Glide through rugged and wild Alaska in this film from the National Geographic Short Film Showcase.

Ice Skate Through Frozen Wilderness in This Hypnotic Video

Filmmakers capture the incredible beauty of backcountry ice skating in remote Alaska.

ByChristine Bednarz
December 13, 2017
3 min read

Tunneling through ice caves like bubble wrap, twirling with only mountains as spectators, and cutting past calving glaciers on hockey skates with adventurous pups trailing behind, backcountry ice skaters in Alaska follow no particular formula. Their common goal to carve through off-the-grid, frozen wilderness requires a hunt for natural ice on rivers, lakes, and glacial lagoons. Yet few people even know this adventurous activity exists. 

To elevate the sport, filmmakers Cale Green and Paxson Woelber traveled around southern Alaska over two winters to capture their stunning short film, “Wild Ice.” Drone footage puts humans to scale against the vastness of some of Alaska’s most spectacular natural wonders, like zigzag-shaped Kenai Lake, accessible Sheridan Glacier, and the dramatic shorelines of Turnagain Arm.

“Backcountry skating can be unbelievably surreal: You can find yourself cruising at 15 miles per hour over beds of water flowers that look like they're encased in glass, or speeding past the face of a glacier or between icebergs. But very few people are even aware of the sport, even within Alaska,” says Paxson Woebler.

Perhaps the specificity of the season—after temperatures drop beyond comfortable hiking but before snow accumulation allows skiing—keeps the sport under the radar. But as Woebler explains, that’s part of the appeal: “Many folks, myself included, took up backcountry skating as a way to get outside during this season, and then discovered it's just amazingly fun and a great workout in its own right. I love the combination of adventure (never knowing what you'll find), speed, athletics, and spectacular scenery.”

Braving the Alaskan Winter? Give Backcountry Ice Skating a Go:

Always follow the locals’ lead, using the daily intel from groups like Nordic Skate-South Central. As Jim Gonski, who runs Alaska Kayaking Academy, puts it: “One really needs to be obtaining current beta almost every day. Think of it like backcountry skiing. Safety depends on the last snowstorm. One day [things are] great, one day there’s a high avalanche warning. Generally late-October and November are the window. If it gets cold and no snow, [there] can be some great ice for hours and hours. One just never knows from year to year or even week to week.” Never venture out alone.

a man in an ice cave in Alberta, Canada
a sailboat in Svalbard, Norway
snowboarders on top of a snowy mountain in Alaska
a man exploring an ice cave in Iceland
a couple getting married on a glacier
skier climbing a slope in Colorado
man standing on the edge of a glacier in Alaska
a man in a drysuit swimming in glacial waters
a man jumping across a cave in Iceland
man jumping into a glacial pool
a man standing in a cave in Alberta, Canada
a man standing on the Greenland Ice Sheet
person standing in an ice cave in Iceland
a man on a stand up paddle board in Alaska
an ice climber in Alberta, Canada
an ice climber in the Slovakian High Tatras
leopard seal approaching a camera man
an ice skater on a frozen lake in Alberta, Canada
a man ice climbing on an iceberg
an ice climber near Juneau, Alaska
1 of 21
A hiker treks down an icy slope outside an ice cave on the Athabasca Glacier inside Jasper National Park in Alberta, Canada.
Photograph by Nature's Beauty, Aurora

The New Nat Geo Kids Book Bundle

Get 10 issues +6 books curated for ages 6-8