 sliding door. Undisclosed location. The secret stash, baby. Out here in the most Vermont place I've seen in a long time. How you doing? How's it going? I mean, I can't do much, but I'm just stoked to take a tour on the Rope Toes and just have fun and see it all. This place is so sick. Completely off the grid, they got their solar panels where they're getting all their power from. Nothing runs off propane, so they're consistently cutting wood and bringing it inside and really, like, getting that done. Do a backflip! He's got a ski jump for the kiddos. He's got a pump track over there, solar panels, power and everything. His own sugar house to make maple syrup. It's a pretty beautiful thing. It's like my favorite conditions and that park is so flowy and fun. So, yeah. It was still so sick just to get to ride that. I got the biggest smile on my face. Do a few board slides. Do a few fifties, you know. So it's dope. Super soft. Yeah, we just finished up. I got to ride a little bit. Hit some rails. Hell yeah. Pretty sick showing everyone the home map. I loved it. This is a good time. Oh, yeah. Now we have to suicide six. Woo! Just got done. Looking real dope up there. I can't wait to shred. Mountain's been around for over 75 years. It's taught a lot of people not only how to ski, but starting in the early 80s, 82, we introduced snowboarding to the mountain here. And this was the first mountain that held a national championship for snowboarding. Wow! So this is a 1934 pickup truck, a man named Bunny Berndrum. We finished up the first rope tow. You can see inside the area, giant rope, you had to grab a hold of it with both hands and then it would yank your shoulder sockets out as it whipped you up the hill. This was the predecessor to rope tows around the U.S. I tried to warn him. Was it everything I said it was?