Whistler, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2010s-present | Known for: FIS Nor-Am slopestyle, big air and rail event starts | Current: Active Canadian freeski competitor
The course name on the FIS sheet read Stoneham, Quebec, and the date was February 7, 2026. Landon Owen-Mold was not there as a background name. He was in a Nor-Am Cup big air field, carrying a Whistler Freestyle profile into a winter circuit where one missed takeoff can erase a weekend.
That Stoneham result, 22nd in Freeski Big Air, is one of several recent FIS entries that define his public ski record. Owen-Mold is listed by FIS as a Canadian athlete from Whistler Freestyle, with FIS code 2539600, born on August 26, 2006, and marked active. His current record points toward park competition: slopestyle, big air and rail event starts, not freeride or halfpipe.
Owen-Mold’s public trail begins earlier than his Nor-Am starts. In January 2017, Pique Newsmagazine reported that the Whistler Blackcomb Freestyle Ski Club had sent a large group to Apex Mountain Resort for Timber Tour and Super Youth competition. In that youth field, Landon Owen-Mold was listed as second in boys under-12 slopestyle and first in boys under-12 big air.
Those early results place his development inside the Whistler-Blackcomb freestyle pathway. That matters because Whistler is not a small one-discipline hill. The same mountain culture can feed moguls, park, spring jump sessions, big-air training, trampoline-linked progression and filmed laps. For a young skier, that environment gives repetition and scale before the FIS calendar becomes the main public record.
The jump from Super Youth podiums to Nor-Am starts is not automatic. Junior results show early comfort in competition, but Nor-Am fields are filled with older athletes, national development riders and skiers already working toward World Cup-level standards. Owen-Mold’s FIS results show that transition in progress rather than a finished professional résumé.
His 2026 FIS record includes a 9th-place slopestyle result at Mammoth Mountain on March 14, an 11th-place slopestyle result at Aspen / Buttermilk on March 27, and a 6th-place rail event result at Aspen / Buttermilk on March 24. Those are the strongest markers currently available because they come from official FIS competition listings and show him moving beyond entry-level participation.
The 6th-place rail event result at Aspen is the clearest single detail in Owen-Mold’s recent profile. Rail events reward a narrower skill set than full slopestyle: edge control on metal, switch takeoffs, clean direction changes, pretzel variations, balance through impact, and the ability to make technical choices under judging pressure.
For a skier still building public name recognition, that kind of result carries more information than a simple start list. It suggests that his competitive identity is not only based on large jump features. Rail discipline is part of the record, and that matters in modern freeskiing because slopestyle courses increasingly demand real rail difficulty before the first jump line even begins.
The Mammoth Mountain slopestyle result adds a different layer. Mammoth’s Unbound parks are known for long spring seasons, large features and a competition culture shaped by U.S. Grand Prix history. A 9th-place Nor-Am slopestyle result there shows Owen-Mold handling a course environment with speed, exposure and a strong field of North American park skiers.
Slopestyle requires more than one strong trick. It demands rail-line decisions, jump-line amplitude, grab clarity, landing direction and the ability to keep speed through a full judged run. Owen-Mold’s public record does not yet provide a complete trick list, but his placement at Mammoth gives a useful anchor for his current level: a developing Canadian skier already reaching competitive finals-range results in serious park venues.
The 2026 FIS list also puts Owen-Mold at Stoneham Mountain Resort and Whistler Blackcomb. Stoneham’s value is different from Whistler’s scale. It is a Quebec freestyle venue with night skiing, park infrastructure, an Olympic-size halfpipe and a compact training rhythm. Whistler, by contrast, gives Coast Mountains size, park depth and a dense Sea to Sky athlete network.
That Canadian map shapes how to read his season. A skier moving between Stoneham, Mammoth, Aspen and Whistler is not chasing one isolated local contest. He is moving through a Nor-Am development calendar where course style changes constantly: Quebec cold and constructed jumps, California spring park speed, Colorado contest pressure and British Columbia home terrain.
The same North American pathway includes stronger-established Canadian names such as Alec Henderson, whose Aspen Nor-Am win gives a clear benchmark for the level Owen-Mold is moving toward. That comparison should not be overstated. Henderson’s public résumé is more advanced, while Owen-Mold’s current profile is still built from junior history, FIS points and emerging Nor-Am placements.
The useful comparison is structural. Both sit inside the Canadian park progression system, where provincial programs, Whistler training, Nor-Am starts and international-style courses form the ladder. Owen-Mold’s results place him on that ladder, with enough official data to track improvement but not enough yet to call him a senior-level headline athlete.
Owen-Mold’s FIS points listing currently includes slopestyle, big air and rail event categories, matching the disciplines seen in his 2026 results. The strongest editorial angle is therefore park competition, not backcountry filming or freeride. His profile should stay focused on official starts, course results and Whistler Freestyle development unless direct sponsor or film information becomes public.
No verified X Games, Olympic, World Cup podium or major film segment was found under his name. That should not be treated as a weakness; it simply defines the correct scope. Landon Owen-Mold is an active Canadian freeski competitor with a Whistler base, early youth podiums, official FIS identity and recent Nor-Am results that give skipowd.tv a factual foundation to build from as more competition data appears.