From Snurfer Roots to Shaped Boards
In 1965, Sherman Poppen lashed two skis together to entertain his kids, unknowingly launching snowboarding’s first chapter. Those binding-free snurfers taught balance, improvisation, and pure joy. If you ever slid a plastic sled down a crusty hill, you know that feeling—freedom first, tech later. Tell us your earliest sliding memory and what it taught you about balance.
From Snurfer Roots to Shaped Boards
By the late 1970s and 1980s, pioneers like Burton and Sims added steel edges, real sidecut, and grippy base materials. Suddenly, snowboards bit into ice and traced arcs instead of skids. Directional shapes made powder days magical, while twin tips welcomed switch experiments. Which shape unlocked your progression—directional, true twin, or something delightfully weird?