Ski Touring (Backcountry Skiing)
Ascend mountains on skis using climbing skins, then descend untracked powder slopes in remote terrain.
Ski touring (or backcountry skiing) combines uphill travel using removable climbing skins with downhill skiing through unmarked terrain. Access remote high-altitude peaks and pristine powder impossible from resort runs. Requires avalanche awareness, navigation, and physical fitness. Growing sport with dedicated communities worldwide; popular in Alps, Rockies, and Scandinavia. Multi-day ski touring expeditions possible with hut-to-hut routes.
How to start
- 1Take an avalanche awareness course (Level 1 or Avalanche Safety Fundamentals)
- 2Learn ski touring technique on groomed slopes with climbing skins
- 3Join a ski touring club to find experienced partners for first outings
- 4Start on lower-angle, low-avalanche-risk terrain near ski resorts
- 5Progress to backcountry peaks with proper hazard assessment
What you'll need
- Ski touring skis and boots (lightweight)Essential~$800
- Climbing skins (22-25% grip)Essential~$100
- Avalanche safety kit (beacon, shovel, probe)Essential~$400
- Insulated touring polesNice to have~$80
- Winter mountaineering gear and layersEssential~$300
Where to learn more
Plot twists
Ways to spice this up when the basics get boring.
- Multi-day hut-to-hut ski touring expeditions
- Winter ski mountaineering on high peaks
- Ski touring photography in pristine backcountry
- Speed skiing records on famous ski touring routes
Constant environmental assessment (weather, snow conditions, terrain hazards) demands attention. The rhythm of climbing alternating with intense downhill focus creates engaging variety.
Ski touring gives access to untracked powder that resorts can't provide—descending a steep couloir in fresh deep powder while surrounded by mountains is considered one of skiing's ultimate experiences.