 Welcome to Andorra, this is the face check for the Freeride World Tour in Ordino or Caliis, as you can see behind me, this here is the face, 15 metros. We're going to go talk to some of the riders and see what they think of the conditions, how they're going to pick their lines. And as you can see it's snowing so there might be some good conditions coming up. Let's go find out. But do you like the face? I mean it looks like it has a lot of features. In that aspect it's really good because there's so many options. So with a little bit of snow you can see a lot of different line choices. It's super easy to find good take-off for tricks and stuff. Not as good to find technical skiing because it's basically on transportation. Yeah, it looks like there's just like these islands of features. How do you sort of assess and pick your line? I like to inspect the whole venue and look at like all the different features you could hit. So then we show up here tomorrow if like one side of the venue gets really good snow and the other one gets scoured by the wind. You know what to do and you don't have to make up a plan on the fly so trying to keep like all your options open so you can look where the good snow is and ski it and not go where the bad snow is hopefully. You come here and look at the face and do you like choose your line stood here or do you like just sort of assess the face and then you go down and sort of do your homework? Definitely more of an assess-to-homework situation. Especially here because the drone, the shots that we've got like photos of the face and stuff are a lot better than what we can actually see right now. So you've got drone photos to check out the aerials? Yeah, so we know what has take-offs and what's just a rock wall. There's so many like little features everywhere but I think the trick here a bit is to find your line. Sometimes you get some big venues but it's actually quite easy to find a line now. There's so many places where you can go. So we've got two starts for the venue. What altitude are we at here? So the first out which is really at the top over there at the top of the crew are it's 25 under at 70 metres and the one which is slightly lower which will give access all to the skis left of the venue is 40 metres right below. So the face is about 300 vertical drop. So we talked to Jess up the mountain and she said that she's going to come down and do her homework so we're going to go find out what she's looking at and see how she chooses her line for tomorrow. I've basically just been trying to line up photos that they've given us of the venue and line them up with the drone photos as well. So it kind of gives you more of a point of view situation so you can understand where you're going. So I try and build a line on the main big photos first. Once I've looked at everything nice and closely about possible years try and build a line on the main face and then go to the drone photos or flip it around and kind of imagine myself skiing down it. Because like you can look at it now but it's completely no use to you unless you've visualised yourself skiing it. So you're building, you're like doing a 3D model in your head from all these images and then visualise you around and then it's go time. And then it's go time. Any pre-comp traditions? Not really I just have to make sure that my harmonica and my poker chip and my evil eye are in my bag. Yeah, they go with me everywhere. We're at the base of the mountain today and we can't actually get up to the venue. There's been an estimated 30 to 40 centimetres fallen. We've had a lot of wind so that means that the face, the King Te Metros is going to be filled in nicely which means even better conditions for athletes to perform in. If we can get a break in the clouds tomorrow the competition is confirmed and with all this fresh snow it should be a good show. Keep our fingers crossed and hope for less wind.