
Finding Design Inspiration in Japan’s Snow Surfing Culture
MSR Team
Words by Die Go, DIGGIN' MAGAZINE
Translation by Domi Churiki, GENTEMSTICK
During the development of our new Paragon snowshoe binding, we visited Japan to explore its snow surfing culture. More than a sport, snow surfing is a mindset. Snow surfers believe in using the natural topography of the mountain to create a fluid and artistic ride. In much the same way, our Paragon snowshoe binding uses the natural curves of your boot to provide maximum security without pressure points. This seamless connection to your gear keeps you focused on your surroundings. It’s a pure experience, just like snow surfing. Here’s a look at the roots of snow surfing in Japan.
MOSS founder, Shinzo Tanuma, was a surfboard builder and he made his snowsticks out of fiberglass, with a pointy nose and a channeled V-bottom. Those boards had binding systems to accommodate ski boots, which allowed the riders to do full-rail carving maneuvers on snow. MOSS called this sport “snow surfing” and helped establish the Japan Snowsurfing Association, which organized slalom events called the Snowsurfing Grand-Prix. Until the Japan Snowsurfing Association became assimilated into the Japan Snowboarding Association in 1987, snowsurfing and snowboarding had their own distinct identities in Japan.

What is snow surfing?
Many think of snow surfing as an aesthetic approach, using surfboard-like equipment and maneuvers to mimic surfing on snow. Of course, that is an aspect of this culture. However, I think the essence lies far more in the mentality of the rider’s approach to the natural environment. Even in Japan, the cutting edge of snow surfing, there is no concrete definition of the sport. Instead, we see it take shape in a type of culture and ideology. Here in Niseko, surfers constantly read the winds, visualizing the waves and bathymetry and driving across the island to find a specific surf break in pumping conditions. Their priority is to be at the right place at the right time for the right mix of conditions that can only be found several times a year or even less. This attitude carries over into winter. Observing the weather, reading the winds, the snowfall and the snowpack, they spend all their energy to stand atop a slope that provides the perfect conditions. They glide down in a way that fits into the beautiful contours of the natural terrain, mimicking the way water might naturally flow. The wave or snow of a lifetime can only be identified by carefully observing nature. It is for this reason that snowsurfers stay modest in the face of the natural world. Taro Tamai, snow surfing’s standard-bearer, portrays this relationship as “being in harmony with nature.”How snow surfing began in Japan
I think don’t many would object to the statement that Taro Tamai, GENTEMSTICK founder, is the father of the Japanese Snow Surf culture. The journey started four decades ago when Taro, already a keen surfer, made first contact with a snowboard. Snowboard-like crafts started to make an appearance in the world in the 1970s. Just like the North American brands such as WINTERSTICK, BURTON and SIMS, there was a brand in Japan, testing out various boards and preparing for launch. After its first test ride in 1971, MOSS (currently MOSS SNOWSTICK) launched as a brand in 1979, a time when the first sprouts of snowboarding around the world were yet to be uniformly known as “snowboarding.”
