Photo of Annabelle Santerre

Annabelle Santerre

Québec City, Canada / Park City, Utah | Active: 2019-present | Known for: slopestyle, freeride guiding, women’s ski community projects, Arctic ski expeditions | Current: DaleBoot athlete and Streetwentytwo host



London Rails Under A Railway Tunnel



White Grounds Skatepark sat under London’s railway brickwork with real snow packed against metal. The run-in was short, the crowd tight, and the rail feature rose out of a skatepark never built for skis. Annabelle Santerre was part of Peak Performance’s city session in November 2025, sharing the setup with Max Palm, Ella Hall, Paddy Graham and other invited riders.

The event worked as a clean snapshot of Santerre’s current place in skiing. She is not defined by a single competition table. Her public record moves through slopestyle, rail sessions, freeride coaching, Arctic travel, community events and media work. That mix makes her profile unusual: part skier, part guide, part event builder, part host.



Québec City Roots And The Mont-Sainte-Anne Radar



SBC Skier introduced Santerre through its Scouted series in 2019, placing her at twenty years old, from Québec City, and photographed at Mont-Sainte-Anne by Abby Cooper. The profile listed Nikita Clothing and D-Structure as sponsors, with “Baby Crutcher 270” named as her best trick. It also described her as a skier balancing competition, coaching and studies.

That early profile matters because it shows the foundation before the later Park City and international event work. Santerre was already building around more than personal clips. She spoke about encouraging female skiers, hosting events around Québec City, and riding with a style built around creativity and flow rather than only amplitude. Le Relais, near Québec City, became part of that first public record through the Girls Only Jam she helped organize.



Le Relais And The First Community Blueprint



The Girls Only Jam at Le Relais was not a side note in Santerre’s early story. In the SBC interview, she said the event brought more than thirty girls together to ride park and that she wanted it to become a tradition. That detail gives her profile a clearer shape: skiing as participation, not just performance.

Her comments from that period also showed a skier thinking about how park culture feels from the inside. She pointed toward creativity, grab variation and style, naming Giorgia Bertoncini, Jennie-Lee Burmansson and Max Moffat as examples of skiers whose individuality mattered. That frame still fits her later work, where rail sessions, women’s events and podcast conversations carry as much weight as contest starts.



The ACL Season That Shifted The Work



Santerre’s 2019 interview also documented a left-knee ACL surgery. She described that season as a return to her previous riding level, with the injury pushing her toward more style work, coaching and event organization. In freeskiing, an ACL comeback often changes how a skier reads takeoffs, landings and training time.

For Santerre, the public record after that point does not show a narrow contest comeback. It shows expansion. Coaching, guiding, travel and media gradually became part of the same ski identity. That path is practical in modern freeskiing, where athletes outside the World Cup system often build careers through hosting, filming, coaching, brand events, clinics and independent travel.



From Québec Parks To Arctic Ski Travel



DaleBoot’s athlete page lists Santerre as based in Park City, Utah, with Québec City as her hometown. The same profile identifies her with three Arctic ski expeditions, freeride guiding and slopestyle skiing. That is a wider terrain map than a standard park skier’s biography, and it gives her article a north-south contrast: Québec park roots, Utah rail access and polar travel.

The Arctic thread also appears outside skiing media through her public portfolio and photography presence, where expedition imagery and outdoor travel sit beside ski-related work. For a freestyle skier, that matters technically. Freeride guiding and Arctic movement demand terrain reading, snowpack awareness, layering systems, route decisions and patience. Those are different skills from a slopestyle line, where rails, kickers, switch takeoffs and controlled landings happen inside a designed course.



Mammothheimer And The Two Planker Connection



Santerre appears in Mammothheimer 2023, a TwoPlankerPod video published on Newschoolers in July 2023. The rider list included Matt Donahoe, Twan, Ryan Barrick, Nikolay Dobrianov, Monty Wright, Andrew Branch, Annabelle Santerre, David Kolbrener, Luke O’Brien, Charlie Raczkowski, Aaron Durlester and David Mackens, with Ethan Shafer credited for filming and editing.

The tags around that video were simple: jumps, rails, edits, park and Mammoth. For Santerre, the credit places her in the North American park-video network rather than only in coaching or guiding spaces. It also connects neatly to Streetwentytwo, where she later hosted Ethan Shafer on an episode about Two Planker Podcast and the growth of ski media around creators, athletes and filmers.



Streetwentytwo Behind The Microphone



Streetwentytwo Podcast is listed by Apple Podcasts as a sports show about extreme sports through athletes, creators and filmers, produced by Streetwentytwo and hosted by Annabelle Santerre. The episode archive includes conversations with Alicia Cenci of the Freeride World Tour, Rosina Friedel for a women’s park-and-pipe timeline, Vulgus 365, Two Planker Podcast, Ruby Dicastro, Myrie Metzger, Milo Nicholson and Flynn Kabisch.

That work strengthens Santerre’s role as a connector. Podcast hosting in freeskiing is not just media filler; it records names, crews, events, timelines and small cultural shifts that can disappear when only contest results are archived. By interviewing riders, builders and organizers, she has positioned herself close to the social infrastructure of modern park, pipe, street and freeride culture.



Val Thorens With Peak Performance And FWT In Town



In February 2026, Newschoolers covered Peak Performance’s moving Mountain House in Val Thorens while the Freeride World Tour was in town. The week opened with a group podcast hosted by Quebec skier Annabelle Santerre and a Freeride World Tour representative, then brought together women’s ski and snowboard community leaders from groups including Slut Strand Society, Shredcatz, Colour The Trails, Mount Noire, Off Piste Ski Trip, Soft Life Ski and Girls Skiing.

The Val Thorens program included a freeride progression day for sixty local female riders, with avalanche education and backcountry practice, plus a private snowpark session with rail and box coaching. That is the strongest recent evidence for Santerre’s current direction. She is operating where athlete work, coaching, safety education, media and women-led community building meet on snow.



Rock A Rail And The Street Event Lane



Snowfest’s Rock A Rail Ski Innsbruck 2025 rider list placed Santerre in the women’s ski field with Laura Wallner, Sarah Schönach, Ella Hall, Jennie-Lee Burmansson, Alais Develay and others. The results page later listed her thirteenth in the women’s ski standings, under USA nationality for that event.

That result does not make her a contest-dominant skier, but it confirms her presence in the rail-event lane. Rock A Rail is built around tight features, quick-footed switch-ups, surface swaps, press control and the ability to make tricks work with limited space. Combined with the Peak London session and Mammothheimer credit, it shows Santerre’s public skiing still connected to rails and park, even as her career has broadened into guiding and hosting.



The Current Shape Of Santerre’s Skiing



Santerre’s profile now sits across several lanes: Canadian park roots, Utah-based ski access, Arctic expedition work, freeride guiding, rail events, women’s coaching and Streetwentytwo media. The verified record is not deep enough for a major competition biography, but it is strong enough to show a skier building influence through projects rather than medals.

The next concrete markers around her are project-based: more Streetwentytwo episodes, Peak Performance community events, rail sessions like Rock A Rail, and further outdoor or Arctic work. Her skiing is best followed through those touchpoints, where park style, terrain education and community-building keep crossing the same track.

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