Archive for December, 2007

31
Dec

Sick Pow on Incline Peak!

Tahoe Backcountry Skiing
Check out this hoser! Who knew knee droppers could do that shit! Yeah Yeah…

Nooner, TheRestlessApe, Pyrofloptic, Tongaroo and Wolfy (me) hit Incline Peak today with Juni and Chloe rounding out the quadrupedal auxiliary (Smoky on the semi-injured list). If you know the area, you can tell from the pic where we were. If you don’t, get a map, view the exif on the pic for the time of day, put 2 and 2 together… Coverage was so so, as was depth, but the compact layer beneath last storm’s 6 inches or so made for some NIIIIICE turns! Got three runs in and Nooner said he was heading back tomorrow. I even defended a cool steep line against Nooner through some rocks and trees. Then the ride out was fast super-g’s through a boulder field! Not a lot of damage considering…

All in all for the depth of snow it has developed pretty well over the last few weeks. Very skiable in the B/C. And if this prediction is right complaints may be on the decline by the weekend. (That is the Draino Gazette-Urinal tho…)

Post up your experiences this weekend! And link up the photos!

Wolfy - Incline Peak

TheRestlessApe - Incline Peak

-M

27
Dec

del.icio.us ba.con for December 26th through December 27th

Sizzling hot bacon for December 26th through December 27th:

26
Dec

SphincterBoy’s Ski Diary, Chapter 1

Day 1, Dec. 8th, Cameron Pass, Rawah Range.  Not the best conditions for opening day…but there’s fresh snow and the road’s been plowed, so why not? I have a late start, but the familiar uptrack toward Montgomery Bowl disappears quickly. Pewter-colored clouds boil and race past the Nokhu Crags and Lulu Mountain to the south. What if we get a whiteout? I am going solo today. Fortunately there are a half-dozen fellow addicts in the upper bowls, so it’s safe to ski up there. The first run is a bit tentative, feeling it out, getting my skis under me, but the last half-dozen turns are solid and hold all the promise of the coming winter. The second run is in mid-season form–through the scattered spruces near the top, quick, short, slow turns, then breaking out below the trees onto the (inexplicably) untracked open slope above the exit gully. Yaaaaahhooo! Zoinks…it is already getting dark and flurries are starting to blow in from North Park. Time to head for the pub. The exit gully (as usual) provides the best skiing of the day–easy turns across the bottom and back, then well-graded tree skiing for most of the rest of the way back to Highway 14. Game on!

Day 2, Dec. 11th, Snowy Range, Wyoming. It’s the weekly visit to our high-altitude research site in the boondocks of southeast Wyoming. The skiing here usually is bad; Wyoming is not known for its soft, fluffy, wind-free snowfalls. But the gods have smiled with the latest storm: a foot of champagne atop a shallow but fairly solid base. I make a mental note to GPS all the boulders and logs near our site next summer. Using the fatties today–the skinnies/3-pins I usually use for work would ride too deep for early-season skiing. Only a couple of short runs today, but the snow is good and forgiving of sloppy technique.

Day 3, Dec. 12th, Ajax Mountain, Aspen. Today is an excellent example of why all BaconStripppers (and plenty of other people) wish they were me. I stop in at the Aspen will-call window, present my Forest Service ID, and am given a complimentary gondola ticket. Lugging 50 lb. of equipment and tools, I board the gondola, ride to the top, and glide over to a small, cylindrical shelter where my ozone monitor awaits its monthly calibration. Twenty minutes later, calibration machine running, I leave the shelter and roar downslope. Aspen has benefitted from 2.5 feet of nice, light snow in the past two days, and much of it remains on the ungroomed runs. I ski under the gondola (the pressure’s on–I am in uniform and a stupid fall here makes the government look even worse than it usually does), bounce over a couple hundred feet of bumps, and jump-turn down a steep, unmarked face. The pitch is even steeper mid-slope, and I begin to wonder if I’ve bitten off more bacon than can be masticated…then whump-whump-whomp-whump and I am spit out onto a groomer where two rich cats stare vacantly. Whatsamatter…you never seen anyone drop the knee before??! The run is over too soon, and then I return to the top, gather my equipment, download the data, and head back down in funereal evening light. This run isn’t any fun–the heavy pack and calibration machine (carried like a suitcase) turn my quads to jello before I’m halfway down. Oh well, that’s why they pay me the big bucks.

Day 4, Dec. 16th, Cascade Mountain Ski Area, near Madison, Wisconsin. 1) Who says the midwest doesn’t have powder days? There are six inches of fluffies on the ground today. 2) Unfortunately, the douchebags who run this place groomed the hell out of absolutely every last square foot. 3) Nobody, except me, drops the knee in Wisconsin. WTF? The place is overrun with Norskies on alpines. 4) My nephew Henry, seven years old, required an hour and three runs to master the kid-banzai school of technique. Like almost all kids, he’s a natural. This is his first season on skis; it’s my 36th.

Day 5, Dec. 25th, Snowy Range. Back at the field site, on the skinnies for the first time this year. Defying all odds, we have received yet another storm without the usual accompanying 50-mph gale, and once again the powder remains movable, this time to a depth of a foot or so. It’s ideal skinnie conditions, and the experience does not disappoint. The scrub spruce and open slope above our uppermost precipitation collector is the private ski resort of the research crew, consisting, in this case, of myself and my friend John Frank. I have a couple of white-knuckle moments at first–the old 200cm skinnies are just a leeeetle bit less maneuverable than, say, a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier–but I thread the needle, emerge into the open, and carve 10 almost-perfect turns down to the frozen lake shore. John F. follows. He is still learning to freeheel and usually yard-sales at some point, but today the gods are kind and he manages to parallel my turns. Another run, and that’s all for today–once again we’re racing the weather back to the snowcat.

My apologies to all B-strippers for having no photographic evidence. Camera battery is toast and I have only now found a new one. So Day 6 (this Friday at Winter Park, I think) will be more visual. Cheers, beeyotches…!

 -SB

26
Dec

Day 1 in the B/C 4 Me!!!

This past Saturday Smokey and I meet up with Juni, Wolfy, Dave, Dave and Ray for a lil’ backcountry in the Mount Rose  area.

It was a beautiful sunny day, didn’t really know what to expect considering the not so considerate SNOW GODS lately!  Actually I was kinda expecting crappy conditions with crappy conditions…. what we had in place was Sick mofoin powder with crappy conditions!

We pondered a bit below hourglass on what to ski.  Wolfman and myself noticed some fellers skiing our lines climbers right (more appropriately, skiers left) of hourglass… pow lines!  Needless to say, the two Mikes, the two Daves, Ray, Juni and the subtly cracking Smokey headed that way and we’s all had sick lines with the occasional rock jib!

On our way back up to ski the last pitch of the day we ran into your friendly neighborhood tattooed man.  Around that point I believe we lost a Dave and Ray, but added one of our TBS mates and one of my 24 hour mates.

Short story short… Wolfy, Dave, myself, Juni and my BONKING WOLFDOG headed back to the realities (holidays) of the world!  Huck Tatar soldiered on! 

Very few pictures that day… low battery!

Nooner

24
Dec

Solstice in the Sonora

Winter Solstice is up on us and it’s way beautiful down in the deserts. Heck, even the moto-rally to get here was gorgeous. Clear skies and relatively uncongested roads through the Great Basin. Rest breaks in Nevada’s historic gold and silver boom towns (which’re very off the radar of retirees, dirt twirlers, and most 30-something D.I.N.K.s) are always enjoyable. Just tough ol’ folks, old cars, and much much older buildings.  I wanted to check in at the Saddlery in Goldfield and pick up some soap for the Brooks. Salty roads are hell on leather.

GBS

what’s a cowboy trapping?

there was a note on the door with a phone number if you needed to contact the proprietor if she/he was not around. there were also instructions on where to find them if the no one answered their phone. i thought that was excellent. Continue reading ‘Solstice in the Sonora’

18
Dec

del.icio.us ba.con for December 12th through December 18th

Sizzling hot bacon for December 12th through December 18th:

18
Dec

It’s snowing

_MG_3484
Dawn Patrol: When and Where?

-M

17
Dec

Grizzlo-X

Griz puts on one mean cross race. i mean, the man commands the weather, lays down 6 inches of fluff 5 days ahead of time, which settles into 4 inches of crust on dust and pock-marked gumbo frozen solid in the <30 degrees Fahrenheit morning temps.

griz Continue reading ‘Grizzlo-X’

11
Dec

del.icio.us ba.con for December 4th through December 11th

Sizzling hot bacon for December 4th through December 11th:

11
Dec

sex with a tractor trailer in a parking lot

I wonder if this stuff has bacon in it?

Thanks to Jeff for the link.

-M




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