From Snowboarder Magazine’s The 20 most Influential Riders

    As the only active shred magazine staff writer on this list, Peter’s influence can be felt each month like an enlarged prostate, in his colon.

    In all seriousness, and Ricky Melnik stories aside, before Peter Line ever put pen to page, he was putting his mark on snowboarding. Zigging and zagging through Zigzag Canyon in front of Mack Dawg’s cameras, the Washington native appeared out of nowhere as a mild-mannered and quirky snowboarding savant, and though he wasn’t old enough to drink yet, Pete had no trouble uncorking and unleashing. When The Hard, the Hungry, and the Homeless hit the shelves, all the established guard could do was drink it all in. “The old school was just straight scared,” declares Mikey LeBlanc. “Peter came out with a video part in the mid-nineties that caught a lot of attention,” adds two-time world big air champion Tina Basich. “He was pulling some new moves with new variations that kicked off a new direction [for] freestyle jumps in the backcountry.”

  Peter’s life was quickly turned upside down, and the Transworld video magazine film crews captured it all. Though no one believed he was raised by chipmunks, there was no denying that the tricks he had squirreled away were nuts. How cool is Peter Line? Cool enough to make an entire industry believe that not only could a pink snowboard covered in rainbows sell, but that it was macho. “He’s an innovator and an artist,” observes Texas transplant and former goofy-footer Travis Parker. “He painted the air with his passion for progression.”

  Perhaps the most telling gauge of Peter’s impact are the achievements of those he mentored, as three other riders on this list were hand-picked by Line to represent Forum, the brand he founded. Simple Pleasures, Technical Difficulties, Decade, The Resistance, True Life, and a flood of team videos followed. Original Forum 8 member JP Walker has been along for the whole ride, saying, “The kid is sick. You can credit him with inventing tricks like backside corkscrews and backside rodeos. [And he’s had] lots of contest wins over the years, from the X Games to random quarterpipe contests. He came into the game with a style all his own and did his thing. [Just a] weird, scrawny kid flipping and hucking down the mountain... Oh yeah, and stomping.”

a site by peter line

Peter Witmer Line

DOB: 8/3/1974

Home Town: Seattle, Wa.

Home Mountain: Ski Acres, WA
Stance: Goofy

Sponsors: Forum, Foursquare, Electric Visual, Vestal Watch, C1rca Footwear


What are the skills and responsibilities of being a snowboarder?
The skills are of course to be a good snowboarder, but to also bring something new to the sport. It’s a responsibility to do this and work for it.

What makes you want to progress?
Boredom, it’s boring for me to do the same jumps all day, everyday. I need variety and to try new tricks off weird obstacles.

How would you spend your ideal day?
It would involve snowboarding, doing something creative for a bit, drinking some wine and hanging out with girlfriend and my dog, those days are pretty perfect.

What do you think is the most fun thing to do for yourself?
Trying to top the last fun thing I did, or just the opposite and doing the least amount of anything.

What would you list as a career highlight?
The Air and Style contest, traveling to crazy places, the proud feeling of putting together a good video part

Were there any notable trips in filming for Forum or Against’em?
The Quebec trip stood out for me. I had just gotten the ok from my doctor that I could ride again (broken foot) and flew out there the next morning, and ended up getting 4 or 5 shots in 3 days. I learned I really like riding that urban stuff too.

In what kind of snowboard environment are you most comfortable?
Soft snow, but not too deep, weird and odd transitions everywhere. Stuff to pop off of and bonk with steep landings.

If you weren’t snowboarding, you would be?
Lazier

What, if anything, is too serious to be joked about?
A Prince Albert on a Forum Team Manager.

What was the last thing you regret buying?
Land in Arizona

Where do you see yourself when you are 55 years old?
In a wheelchair getting pushed around by a hot nurse.