The Top All-Mountain Skis of All Time: Part II
This article completes the list of “iconic all-mountain” skis published last week.

One reader comment on last week’s list stated that better options are available today. In the interest of clarification, skis listed last week and in this article weren’t necessarily the most innovative or game changing. But, at the time they were introduced, they were the best at handling all conditions.
Völkl Mantra
One could make a strong case that the Völkl Mantra served as the primary prototype for the modern all-mountain ski genre. Like the Snow Ranger preceding it, the Mantra pulled no punches when it came to integrating first class construction into a modern shape. Any ski with decent surface area will work in powder, but it takes a stout ski to subdue crud. The Mantra, in all its incarnations, has been pulverizing crud since its inception.
Kästle MX83
Dimensionally, the MX83 falls just outside the current definition of an all-mountain shape, but temperamentally it’s predisposed to dominate in any condition. Rather than float over fluffy pow, the MX83 rips it out by the roots, tearing through whatever lies in its path. What makes it deliriously well suited to off-trail skiing is its unique ability to flow over irregular terrain as if it were made of mercury.
Atomic Nomad Crimson Ti
The Nomad series focused on Frontside performance, but top of the line Crimson Ti, had the moxie to travel anywhere with aplomb. The only system ski among our dandy dozen, the original Crimson Ti was so stable at speed it inspired the confidence to roam all over the mountain, where it revealed a capacity for decimating crud with the same power it applied to carving up the groom.
Nordica Hell & Back
Many skiers are under the illusion that it takes a slab or two of Titanal to make a strong, powerful ski. Nordica laid that notion to rest when it concocted the Hell & Back, an all-glass construction with the grip of Gorilla glue. A fall-line charger without fear, the Hell & Back had a big brother, the Patron, which set the benchmark for powder performance for several seasons.
Rossignol Soul 7
Strictly speaking, the Soul 7 was a tad too wide to make our list, but one can’t overlook top-of-the-heap sales success. A follow-up to the already popular S7, the Soul 7 hit the sweet spot on a slew of trends: lightweight construction, tapered tips and tails, and eye-catching cosmetics. But the key to its powder performance lay in an Old School property: rebound of the kind that coined the term, “porpoising,” describing the way the Soul 7’s coiled power lifted the skier up after every turn.
Blizzard Bonafide
I’d skied 1,000’s of models before I first stepped into a pair of Bonafides. All it took was one run and I was in love. As with any true love, all other contenders for my affections faded into the background for the Bonafide demonstrated that it could do anything at any time in any condition. I hear the quibbles that it requires speed and expert technique to extract its charms but dismiss them as hollow carping. As this list makes clear, when has it not been true that better skis reward better skiing?
Postscript: This highly unscientific exercise isn’t meant to identify the very best skis, nor the most popular and not necessarily the most innovative or influential. The common thread is that they epitomized versatility in their respective eras.
However you feel about these selections, I invite you to chime in on the Realskiers.com Facebook page, home of the discerning diatribe.
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For Senior Skiers, Online is Just Fine
Like generations of more recent vintage, SeniorsSkiing.com readers are comfortable making online purchases.
Nintey-five percent of the respondents to the most recent SeniorsSkiing.com reader survey reported they were “satisfied” with purchasing lift tickets online from ski areas and from ticket aggregators like Liftopia.
And more than half of the respondents reported that they’re likely to purchase ski apparel, such as parkas, on line.
The survey was the fourth that SeniorsSkiing.com has conducted with its growing base of reader/subscribers. Similar to earlier surveys, 27% of SeniorsSkiing.com readers responded.
The average age of respondents is 67, which is consistent with the last time that question was asked in 2015. The gender balance shifted from earlier surveys. In 2016, it was 60/40 male/female. The most recent result shows the ratio closer to 70/30.
When asked how much they expected to be on the snow this season, almost 42% reported more than 15 days. Of that, more than 25% expected to be on snow 25 or more days.
Seventy-one percent are between the ages of 60 and 74. Slightly more than 13% are in the 75 to over 90 range.
About sixty-six percent intend to make hotel/lodge/Airbnb/VRBO purchases next season. The next most popular purchase will be season passes (individual area and multiple area). Those purchases are followed, in order, by layering garments, pants, goggles, socks, gloves, and helmets.
When purchasing ski jackets, 82 percent spend up to $400. Almost 90% purchase ski apparel pre-season, end-of-season, or off-season. Surprisingly few purchase during the season.
Do any of these stats come as a surprise? Please drop us a line to let us know.
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