Posted on 02 October 2009.
Read Chapter one of “Out West: Snowboarding, Westbeach, and a New Canadian Dream” here in FLIP BOOK FORMAT. Keep your eyes open for more releases…basically one every two weeks. Chapter one is titled…..”Beginnings” and is all about how it began – we mean snowboarding in Canada.

Heh you can read chapters of our book here!!!!
Posted in Uncategorized
Posted on 02 October 2009.
This pic is just funny. What more can we say that snowboarding always has been and always will be FUN – even when doing STIFFIES was rad. Wait..STIFFIES are RAD!

Stiffies rule
Posted in Summer Shredding, The 80's, The Early Days of Westbeach
Posted on 02 October 2009. Tags: style, Summer Shredding, trevor andrew, Westbeach
A few pics of Trevor Andrew from the WB vault. For a brief time Trouble Andrew rode for WB…check the pics and note the sweet tongues flipped on his boots.


Just a young buck.....sporting a WB hood.




Posted in Summer Shredding, The 90's
Posted on 02 October 2009. Tags: camp of champs, summer snowboarding, Westbeach

The Westbeach Camp of Champs
Camp of Champs is the current day heart and soul of the summer shred on Horseman Glacier. Their terrain is second to none, all the pros roll in, the level of riding is high, and it’s FUN.
Looking back in time we found this ad from the early 90′s when Westbeach sponsored the camp. Wait, did we mention that we are working with them again!
Long live summer snowboarding and the Camp of Champs.
Posted in Summer Shredding, The 90's
Posted on 20 August 2009. Tags: Snowboarding, Westbeach, Whistler
Contributor / WACKLE /
IN 1990 the contest scene was warming up a bit as seen by the number of entrants below. Pipes were still dug by hand and the entire ethos was a lot of D.I.Y. – if the pipe needed some work, grab a shovel. CONTEST ANNOUNCEMENT - send the name of bib #128 to competition@westbeach.com to win a FREE JACKET.




Posted in The 90's, The Early Days of Westbeach, The Westbeach Classic, Whistler
Posted on 20 August 2009. Tags: Kevin Young, Sean Johnson, Snowboarding, Westbeach, Whistler, Whistler Mountain
Contributor//Jon//
Devun Walsh recounts his memory of the event in “Out Westbeach: Snowboarding, Westbeach, and a new Canadian Dream”.
I really remember [Sean] Johnson bonking the announcer stand [and] Jamie Lynn doing late-grab 540s and snowboarding way different than anyone else. The first time I saw him was at Westbeach, and he’s doing those frontside fives in the pipe, and he’d come around late mute and bone ’em out straight—it was just like, “That is sick! He’s so different.” There was just a clear-cut difference. It’s not like he was going that much bigger—it was just solid. And that’s when I was like, ‘That’s who I wanna snowboard like.’ – Devun Walsh
Below – Sean Johnson (founder Stephchild snowboards) bonking the announcer’s stand.

Below – Westbeach team rider Kevin Young – perfect style.

Below – Kevin Young in the news.

Posted in The 90's, The Westbeach Classic, Whistler
Posted on 18 August 2009. Tags: Paul Culling, Snowboarding, Westbeach, Westbeach Classic, Whistler Mountain
This original artwork for the first ad featured in Transworld Snowboarding tells it all – $10,000 cash prize. Snowboarding was on the up…..

Posted in The 90's, The Early Days of Westbeach, The Westbeach Classic
Posted on 18 August 2009.
Contributor Jon // Not many people remember it, but The Westbeach Classic was originally held at Cypress Mountain and more than a few careers were made of it. At this time contests were as much about socializing as about winning. Snowboarding was pretty small, and all the competitors were acquainted with one another.
Dano Pendygrasse puts it this way in “Out Westbeach; Snowboarding, Westbeach and a new Canadian dream” (buy it here)
So, in April 1989, Cypress Mountain in West Vancouver became the first host of what would become an iconic event. I was 19, and I remember it being a pretty big deal. A big-name American pro, Dan Donnelly, drove up, which was something most riders hadn’t seen up until that point, and people came from all over the province to ride, watch, and party. I guess because it wasn’t very good, I don’t remember much of the “pipe,” but what I always will remember is the jump that was built at the end of it: a big booter to a terrible landing that pun- ished everyone who hit it. The halfpipe contest became a jump contest, and Don Schwartz won it with a backflip full twist. Warburton blasted some double-grab rocket airs, and Ross Rebagliati’s signature method air was good enough to push him to a win in the amateur category. That kid had style, man. I used to think it was a shame that he got into racing, because he was so good at freestyle, but then he won the Olympic gold medal. I doubt he regrets the switch.


Posted in The 80's, The Early Days of Westbeach, The Westbeach Classic
Posted on 18 August 2009. Tags: beginnings, surf, Westbeach
Contributor WACKLE //
IN the mid 80′s before snowboardings’ rise in popularity and commercial appeal, shred competitions were near non existent. Surfing on the other hand, had roots, lots of participants and competitions. Westbeach was the at the epicenter of the California lifestyle scene and knew it had to stoke the fire and blow the scene up. The solution? The Westbeach Classic!
An excerpt from Out West: Snowboarding, Westbeach and a new Canadian Dream by Dano Pendygrasse available at www.westbeach.com.
The first Westbeach Classic was actually a surf contest. it started in the mid 1980′s on Vancouver Island’s west coast and in its very first year had 100 entrants, including four in the women’s cateogry. As Marco Allinott remembers it, Raph Bruhweiler, who went on to some fame in the surfing world, won the novice category that year. In typical style, Westbeach decided they were going to have a contest, set out to do it, and, without asking too many questions, went ahead and did. Only after they showed up to the beach did they find out that they needed to have an event permit from the Canadian Parks Service. The next year they had that covered and had rented and filled the entire campground at Chesterman’s in Tofino.
Below: A poster from the 1989 Westbeach Surf jam advertising sun, surf, sand and prizes.

Posted in The 80's, The Early Days of Westbeach, The Westbeach Classic
Posted on 18 August 2009.
By the late 80′s the snowboarding communities’ core followers had started moving to Whistler to see for themselves if it lived up to tales. Leaving the comforts of home, work, and girlfriends, they banded together in the cheapest accomodation available. This often meant 2 to a room, no toilet paper, and only beer in the fridge. Given the hope of a brighter future, or at least unlimited powder to be shared with new friends, many gave in to the higher calling and headed west. Once there they met others who were equally as determined to snowboard everyday and progress the sport. It was this combination of location and timing that set the explosive and progressive scene that would put Whistler on the map as the epicenter of Canadian snowboarding. If you wanted to go pro, you moved to Whistler.
Below: The front porch of “The Snoboard House” in Whistler. Three different Craig Kelly prototypes belonging to Alex Warburton
and Jeff Brushie as well as the debris from the lives of a dozen or so young snowboarders. Photo: John Kamitakahara.

Posted in The 80's, Whistler