Jake Burton Carpenter, the founder of and one of the pioneers of the sport of snowboarding, died Wednesday night. Carpenter had announced early in the month that he was battling cancer听for a second time. He was 65 and leaves behind his wife Donna and three sons, Timi, George, and Taylor.听
Carpenter grew up in Cedarhurst, New York, eventually moving to southern Vermont in the mid-1970s. He was a skier, but he鈥檇 developed a love for the Snurfer, a piece of plywood that sort of resembled a water ski and could be ridden down snowy hills while standing and holding a rope. Carpenter believed he could improve upon the Snurfer听by shaping a wider board out of better materials and adding bindings. In 1977, working out of a barn in Londonderry, Vermont, Carpenter, who described himself as a 鈥渓oser in shop class,鈥 started using industrial machinery to try to bring his vision to life. Many of the prototypes ended up shooting out of the machines and through the walls of the barn. But he finally produced his first model, the Backhill.
He only sold 300 snowboards that first year and almost gave up. 鈥淚 came incredibly close in the beginning to just bailing on the whole thing,鈥 he told 国产吃瓜黑料 in 2002. Instead, he stuck with it and sold 700 boards the next year.听
But snowboarding had a problem. Ski areas were wary of people riding the new contraptions on their slopes and banned snowboarders from riding the lifts. To get on the hill, boarders resorted to poaching the ski areas by hiking up trails after they鈥檇 closed for the day, or tromping around the backcountry. In 1983, Carpenter reached out to Paul Johnston, then the vice president at Vermont鈥檚 Stratton Mountain Resort.听
鈥淗e approached me one day and said, 鈥榳ill you guys at least try it?鈥欌 remembers Johnston. 鈥淚 said, bring up some boards and I鈥檒l try it.鈥 Carpenter took Johnston and other executives from Stratton up a bunny slope and tried to teach them how to make the board turn. 鈥淗alf of us couldn鈥檛 even get down the ramp from the chairlift,鈥 says Johnston. 鈥淧eople went into the woods. Nobody wanted to have it on the mountain, but I said I鈥檓 going to try it.鈥 Stratton opened to snowboarders that year.听
鈥淚 do feel that snowboarding is still a big brotherhood, or sisterhood, in the sense that when you see someone on a snowboard, you鈥檙e going to give them the benefit of the doubt,鈥 he said in 2007. 鈥淵ou just have something in common鈥攖here鈥檚 a bond there.鈥
Two years later, the resort hosted the U.S. Open, an event that would become the sport鈥檚 preeminent contest. 鈥淗e had a real vision for what he wanted to achieve,鈥 says Johnston. 鈥淚 remember, early on, he showed me a drawing that he鈥檇 done. And half the people on the mountain were skiing and the other half were snowboarding. 鈥楾his is what I want,鈥 he said.鈥
Carpenter would eventually move his business to Burlington, Vermont, where he鈥檇 grow the company to 950 employees and produce snowboard gear and apparel. The fledgling sport became a billion dollar industry and served as a boon to the snowsports sector. 鈥淲hen we started allowing snowboarding it brought all the kids back out again,鈥 says Johnston. 鈥淲e started to see 200 kids coming out of snowboard school and only 15 kids coming out of ski school.鈥澨
鈥淎s far as the ski industry was concerned, we didn鈥檛 exist,鈥 Carpenter told me when I interviewed him in 2007听for 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 30th anniversary issue. 鈥淭hen we became a nuisance. Then we started getting into resorts, and became a threat. Next thing you know, we were the saviors.鈥
In 1998, snowboarding became an Olympic sport, and the way it was presented made Carpenter cringe. 鈥淎nimal, a Muppet character, with orange hair and a nose ring鈥攖hat was our mascot,鈥 he told me. 鈥淚n the Nagano Olympics, they spelled 鈥榮nowboarding鈥 wrong.鈥
The bright spot was Ross Powers,听a Londonderry native who Carpenter had known for years.听鈥淚n fifth grade I remember getting a one-page letter from Jake saying that the company wanted to sponsor me,鈥 he says.听鈥淗e really gave me a chance.鈥 Powers won a bronze medal at Nagano and followed it up with a gold听at the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City.听鈥淭his is a big loss in our sport,鈥澨齈owers says. 鈥淲ay too early. But he lived his life to the fullest and affected so many lives and made so many of us part of the snowboard community.鈥澨
Carpenter was especially proud of that community. 鈥淚 do feel that snowboarding is still a big brotherhood, or sisterhood, in the sense that when you see someone on a snowboard, you鈥檙e going to give them the benefit of the doubt,鈥 he said in 2007. 鈥淵ou just have something in common鈥攖here鈥檚 a bond there.鈥