Stoked to Shred at Telluride Skate Camp

July 3, 2023

Two children skateboarding in a concrete park. Both wear protective gear, including helmets and pads. One child wears a leopard print helmet and leggings, and the other a white helmet and jeans. Theyre practicing on a smooth, curved surface.

By Grace Richards

Two children skateboarding in a concrete park. Both wear protective gear, including helmets and pads. One child wears a leopard print helmet and leggings, and the other a white helmet and jeans. Theyre practicing on a smooth, curved surface.

Photo Grace Richards

Telluride Skate Camp teaches lessons in confidence, grit, and courage. KOTO’s Grace Richards dropped into Town Park to see a skate session in action.

It’s 9 a.m. on a Friday, and the Telluride skate park is a beautiful kind of chaos. Everywhere you look, kids careen over the dips and curves of the rolling grey sea of cement, caught in an ephemeral rush of momentum and balance.

They wear outrageously colorful knee pads and wrist guards, cheetah-print leggings…there’s even a fuscia unicorn-horn helmet in the distance.

Close your eyes and you can hear the squeak of their trucks underfoot, “Hey Ya” by Outkast on distant speakers, and coaches encouraging kids to be brave, to try again when they fall down.

This is Telluride Skate Camp, a 16-years running program for people of all ages to learn the physics-defying art of skateboarding.

Coach and owner of The Drop Board Shop Craig Wasserman stands in the middle of the fray, guiding a wobbly-kneed child into her center of gravity on the board. Every so often he calls out words of motivation to someone.

“Keep doing that! Repetition’s what’s getting that in your muscles,” he calls.

Wasserman, a retired art teacher, has been running the program since 2007.

Skateboarding has long been a male-dominated sport, but Craig says he sees that changing. During the school year, he hosts an all-girls skate day once a week.

“If you look out here… there are more girls than boys at this skatepark,” Wasserman notes “It reflects this global shift where you see more girls shredding…”

There is no shortage of little girls shredding the dips and hills of the skatepark.

A man helps a child on a skateboard in a skate park. The child is wearing a colorful helmet and pads. Other children are skateboarding in the background. Both are casually dressed, and the man wears a bright bucket hat.

Photo Grace Richards

Two boys crash into each other in a tangle of arms and legs. It takes them only a second before they dust off and run after their boards, which have shot in opposite directions.

Falls happen. Injuries happen. It’s part of the sport, and it takes toughness to stick it out.

A young girl in a purple helmet named Shelby says she’s been skating for eight years. She’s taken her share of tumbles.

No doubt about it, skateboarding is hard. It takes coordination, consistent practice, and a willingness to fall (a lot). Across this rolling swath of concrete, something invaluable is being cultivated. Kids are learning how to push themselves, to surmount self-doubt.

Wasserman says that skating cultivates the soft skills he remembers trying to teach to kids in the classroom.

“We teach them respect and confidence…to walk tall outside the skatepark too,” he notes.

For children, fear often feels bigger than they are. Proverbial monsters under the bed can feel almost tangible.

 Skating gives these small children the confidence, scrappiness, and self-esteem to hit that steep drop, shift their weight into a kickturn, or shred the bowl.

“Foreign language, math class… dancing in front of people,” Wasserman muses, “whatever it is, you learn to face your fear…”

A child wearing a helmet and knee pads rides a skateboard at a skate park, while an adult crouches on a skateboard, adjusting something on the ground. They are surrounded by trees and hilly terrain in the background.

Photo Grace Richards

Recent News

  • A woman in a black top with lightning bolts and a man in a blue suit are standing side by side, each smiling at the camera, against the scenic backdrop of Mountain Village.

    Prohaska, Wisor Cleared from Ethics Violation in Mountain Village Investigation

    June 3, 2026

    An independent investigation into the conversations and actions surrounding an offer to purchase a portion of the Telluride Ski Resort by former Mountain Village Mayor Marti Prohaska and former Telluride Town Councilmember Meehan Fee, with support from former Mountain Village Town Manager Paul Wisor, found that neither Prohaska nor Wisor violated local, state or federal ethics codes in their actions.

  • A vibrant Poetry Box display case labeled Poetry stands on a Placerville lawn near a road, surrounded by trees and mountains in the background.

    A Placerville Poetry Box

    May 21, 2026

    A bright yellow poetry box on the side of the road in San Miguel Canyon offers people driving to and fro a place to stop, write, and share poems.

    Created by local poet Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, the poetry box is an opportunity to pause, reflect, and embrace a sense of community.

  • Open grassy field on the valley floor with scattered pine trees, surrounded by green hills and distant snow-capped mountains under a clear blue sky.

    Valley Floor Day Instills Stewardship in a Changing Climate

    May 11, 2026

    More than 100 elementary students explored local flora and fauna during Valley Floor Education Day, learning about beavers, owls and ecosystem health through hands-on science.