After Losing Her Leg to Cancer, Brenna Huckaby Found a Chance to ‘Heal’ in Snowboarding — Despite Living in Louisiana (Exclusive)

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Everyone in Brenna Huckaby’s life was skeptical about snowboarding at first — herself included.
The Baton Rogue, La., native never dreamt of gliding down snow and executing tricks on its powdery surface. Her athletic talents were focused on flipping barefoot above a springy gym floor, hopefully working towards a gymnastics scholarship to her hometown Louisiana State University.
But cancer took away those plans, Huckaby recalls in a recent interview with PEOPLE about the path that led her to 2026 Winter Paralympics. At 14, Huckaby was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a rare bone cancer, that ended with her right leg being amputated and her dreams of a gymnastics career dashed.
“It also left me with trying to figure out my identity,” Huckaby, now 30, says. She wasn't thinking about sports anymore; “For me, it was really just getting up off the couch, putting my prosthetic leg on, making myself some lunch. That was really hard after losing my leg.”

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Then came a life-changing trip to Utah a year later.
“My hospital was taking kids with cancer who lost mobility on a rehabilitation ski trip and at first, I was like, ‘Sounds like my doctor just really wants to go skiing and is trying to find a way to get an organization to pay for it,’ “ Huckaby recalls, laughing. “But their idea was if they could take kids who lost mobility from cancer to the mountains where they could ride down and conquer an actual mountain in a sport that's objectively difficult, then when they got home, they would be able to conquer their figurative mountains, like getting up off the couch.”
She decided to give it a shot, asking "to snowboard because it reminded me of a balance beam, and at that time of my life, I would've given anything to have just a piece of my old life back," she says. Organizers thought it might be too soon after her amputation, but, Huckaby remembers, "I was like, ‘No, please. I'm strong. I promise.’ So I did. I was able to snowboard. I immediately fell in love. It was hard. I wasn't very good. But I knew just deep down, I was like, 'This is something I can be good at.' "
It’s easy to say in hindsight, but “good” might be an understatement: A decade and a half and a properly fitted snowboarding prosthetic later, Huckaby is now one of the best snowboarders in the world. She's got four Paralympic medals overall (three golds), 10 medals at World Championship events, and is now gearing up for her third appearance on the sport’s biggest stage in March at the 2026 Winter Paralympics in Milan, where she could break the record for most-decorated female Paralympic snowboarder.
But for her mom Kristie, who had accompanied Huckaby on that fateful first trip to Utah, no matter what came of her daughter’s experience after discovering the sport, the victory was in gaining back her confidence.
“[My mom] was like, ‘The moment that you strapped into the snowboard and you could actually go down the hill, it was like this light was back in your eyes again,’ “ Huckaby remembers. “She used to say, ‘I had my Brenna back, the Brenna before cancer.’ And she would do anything to keep that there.”

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In practice, that looked like relocating to Utah so Huckaby could continue to develop her skill in the sport.
"For [my mom], it was so that I could heal from cancer. But for me deep down, I had heard about the Paralympics and I was like, ‘Okay, I like to be the best at everything I do. How can I be the best in snowboarding? Oh, the Paralympics are a thing? I'm going to do that,' " she says. "In the back of my mind, I was going to be a Paralympian, but for my mom, she was just watching me heal post cancer.“
Now Huckaby’s own daughters, Lilah and Sloan, will be in attendance at this year’s Paralympics, watching their mother’s inspiring journey play out live.
“As a mom now, I often try to put myself in my mom's position," Huckaby says. “I can't even conceptualize the fact that my mom was like, ‘Okay, I have two other kids, ‘I have a husband, I have a whole life in Louisiana, but I'm going to uproot everything and go to Utah with my daughter on a hope and a dream.’ I had been snowboarding two times and she's like, ‘You're going to love it.’ And I did. But to just trust your daughter that much, that this is something that she loves and is going to help her with her life — and then to actually do it? It's crazy. I'm so grateful to my parents for that.”
To learn more about all the Olympic and Paralympic hopefuls, come to people.com to check out ongoing coverage before, during and after the games. Watch the Milan Cortina Olympics and Paralympics, beginning Feb. 6, on NBC and Peacock. (edited)
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