Heading to Banff!
I will be speaking at the event So You Want to Ski In the Movies on Thursday, November 3rd. MOre to come, but thanks to the Banff Airporter for sponsoring my transport from the Calgary Airport…You guys rock!!
I Jump: Avalancha en el Volcán 2011
I distinctly remember telling all my Hood River friends that my trip to Chile this year was going to be short and sweet—“I’m only going to guide for a couple of trips for CASA Tours and then be home.” I just started getting into kiteboarding this summer and the Columbia River Gorge is known for its amazing windy August and September days. I wasn’t lying until I actually got down to South America and started to ski powder. Then I forgot all about summer as I knew it before.

I had a great time guiding for CASA Tours (my second year, amazing tour company for ski and snowboard vacations in Chile and Argentina). We had great snow for almost every group and I even had time between trips to go to the Pichilemu and catch some waves.

I was just beginning to wonder what it would be like to actually leave on my scheduled day of departure—September 20th—and head home, when I was contacted by Rodrigo Vera, a professional climber and instructor at one of Chile’s top eco-tourism colleges in Pucón, Chile. Rodrigo, or “Negro” as he’s known to most, offered me a position as the Director of Marketing for a competition he had been dreaming to create for years—a timed race from the top to the bottom of Villarrica Volcano, one of the most active volcanoes in South America—Avalancha en el Volcán.
My immediate reaction was “Yes! Of course!” and then the reality set in that I wasn’t going to be writing press releases and contacting my media friends in English, but in Spanish—and not any Spanish, but Chilean Spanish. As the time drew closer to the day of the competition, I realized how far I had come by throwing myself into the position. I was proud of overcoming the desires to quit and say “Wow, I have no idea what I’m doing!” and continue to work at the level I envision for any project in my life.

When the competitors started showing up in Pucón, I was the person to meet and greet them, register them, give them all the beta about the competition and make them feel welcome and proud to be involved the competition. It was an amazing feeling to put faces to names and ask them, “How did you hear about Avalancha en el Volcán?”
The day of the competition I hiked up and raced with all the competitors. It was a great feeling to see everything through start to finish. I ended up in first place for the women and really feel vested in seeing more people have the amazing experience of sharing a day on an active volcano with people from around the world….Avalancha en el Volcán 2012!



What an amazing experience!! Thank you to all who made it possible!!
Another look at SheJumps.org in Chile
I just wrote a piece for SheJumps.org and it is up now on the site! Please take a moment to check it out…I will be posting it here soon. Also a (seriously) rad new video from SJ-Co founder Lynsey Dyer (and another one of me skiing Mount Adams is on there too!)
For more sweet photos of the trip so far, I just checked in at FlyLowgear.com as well…
(S)heJumps into the Canyon is a huge success!
(S)heJumps into the Canyon wraps up with smiles and a love for skiing

The teens spilled into Goldminer’s Lodge at Alta with sweat on their brows and huge smiles on the last day of (S)heJumps into the Canyon. It was the last session of four, where teens from four Boys & Girls Clubs in the Salt Lake City area came to participate in a program where they learned how to ski from some of the best skiers in Little Cottonwood Canyon. Coaches included 2009 World Champion ski jumper Lindsey Van, World Cup aerial winners Emily Cook and Ashley Caldwell, plus numerous big-mountain skiers and local rippers alike. The teens were taught by local heroes that provided mentorship and coaching to these teens that wouldn’t have the chance to ski without the support of SheJumps and the many sponsors that brought this program to fruition for the third year in a row.
“I can be scared of doing one thing and then with the support of SheJumps I have been able to jump…or go faster than I usually do,” said Honduras immigrant Lidia Mejia, 17, recalling the experience. “I can reflect back on something that is scary and say if I can do that I can do this too.”
SheJumps goal was to impart the spirit of the organization in the teens, which is to take a jump, or challenge, that may not be immaginable. For many of these teens, the Wasatch mountains are just a backdrop to their lives in the city. They often don’t have the opportunity to engage in expensive outdoor activities such as skiing. During the program, SheJumps taught 43 kids over the course of four weeks in March—which was the largest group to date.
“Teaching the teens how to ski was a joy,” said coach Lindsey Van. “There was no griping, no complaining—they just totally appreciated the experience and couldn’t have been happier sliding on snow.”
Thanks to the many sponsors that made the program run—outer wear, rental gear, lift tickets, and even lunches were donated by wonderful businesses like Rossignol, Deep Powder House and Alta Ski Shop, Goldminer’s, and Alta Ski Area. Much of the added expenses were covered by The North Face grant to help make an impact on the teens. SheJumps couldn’t have done it without the 20 wonderful coaches that volunteered their Saturdays to help mentor the teens. Also, a big thanks to photographers Jeremy Koons and Re Wikstrom for documenting the experience so Shejumps could collect memories for the teens to take home with them.
SheJumps hopes to expand this program to other regions, and is always looking for sponsors to make it happen. If interested, please contact Executive Director, Claire Smallwood, at claire@shejumps.org.

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(S)he Jumps Into The Canyon was established in 2009 to work with as many Boys & Girls club teens as possible in order to inspire them in the mountain setting by offering creative avenues for physical expression that are completely free for them to try. Since it’s founding, the program has provided a month long opportunity for 9-17 year olds to learn about fitness, skiing fundamentals and using public transportation to reach the mountain.
Where does the time go? Skiing!
Wow! It can’t be that I haven’t updated in weeks, but it’s true! The winter is off to an incredible start. We got over 80 inches of snow in the past week. I don’t think I have had a bad day of skiing (is it even possible) since the season has started. Wait, which season? And where did it start? I love the endless winter!
I am cooking for a private family this week at Alta. Last night I made a shallot-white-wine-aged-cheddar-thyme-and-deliciousness-sauce for some macaroni and cheese…A bit of crushed red pepper cauliflower and sauteed spinach with some steak to top it off! Tonight: stuffed chicken breasts wrapped in prosciutto….Life is good! I love to have the opportunity to cook for more families in Alta…the view from the kitchen is inspiring to say the least! Tonight I will have to bring my camera!
SheJumps is keeping me sooo busy! We will have a party at the FlyLow booth during the Outdoor Retailer show and a couple of fun movie premieres are scheduled for Jan. and Feb. in various parts: Utah, California, and Colorado! Above is a photo from our Women’s beacon clinic at Alta. We had over 60 participants there, and 60 other participants at our Women’s Avy Seminar at REI the week before. SheJumps is really growing!
Featured in Women’s Adventure Magazine!
So here I am in Reno, Nevada…About to hit the road to go and spread the word about the best skis on earth AND SheJumps down in Mammoth, California with none other than the Mammoth Snowman. I am with the infamous Pat Keane and we are ready to shred! In the meantime, I’m super stoked because…..
Molly Baker wrote this about me for Women’s Adventure Magazine!!!!
I am so flattered!!!! Check out the original story here
Claire and I met at my first big-mountain skiing competition in Taos, New Mexico. There is a fire radiating from her eyes that changes the energy all around this skier/writer/intellectual and native New Mexican who counts as one of the most gregarious people I have encountered in the ski industry. We’ve kept in touch through her time at Portland, Oregon’s Lewis and Clark University; her winters at Mt. Hood Meadows; her teaching stints at a French school in Portland; and two trips to Senegal where she studied modernization’s effects on oral history. In 2006, she spent the winter in Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah, where she’s spent every ski season since, working as a sous-chef at Alta and more recently as the executive director of the non-profit, SheJumps, that we covered in our winter issue. While “work” keeps her busy, Claire still skis over 200 days a year, a result of a phenomenon she calls “FOMO,” or fear of missing out. “It is a common disorder among outdoor enthusiasts,” she claims.
If fear of missing out can inspire Claire’s to-dos, then sign me up. At the end of last season, Claire skied powder as the target for outdoor photographers before a 20-day rafting trip in the Grand Canyon, climbing in New Mexico, cooking and catering for an outfit in the Columbia River Gorge, and finally as a ski guide in South America—all while strategizing and organizing for SheJumps. When asked what keeps her spontaneous and undeniably chaotic schedule possible, Claire points to her constant exposure to inspiring people, from British Columbia all the way to Tierra del Fuego. And her penchant for multi-tasking. “It’s not that it’s impossible for me to slow down, but once you get used to operating at a certain frequency, it becomes a norm,” she says. “I just really like to have full days—days where I can see tangible progress towards a goal or days where I know that as soon as my head hits the pillow I’m going to have a solid night’s sleep (or at least a few hours).”
That schedule of full days helped Claire stay busy between work and play last summer: summiting a handful of Pacific Northwest volcanoes and checking up on new regional chapters of SheJumps in Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, and California which the organization is planning to expand with spring and summer programs next year. Encouraging other females to get outside and play is just as important to Claire as her own time in the mountains. “I believe when you show someone they can do something they thought was impossible, it is bound to bring about some tangible change within them. My intention for SheJumps is to create experiences that get women thinking along the lines of: What’s Next?”
Driving a beat-up Subaru, living out of storage spaces, and sleeping on friends’ couches has also, in some circles, earned Claire the classic title of “ski bum.” But juxtaposed to her skills as a skier, chef, inspirer, world-traveler, linguist, and organizer, Claire doesn’t find the label fitting. “Maybe if you think about it as, if I don’t ski, them I am bummed,” she says, “but even that is a stretch. I live, eat, and breathe skiing,” admits Claire, “For all of my other jobs, I just hold different office hours.”
When she’s not contributing to Women’s Adventure‘s blog series, Women of Winter, writer and professional skier Molly Baker is likely shredding snowy wonderlands in the Pacific Northwest and posing for some of the industry’s best action photographers. She also contributes to ESPN Freeskiing, The Ski Journal, and Skiing Magazine.
Article in WEND Magazine, August 2010
So honored to be asked by WEND magazine to write this Platform piece for the August 2010 issue!

Text from article:
My name is Claire Smallwood. I am an activist.
My passion is sharing what I love most—the outdoors. The vision we foster through SheJumps is to create a community of ambitious and compassionate women that are willing to take a “jump” to reach their potential and help others reach their own.
Our main objective at SheJumps is to increase and inspire the participation of women in outdoor activities. We are a multi-faceted organization that works on three levels: Jump In (and try something new), Jump Up (challenge yourself to something better), and Jump Out (share it with someone new).
SheJumps.org is our website and main portal of inspiration that highlights the accomplishments and adventures of everyday women. We create many different programs that are opportunities for pro athletes or recreational enthusiasts to give back to their communities and the sport, such as our skiing camps at Alta with Boys & Girls club teens from Salt Lake City.
We offer a multitude of resources to ensure that women have no excuse to not go outside. These resources come in many different ways. SheJumps offers a gear grant program that provides gear through a simple application process. In return we simply ask that the gear get used and that you document the fun you’re having with it.
SheJumps also strives to create community-organized events where women meet up with other women to have outdoor adventures of any nature (including hula-hooping). One of the most memorable is our Backcountry Tour for the Cure, an event for SheJumpers to experience the challenge of winter camping in solidarity for women with breast cancer.
It’s not that there haven’t always been women excelling in the outdoors as leaders, athletes, activists, and enthusiasts; at SheJumps we believe it’s time for women to become a part of something bigger. We started SheJumps to celebrate the beautiful, empowering, camaraderie of what females and genuine, unselfish support can do. After all, “If she can do it, so can I.”
Rad Boobs!!
I am so inspired by my friends up in Canada right now. My friend Holly Walker decided to “Re Think Breast Cancer” by creating a calendar full of rippin’ hot skier chicks and use the proceeds to raise money for breast cancer. You can purchase the calendar here.
Check out the site! www.radboob.com









