Skip to main content

Tag along on French skier Candide Thovex’s quest to ski the world

Candide Thovex - quattro 2
Much to the dismay of skiers everywhere, the American West is having one of the driest winters in the past 60 years. Parts of ski-happy Colorado have seen very little powder so far, which has made it difficult to enjoy any significant time on the slopes. But as you’ll see in the video above, you really don’t need snow anyway. All you truly need is a good set of skis and a slope to slide down.
Recommended Videos

The four-minute clip features pro skier Candide Thovex, who partnered with Audi in a quest to ski the world, regardless of whether or not there was snow to be found there. Thovex’s journey took him across Europe, Asia, and America where he skied down grassy alpine slopes, through deserts and jungles, and even on rivers and oceans, where he discovered a completely new type of water-skiing.

Learning to surf across water while wearing skis wasn’t the only new surface that the French freerider had to master. He also took on stone, grass, volcanic ash, and even dirt. He also shredded his way past massive statues, jumped roads and huts, and even skied down the Great Wall of China, all while dressed in appropriate ski garb, even though the weather conditions really didn’t require it.

Its all in a days work for the the 35-year-old Thovex, who has been skiing in the French Alps since he was two. At 14 he won the moguls division at the French National Junior Championship, which propelled him to career as a professional freeskier. Over the course of his career he competed in dozens of events and even become the freeride world champion in both 2009 and 2010, before embarking on a second career as a ski filmmaker.

This video was created in conjunction with Audi to promote the Quattro Q7, a vehicle that much like Thovex is designed to perform well just about anywhere. The clip even ends with the tagline “all conditions are perfect conditions,” which not only seems to hold true for the skier but is also an indication of how the car performs on a variety of different terrains and surfaces too.

To find out more about the Ski the World project, visit Audi’s website.

Kraig Becker
Kraig Becker is a freelance outdoor writer who loves to hike, camp, mountain bike, trail run, paddle, or just about any other…
Goodbye, coolers. The EcoFlow Glacier doesn’t need ice — it makes it
The EcoFlow Glacier is a fridge shaped like a cooler with its own battery,

Every cooler operates on borrowed time. It leaves for your camping trip brimming over with crisp produce and ice-encrusted beer that looks straight out of a Super Bowl commercial, and returns with a soggy block of foil-wrapped cheddar cheese floating in a pool of mustard water. Mother Nature always wins.

Perhaps that’s why I was so enamored when I saw the EcoFlow Glacier at CES 2023. Less a cooler than a mobile battery-powered fridge on wheels, the sleek electric Glacier not only obviated the need for ice, it would make ice for me in 18 minutes. My home fridge can’t even do that, and I didn’t even know I wanted it to until just now. When EcoFlow offered to let me try the Glacier, I envisioned sipping a perspiring glass of whiskey in the tropics and accepted the occupational hazards of my job.

Read more
I was wrong. E-bikes are so practical, they’re a transit cheat code
An Aventon Level 2 ebike sits outside a grocery store.

Confession: Despite loving both bikes and gadgets, e-bikes never excited me. Compared to my bicycle, e-bikes seemed unfair. Compared to my motorcycle, they seemed slow. Compared to my car, they seemed impractical.

But with $1,500 federal e-bike rebates potentially on the horizon at part of E-Bike Act, I decided it was past time to reconsider. Not just because 30% off would make them way more accessible, but because the entire idea that e-bikes could be worthy of a rebate changed the way I looked at them: less as toys, more as transit. Had I written off an entire way of getting around because I was looking at it the wrong way?

Read more
Upway launches one of the best marketplaces for certified e-bikes, new or not
Man holding ebike from Upway in a field, lifestyle image.

This content was produced in partnership with Upway.
It wasn't too long ago that e-bikes were a rare sight, but all of that has changed, and rightfully so. Electric bikes are all over the road these days, and there are many brands either venturing into the technology, to launch their own versions of the sustainable transportation option or reiterating existing and traditional designs. From Aventon to Schwinn, or RadPower to Momentum, with so many opportunities, the prevailing question is, where do you go to find the best deals and the best information about these brands and their e-bike models? The answer is Upway, the number one certified electric bike provider and an official partner to many of the aforementioned brands.

What is Upway, exactly? It's a marketplace, specializing in e-bikes, featuring an inventory that's sourced from some of the best brands in the world. There are American brands -- like Specialized, Cannondale, and RadPower -- and European brands -- like Riese, Muller, and VanMoof. The best part is the discounts, offering up to 60% off retail, for a plethora of brands. Upway is on a mission to make sustainable mobility affordable for everyone. It's also one of the best places to go for a new or pre-owned e-bike, and here's why:

Read more