The article “The Soul of Snowboarding,” published by Bomb Snow, doesn’t try to define the sport by medals, tricks, or gear. Instead, it starts in a far more familiar place for many riders: a few days of winter camping in “the lot” at Mt. Bachelor over New Year’s Eve—already their second lot-camping trip of the season.
That detail matters, because it frames snowboarding as something that happens before first chair and after last run. The story is rooted in a particular kind of winter rhythm: packing up for a cold weekend, committing to the shared chaos and comfort of a parking-lot community, and letting the trip itself become the point—not just the turns.
Written by Annie Fast, a former editor-in-chief at TransWorld SNOWboarding Magazine who now continues to snowboard and write from Bend, the piece carries the perspective of someone who has seen snowboarding from the inside: as culture, as story, and as lived experience. And what comes through is the idea that snowboarding’s “soul” isn’t confined to the mountain’s boundaries. It’s also in the gatherings, the traditions, and the way a simple trip—camping out at Mt. Bachelor to ring in the new year—can still feel like the heart of why people ride in the first place.
In a world where it’s easy to measure a season by how many days you logged or how perfect the conditions were, the article reminds us of another metric entirely: the moments that linger. The kind you can’t download, and don’t need to prove. Just a winter lot, a new year, and a sport that keeps finding its meaning in the places riders choose to show up together.

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