plan your next vacation, you may want to consider the condition of the slopes.
Snowboarding Resorts
The nation is peppered with resorts that offer snowboarding lessons, to suit any vacation plan. You’ll find snowboarding resorts in states across the US, if you know where to look. In Canada, Lake Louise and Whistler are two highly popular spots for snowboarding and snowboarding lessons. California’s Squaw Valley is a great, dreamy snowboarding vacation resort for those wishing to learn the craft of snowboarding. Sun Valley in Idaho, and Moonlight Basin in Montana are popular Rocky Mountain snowboarding vacation destinations.
In Nevada, Heavenly is the best resort for snowboarding, and Jackson Hole is where you want to go if Wyoming is the state of your choice. If the resort you choose features snowboarding, there will be a bevy of other winter sports to enjoy as well. Amid lush mountain scenery and crisp white snow, you may discover that snowboarding is the answer to your dream vacation.
Utah is filled with great resorts; where you can do all the snowboarding you please and even receive lessons. Deer Valley, The Canyons, Snowbird, and Park City are all well-known and beautiful resorts that you might want to check out if you’re visiting Utah. For snowboarding, you can hardly do better than the beautiful peaks of Utah.
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Hit the Slopes: Dreamy Snowboarding Vacations
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Tags: Beaver Creek, Butte, California, Canada, Colorado, Copper Mountain, Dreamy, Idaho, Jackson Hole, Lake Louise, Montana, Moonlight Basin, Nevada, Park City, resort, Rocky Mountain, Slopes, Snow, Snowboarding, snowboarding lessons, snowboarding resorts, snowboarding vacation, snowy slopes, Squaw Valley, Steamboat Springs, Sun Valley, Thrill, US, Utah, vacation, Vacations, Whistler, winter, Winter Park, Wyoming
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Surfing | August 3rd, 2009
Sand. Sun. Surf. Think beach, and those are the first descriptions that pop up. Images of azure waters gently rolling to pristine shores, coconut and palm fronds waving in the sea breeze, the soft tinkling of wood-and-string instruments accompanied by the staccato of percussions… all in keeping with the picture-perfect summer holiday. So the general, typical beach-going public would agree.
But take it to a different world: one of waves swelling to as high as thirty feet overhead, of deeply tanned pecs, abs, biceps and legs running, jumping and swimming in shape and of human figures skating the surface of these gigantic waves on colorful boards in a race against crashing foam and surf. It’s the world of surfing.
Surfing traces its historic roots in the early Polynesian people of Hawaii. Memoirs written by Capt. James Cook on his visits to the Pacific are the earliest records of surfing anywhere in the world. Traditionally, the people of Hawaii lay flat on their bellies on wooden boards to skim the waves. Surfing is deeply-rooted in Hawaiian and Polynesian culture, playing a role in the construction of legends and myths. The imminent danger faced while surfing, the thought of conquering the waves, the thrill of being atop them and the discipline it takes to reach all of the above: these elements are responsible for the excitement and popularity that surfing has become.
Tags: Angelo Pappas, Anne Marie, Capt. James Cook, Culture, Gary Busey, gigantic waves, God, Hawaii, Hollywood, Johnny Utah, Kate Bosworth, Keanu Reeves, legends and myths, Los Angeles, Movies, Pacific, palm fronds, Patrick Swayze, Pipe, pipe masters, sea, Summer, Surf, surfer, Surfing, Utah, world