They were unusual, and what particularly struck Van Gyn was their size, which was most evident from the top of the range. She gawked at the Crazies, and it almost felt like whiplash. Then, while driving, they appeared out of nowhere. Not once had she spotted anything rideable. From there they convened at a farm to gather their belongings, yet Van Gyn couldn’t quite shake the lingering skepticism. Van Gyn eventually linked up with Carter and cinematographer Dan Gibeau, and followed them to Livingston, Montana. Robin with her tent at the team's basecamp in the Crazy Mountains. She hails from the land of deep powder and pillow lines, and when she accepted an invitation to join Jeremy Jones, Mark Carter, and TGR’s production crew for a foot-powered expedition in the Montana wilderness she didn’t quite know what to expect. “Why not?” she tentatively asked and got the answer no snowboarder wanted to hear: those mountains don’t typically get much snow. They existed “but no one really goes there,” they told her. It wasn’t until she reconnected with a few friends at Spark R&D, the splitboard binding company in Bozeman, that someone had an idea of what she was referring to. RELATED: The Far Out Ones - Robin Van Gyn Van Gyn walked back to her car perplexed and continued with her drive. The clerk responded with bewilderment, no one seemed to know what she was talking about. Confused, she eventually pointed to the map underneath the clerk’s counter and inquired about the elusive range. She thought it was a fluke at first, but it kept recurring. Her destination, the Crazy Mountains, was nowhere to be found on any of the maps at the gas stations along the way. Driving from her home in British Columbia to Montana, Robin Van Gyn noticed something peculiar.