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Scot Schmidt grew up in Montana and started his ski career working in a repair shop at Squaw Valley. Soon he established a reputation for laying bold new routes down the treacherous rocky chutes of the Palisades with a style that was new and exciting. Agile and catlike, Schmidt took to the air and seem to hang motionless before dropping into the jaws of death. He stunned the locals with his exhibitions of courage and skill. Word of Schmidt's feats quickly spread throughout the Valley and soon photographers were following his every move. On one occasion, while being filmed by a Warren Miller crew, Scot decided that instead of skiing down the West Face, as planned, he'd take a hard right, and leap over the enormous cliffs under the KT 22 chair. You can catch this unbelievable stunt in Warren Miller's film, Extreme Skiing. Scot still visit Squaw, but you find him more often windsurfing in Santa Cruz where he is building a new house for his family.

"When you're in the mountains you have to be totally there. You have to be all in one place, at one time, instead of having your mind scattered out in all these different directions."

"I've always been able to really find myself in the mountains, get in touch with who I am. It's such a pure environment without any distractions. You really become in the moment and you re not worried about the day to day things. For me, that s a good feeling."

"I don't like to get attached to what the future should become. I just let it happen. I never know if I ll have a job next winter. But I don't worry about it either. It always seems like there are plenty of opportunities."