Hi Neil! You are busy presenting the Midiafilm and Snowmads movies you were involved in last year. One of them took you to Greece - not the standard destination for skiers! How come you ended up skiing there and how was it?
Hey there PowderGuide. Yep, Greece was great - friendly people, tasty food and surprisingly good snow. I went there to join the crazy ski genius Fabi Lentsch in the Snowmads truck, he's all about skiing the unexpected. And we even got to ski off the summit of Mt Olympus!
We will get back to the Snowmads shortly, but let me ask some questions about how your skiing career started. Mount Olympus is also a ski field in New Zealand where you are from. How did you get into skiing there and how can a European skier imagine a standard Kiwi ski weekend?
Mt Olympus is one of the 'club fields' in NZ, which doesn't mean it's exclusive, just that it's a non-profit organisation run by volunteers. I grew up skiing at a different club field called Mt Robert but when I moved to Christchurch for university I started skiing at the club fields there like Temple Basin (that you had to walk to get to, like Mt Robert) and Mt Olympus, 'the drinking club with the skiing problem'. It's like an insight into how skiing was 50 years ago- rough, ready and radical.
And how did you get into competitive skiing?
My university friends Pete Oswald, Charlie Lyons and Si Reeves encouraged me to join the competition scene with them, first the Chill Series at the Mt Olympus/Craigeburn and then NZ Open in Wanaka/Queenstown. After a couple of attempts I ended up winning the Chill Series and getting a couple of top 5 results at the NZ Open.
When did you first leave NZ to ski abroad? How was that? I image it's a pretty different experience, at least in terms of infrastructure, the amount of people and accessible terrain?
Yeah for sure. I went to Tahoe for a couple of 'Uni holidays seasons' because summer holidays are Nov-Feb in NZ. I rented a little place in Truckee with a couple of snowboarder friends of Jethro Neeson and Matt Stevens, plus a Brit and American that we didn't know but became friends with even though we invited Si, Charlie and Sam Smoothy to come sleep on our couch/floor for most of the season. Maybe it helped that it snowed 6m in January and we never had to dig out the gondolas (like you have to dig out the rope tows in NZ). It blew our minds to realise the ski possibilities in the northern hemisphere.