国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Skier Noah Dines takes a selfie with snow covered peaks in the background
(Photo: Noah Dines)

What Does It Take to Ski 3 Million Vertical Feet? We Asked Noah Dines.

Three continents, a dozen of sets of ski skins, and a lot of candy鈥攚e asked the new record holder for vertical feet skied in a year for the keys to his success

Published: 
Image
(Photo: Noah Dines)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

When skier Noah Dines answered my phone call in late November, he was skinning up a 400-vertical foot stretch of artificial snow at Waterville Valley Resort in central New Hampshire. Anyone who skis uphill at a resort knows the activity is pretty uninspiring, akin to running on a treadmill, but Dines didn’t care鈥攈e was chasing a record. If you caught up with the 30-year-old athlete at any particular moment during daylight hours in 2024, the odds were pretty good . Setting聽a new record for the most human-powered vertical feet of skiing done in a single year, which Dines had achieved with the 3 million vertical feet (and counting) he鈥檚 logged since January 1, takes a lot of time.

The record had actually been Dines鈥 for weeks now鈥攈e surpassed Aaron Rice鈥檚 2016 record of 2.5 million vertical feet late this summer, and hit his own goal of 3 million on October 24, in Farellones, Chile. Every cold, wet lap that November day in New Hampshire was just extra credit.

鈥淚 wanted to see what it feels like to try really hard, to be totally invested in one thing,鈥 said Dines, adding, 鈥淚鈥檒l probably do a little bit more today, and then walk down the mountain. They offered to upload and download me [on the chairlift], but I said no thanks.鈥

Technically, Dines didn鈥檛 have to hoof it the extra 600 feet from snowline to the resort鈥檚 base鈥攁voiding surface lifts wasn鈥檛 one of the initial self-imposed strictures聽for his 2024 ski season goal, but it became a point of pride.

鈥淚 just love skiing,鈥 said Dines. 鈥淭o do this sort of thing you鈥檝e got to love skiing on a day-to-day basis, and on a grand scale. And I love that day in, day out grind. I love it more now than when I started.鈥

Prior to the season, Dines calculated that he鈥檇 need to ski approximately 9,000 feet per day for 330 days, or around 125,000 feet per month, to hit his goal. He blew past that pace in January, skiing 378,000 feet, and continued to log monster months. He took the year off from working as a tutor in Stowe, Vermont, to ski full-time.

Skiing 3 million vertical feet in one year requires more than free time and an extreme love of the sport. I caught up with Dines to talk about logistics and gear, and to ask about his favorite place to ski.

Location, Location, Location

Dines spent the year globetrotting in search of adequate snow coverage. He skied across the United States, and also in Europe and South America. He started the project at his home mountains in Vermont in January before jetting off to France and Austria in February and March to ski聽in the Alps.

鈥淚 liked the ski culture there a lot, but the skiing itself wasn鈥檛 the best,鈥 he said. Dines drank plenty of espressos in mid-mountain chalets while escaping rain and fog.

In May, Dines returned stateside to ski in Colorado and Utah, earning his turns at Winter Park Resort and Alta after they closed for the season. He eked out the last of the spring鈥檚 vert on Mount Hood鈥檚 Palmer Glacier in Oregon, before flying to Santiago, Chile and the southern hemisphere winter.

鈥淚鈥檒l probably drive back to Stowe tonight,鈥 said Dines when we spoke in November. He鈥檒l spend the rest of 2024 where he began it, lapping the New England mountains around his home. 鈥淚t鈥檒l be great to see friends again, but it was so cool getting to go to so many places for the first time this year, too.鈥

What Kind of Gear Does it Take to Ski 3 Million Vertical Feet?

Skis

Dines drew from a two-ski quiver, with snow conditions dictating which pair he’d use. His lightest option, the 690-gram , are designed for competitive ski mountaineering racing, and feature a narrow shape meant for skiing quickly on firm, groomed snow. When Dines needed more floatation on ungroomed snow, he used the wider聽, which tip the scales at 1240 grams. Dines said the two pairs of fairly narrow skis would have been perfect for all the terrain he encountered the entire year, save for a two-week stretch in Chile when he encountered deep powder.

Bindings

, 鈥渨hich I just love,鈥 said Dines. The model is a burly ski mountaineering racing binding that’s frill-free, lightweight, and highly reliable.

Boots

The , a lightweight touring boot, was Dines鈥 footwear of choice. 鈥淚鈥檓 in my third pair of shells this year, which is pretty incredible for the amount of skiing that I do,鈥 he said.

Skins

鈥淚鈥檝e probably worn through around a dozen pairs of skins this year,鈥 said Dines, who just used 鈥渨hatever was on hand鈥 wherever he was traveling. He always brought a spare set in his pack in case his primary pair broke or became too soaked to work effectively.

In the Pack

Preferring to travel light, Dines minimized his time in avalanche terrain, since he usually skied alone. But he still packed a shovel, beacon, and probe when conditions called for it. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 doing laps somewhere in-bounds or not in avy聽terrain, I leave my pack at the bottom,鈥 said Dines. 鈥淚鈥檓 not carrying water with me, and only rarely an extra layer. I鈥檒l bring a second pair of skins, and a spare pair of gloves, because wet gloves can be such a day-ruiner. And then you鈥檝e always got to have carbs on hand.鈥

What About Nutrition?

Dines didn鈥檛 obsess over calorie counting. When I asked him about his daily caloric intake, he said, 鈥淢y watch usually spits out 5,000 to 7,000 so I鈥檇 imagine somewhere in that range.鈥 But he believes his nutritional approach helped him surpass the previous record, held by Aaron Rice, who struggled to recover from each effort as the year wore on.

鈥淲e know a lot more about sports nutrition than we did a few years ago,鈥 said Dines, who looked to professional cyclists鈥 fueling regimens to shape his own carb-heavy diet. 鈥淲hen I鈥檓 on the hill, it鈥檚 just carbs, and afterwards it鈥檚 mostly carbs, too.鈥

鈥淐arbs, carbs, carbs. So many carbs.鈥 he added. 鈥淭here were times when I didn鈥檛 want to keep eating but knew I needed to eat more鈥擨 would just be so sick of chewing.鈥

Dines didn鈥檛 have a go-to meal or snack, instead eating the local fare鈥攚hich included lots of bread, butter, and pastries in Europe, meat in Chile, and plenty of candy wherever he went.

How Do You Train for World-Record Fitness?

Preparation

Dines is a lifelong runner and cyclist, and he believes his cross-training helped prepare his body for the massive yearlong effort on skis. 鈥淢y background is as an endurance athlete, so I didn鈥檛 do anything special to prepare physically for this year,鈥 said Dines. He climbed a combined million vertical feet across skiing, cycling, and running in both 2022 and 2023.

Recovery

Dines said his approach to rest is simple鈥攈e gets off his feet. 鈥淚 don’t have any cold baths, no massage gun, nothing crazy. But just plain old resting is really important to me,鈥 said Dines. 鈥淎nd not fake rest, like hanging out with friends and going out to eat. That’s not rest, that’s almost rest. But just sitting with my legs up. Like, I want my watch to think I was asleep鈥攚hen my watch tells me I took a nap even though I didn鈥檛, that鈥檚 high praise.鈥

How Did Dines Stave Off Boredom During the Challenge?

鈥淚 sort of have a hierarchy,鈥 said Dines when I asked how he occupied himself during the hours on the slope. 鈥淔riend vert is free vert鈥攕kiing聽with somebody is best, because then it鈥檚 just hanging out.鈥 By his estimate, friends accompanied him for approximately 5 percent of his skiing this year. 鈥淎fter that, the next best thing is talking on the phone. My grandparents have gotten a lot of Noah time this year, because they鈥檙e pretty available. Friends back home, friends I haven鈥檛 talked to in five years.鈥

Dines also listened to podcasts and music on shuffle. He dictated text messages and scrolled social media. And oftentimes, Dines simply soaked in the scenery and the sounds of the mountains.

How the Hell Does Anyone Afford to Do this?

Dines covered his expenses for the year with a mix of sponsorships, GoFundMe donations, and personal savings.

Advice for Future Record-Seekers

Anyone wanting to take on the yearlong vert challenge can start by picking up the phone. 鈥淢y main advice to someone trying to break my record is to call me,鈥 said Dines. 鈥淕reg Hill, who skied 2 million feet聽in 2010, and Aaron Rice have both offered me so much help and support. I plan to do the same for whoever wants to try next.鈥

Lead Photo: Noah Dines

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online