You've begged, borrowed or rented up until now! It's time to bite the bullet and get your own gear. It's a complex and daunting task, so here's our guide to help you cross the Rubicon.
The first modern snowboard was created in the 1960s in Michigan, USA. Dubbed the 'snurfer', it sold about a million boards.
Other early pioneers were skateboarders and kids using their local and dry ski slopes throughout the seventies. One such 'snurfer' was Jake ‘Burton’ Carpenter from Vermont who in 1977 founded Burton Snowboards, made 'snowboards' out of flexible wooden planks, and went on to create the most famous snowboarding brand in the world.
The sport grew throughout the seventies and eighties, its core equipment consisting of a board with specialised bindings and boots. In the nineties it went mainstream, became recognised as an official international sport with its own federation, high-profile competitions were held worldwide creating sports stars like Terje Hakonsen, Shaun White and Travis Rice, and it became an Olympic event in 1998.
As snowboarding has evolved as a sport, the methods and materials used as well as the design of snowboards have changed. Now there is a huge amount of choice on offer when it comes to buying a snowboard from short, soft, detuned street rail boards to split boards for touring.

































