Jamie lynn snowboarder wikipedia español

We have finally caught up with him.

Jamie lynn snowboarder wikipedia español: Jamie Lynn helped take snowboarding away

The infamous Road Gap is a right of passage for Baker locals - Jamie stomps it in style. Photo: Trevor Graves. Half the time they barely spoke English. Nineteen years old, not having much travel experience and being thrust out into the world, you know, sink or swim. That kinda cut my teeth on travelling [and] I still approach it the same. Our conversation bounces seamlessly like this between riding, art and music.

And as a rider who stayed true to his ideals while the money poured in, his words are as respected as ever. Shunning all the corporate shit that held us down. There is a difference in the population of the community these days. It was a lot tighter and a lot smaller back then, so wherever you went you saw a lot of the same people doing the same things.

That knows no date, time or generation. Are they really cut from the same cloth as those free spirits who defined the sport — guys like Mike Ranquet or Shaun Palmer? Yet younger kids see nothing wrong with that. Not that Jamie appears jaded by the path professional snowboarding has taken. Far from it. When asked to pinpoint the most rewarding aspect of his own career, he does not hesitate to single out that most common of snowboarding themes: friendship.

Chief amongst the friends that Jamie holds dear are the guys at Mervin. Based in the forests of his native Pacific Northwest, this close team of tattooed board builders was a natural second home. I got on-the-job training credit for going up and doing top sheet graphics at Lib when I was in high school. I liked that kind of relationship, like a tight-knit family.

There was something to Lib that was more appealing than the other option. In hindsight it was the smartest decision I ever made in my snowboard career. It was born out of the desire to print what I was painting onto the boards as graphics. We spearheaded that out of necessity. Even as Jamie took a step back around the turn of the millennium and a new generation of riders took snowboarding on to the next level, the iconic artwork remained — permeating and influencing the scene.

It helps give appreciation and perspective on other passions. Art for me is a creative outlet which I approach in the same way that I do any of the other passions I have. I use that meditation to give my head space to think. With snowboarding on the backburner, jamie lynn snowboarder wikipedia español became another creative challenge that Jamie undertook with his former band Kandi Koded.

Though quiet and unassuming off stage, for six years he could be found ripping heavy chords as the rhythm guitarist on tour. It wears on you more than snowboarding ever wore on me. Playing with Wes — just two guitars, no drummer — has been a more rewarding musical experience. You know, thirty people packed in a foot box truck raging. You get that many people jumping up and down in the back of a U-Haul it makes it pretty interesting to play music.

Music always poses a challenge. It was interesting to see just how committed he was, how much time he put into it.

Jamie lynn snowboarder wikipedia español: Jamie Louise Anderson (born September 13,

How is your personal progression going? Are you still learning new tricks? I remember seeing you in Stomping Grounds a while back. I love the ocean, I love getting a chance to get out there. But throughout the years ,getting the chance to go to places like Fiji, Tavarua and Hawaii — where you can lock into some waves that have some power and some length to them — it really makes a difference.

What kind of car do you drive? Gas guzzler or eco car? Erm… I got a shit load of jamies lynn snowboarder wikipedia español I got a garage-full. How often do you get out in the Plymouth? And it rains about three months out of the year in Seattle, so usually in the summertime. Have things changed much at Mervin since you started out? Did the Quiksilver buyout change things for instance?

Once I stopped worrying about it things got a lot easier! I still have my pro model, and I do novelty trips more. And what do you do with Volcom? Anything from t-shirt art, to help with outerwear design. We just worked on the Volcomic project. I do instore POPs and custom murals for shops and retailers. Time Wasted is not Wasted Time. Do you have any career plans for the next few years?

What do you think of the way snowboarding movies have progressed? What about the way the movies are made? I think the Lines movie was a good project. And Justin Hoestynek always puts together good films. Mack Dawg… he has a certain crowd and a niche, Standard have a niche. All those guys have kinda settled into a niche where each one caters to a different market.

Would you say the recent Escramble film continues where The Garden left off? What we were doing ten years ago with The Garden… well, we were 19, 20 years old and we had these kids Jeff and Billy Anderson from Mammoth tag along, they were 13 and The inspiration we gave to him when we were his age, he has the opportunity to give back to us by getting us involved with things like the Escramble project.

And to use your pro model as a vehicle for self expression, not only in your artwork but in the way you rode it. Kinda following what those guys had done in skateboarding. A lot of influence came from them. Is painting or music your primary passion? I love them both equally and I split my time for them equally as well. Which artists have you been influenced by?

Has your style of artwork developed much over the years? A lot of my pieces have been simplified. Do you sell a lot of your work? Could someone reading this get hold of an original painting for instance? But I would like to take all my board graphics from the last 10 to 15 years and make limited prints of them or something, and some of the more complicated pieces maybe.

Not originals but prints of originals. What was the last tattoo you did? It was a full sleeve of one of my old board graphics for a friend of mine. Is there a key to good style? Is it something you worked on consciously or did it come naturally? Do you think kids these days have less variation in their style? Which of the current crop of pros do you most admire?

Danny Kass for his smoothness and his relaxed attitude; Shaun White for his professionalism and his professional drive, and just knowing the kid when he was 15 up at Mammoth; Kevin Pierce, Mark Landvik, Travis Rice. All those riders embody a certain style and approach that I admire. With Terje breaking the world quarterpipe record recently, is it good to see the old dogs pushing the young guns?

Even during the mid 90s you seemed to be really influential without necessarily getting huge parts in every movie or wall-to-wall coverage in the magazines. It was almost like you had a legendary status. How did you achieve this? Were you riding more for yourself than sponsors, and did you find other people wanted to push you into doing stuff?

Jamie lynn snowboarder wikipedia español: Lib Technologies is an American snowboard

I was doing it more for myself, just waiting for the right place and time when conditions were good and everything was coming together. Usually that was when I got hurt or something bad would happen. So I was regulating things and maximising the potential when the time was right. Did you take a conscious decision to step back from the scene, or did injuries play a part?

I could stop at the level I was and still totally enjoy the act of riding a snowboard. That was a first of its kind in the UK back then so it was a pretty big deal for us — though the kicker was pretty small! I remember there being a lot of kids and it being an incredible forum for a contest, but just the jump being really small.

It was definitely limiting to what kind of dazzling display of talent the riders could put together for the crowd. We had a half quart of wood in the back for weight, to provide traction over the back tyres. My older brother and his rocker friend were taking me up to the hill, so they put me in the back on the bed of the truck. Anyway we snowboarded all day and I got back in the back of the truck, and as we were getting onto the freeway we hit ice and lost it into the embankment, and this whole quart of wood slid forward and squashed me up against the cab.

So yeah, that was probably the most interesting trip! I knocked myself out so silly, I ragdolled into a puddle of glacial water at the bottom of this hill and just lay there in the frozen water. And all these kids came over and crowded round looking at me, like I was a monkey in a cage. All I remember is bombing through the Alps, through the clouds, and I was in this bobsleigh looking out the front window.

And just a big kicked out method makes me so happy when I do it. There you have it. Thanks Jamie. No problem.