
Welcome to Living Legends, a new eight-part video series brought to you exclusively by Push.ca and Degree. The idea behind Living Legends is a simple one, we want to honor and document the careers of professional skateboarders and snowboarders that have a significant impact on their sports but remain in the game.
Over the coming months you can expect flurry of historical photos, footage, interviews and back-stories on every individual featured. A new episode of Living Legends drops every two weeks, so keep your eyes peeled for features on some of your all-time favorite pros. After our brief foray into skate territory with Barry Walsh, we're back on the shred with man-beast Kale Stephens.
(Can't see the video? Click here.)
Living Legends: Kale Stephens [by Pete Andersen]
A conundrum wrapped
up in an oxymoron and labeled a paradigm. That's Kale
Stephens. His aggressive riding style and ‘throw caution to the wind'
attitude tear through any contemporary idea of what snowboarding is all about. In
a day and age where smooth style defines a rider, Kale has earned respect from
the best in the business because he gets it done. The man has been rewriting
shredding since he first linked turns at age ten in Collingwood, Ontario. Now
33, the idea of retiring hasn't even crossed his mind.
Born in Newport
Beach, California, he and his mom moved to Collingwood when he was just two
years old. Living a stone's throw away from Blue Mountain he started
snowboarding at ten, made a name for himself in the u-ditch, outgrew Ontario
and moved to Whistler at 18. In 2006 he left the hustle and bustle of Whistler
to settle down in Squamish, just 45 minutes south of Whistler on highway 99. Living
the dream in the Garibaldi Highlands, Kale still gets on his board as often as
possible and oversees the Airhole empire that
he and fellow pro-shred Chris Brown masterminded four years ago. A Wildcats
alumni, Kale spearheaded the ‘sno-moboarding' movement that has overtaken the
snowboarding landscape. Always on the prowl for new terrain, imaginative lines
and ways to make photographers and filmers second guess his antics, Kale
continues to make onlookers cringe and turn away in dismay, until, of course,
he stomps something first try and rides straight to après.

Before we go on, and
just to put things in perspective: Kale tore his nose clean off his face
loading his snowmobile onto his truck with a make shift ramp. He then told the
doctors to wait while he conducted a photo shoot to ensure he documented the
situation properly.
We could go on for
days here...once everything is said and done Kale will go bigger, ride faster and
shralp burlier lines than pretty much anyone on the planet. Snowboarding as we
know it would be chalk full of rainbows and lollipops if it weren't for the
likes of Kale Stephens. He single-handedly progressed snowboarding as a whole
and showed us what's possible on a shred stick. We owe him a huge debt of
gratitude. Hats off too you Mr. Stephens, hats off.
We're five legends deep with three more to go. Review Dennis Bannock, Shin Campos, Martin Gallant and skater Barry Walsh. There will be a test. Or not.
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