jondreads
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Posts posted by jondreads
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I think there was still the odd patch of snow on Yotei last July. I have no idea when you are no longer able to ski or board down.
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Around Niseko some farmers put ash on the snow a few weeks ago. The theory is that this makes the snow melt more quickly because it will reflect less sunlight. I don't know if it helps, but it certainly looks ugly. We also had a good dump of snow last week which covered all the ash so maybe they were a bit premature.
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OK I am totally new to Mac, so new I have never touched one, but..... I know the current iMac does not have USB 3, but is there an adaptor or something out there that lets you connect up to USB 3 devices?
You don't need an adapter as USB 3 devices can be plugged into USB 2 ports (which the mac has).
The new iMacs are rumoured to be out in June or July.
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It maybe April but today was one of the best days boarding I've had. Fresh powder and nobody else around. I mean nobody. Easy to hit powder available all day long.
Where are you all? ;-)
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Somehow I managed to dig the front of my board into the side of a piste back in December when trying to get back on the piste. As I was cartwheeling over much of my weight must have been supported by my front knee which I could see was bending at a crazy angle. I was shouting "no no no!" as I was going over. Really thought that was the end of my season. Luckily it only partially tore the ligaments in the knee. It was very painful for a month but completely fine when snowboarding.
Then in January I managed to hit a tree knees first when doing an emergency stop. Damn that smarted! Not been a good year for the poor fellas.
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I first came to Niseko in the summer and liked it so much that I decided to stay ;-)
It's not too hot so you can get outside and enjoy yourself. Camping, hiking, barbecues, rafting, driving around with the sunroof open, etc. Everybody's chilled out. It's the complete opposite to Tokyo! And as a bonus it's got all these great apartments that are mostly empty in the summer and can be rented at a reasonable cost (last year there were a lot of Fukushima evacuees in town).
It's well worth a visit in summer. You do need a car though.
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It's my first year in Niseko but I'd say it's been pretty awesome . We've had over 13m of snow so far at village level and I believe it is more than they had all of last year.
It is a bit of a pain to get to Niseko from Tokyo - it's a good 6 hours from central Tokyo to piste. If you're short on time then you may want to head to Yuzawa which is less than 2 hours from central Tokyo.
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Hello. I am planning on a trip to Japan in late March or early April. I would love to experience the incredible fresh "pow" I hear about in Niseko. Will there likely be any left the first week of April?
Welcome to the forum!
You can get an idea from the April 2011 snow reports at http://www.snowjapan.com/e/daily/niseko-now-archive.php?month=04&year=2011
It looks like the first week was a mixture of sun, snow and rain, and the snow was wet & heavy as opposed to the famous dry & light Niseko pow.
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Maybe safety bars on the chairs would have helped!
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The only one I can think of is at the top of hanazono 2 if you turn left to get to Holiday or the Waterfall gate it's uphill. The drag lift there is turned off, but's only 20m or so. I have been wondering why they didn't put the top of that lift just a little further up the slope...
However I feel sorry for the skiers because I can scoot faster than them uphill (but then they overtake me when I stop to buckle up)
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May be a translation thing. Japanese often use the word "kawa" to refer to a river or stream, but it is usually translated as "river".
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I was under the impression I needed to have data roaming on to use it, and there is NO WAY I am that keen!!
I turn my data off at the airport just before departure.
I am off to Niseko next weekend so I might look at downloading it
My friend visited last month and he used the gps-motion-x app on his iPhone. He used wifi to download the maps and start the tracker, but after that he was fine and didn't need to use roaming. The big downside is that it drains the battery, and personally I'd rather have some juice left in case I need to call rescue!
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If you have Google Earth on your computer then you can download the The OpenStreetMap overlay for Google Earth. This is a map similar to google maps but it also has the lifts on the map (at least for Niseko). You can then just hover your mouse over the start and end points to find the altitude. (For instance it looks to me like the Hirafu Gondola starts at 303m and ends at 752m).
@Mamabear, if you have an iPhone or Android phone you can download a GPS tracker app which will collect lots of funky information like distance travelled, max speed, total ascent etc. If you have wifi access you can download the maps in advance so that you don't need to pay for data roaming charges. The only problem is that everybody then starts competing to see who can record the fastest speed
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does anyone know the emergency number for Niseko ? Just in case...
The Grand Hirafu map gives Ski Patrol's number as 0136 22 2167 (you may need to use +81 136 21 2167 if calling from a foreign phone). http://grand-hirafu.jp/winter/en/mountain/gelande.html
If that doesn't work try one of the standard emergency numbers (110 for police or 119 if for fire & medical).
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Without going all nanny state, this is an issue worthy of discussion.
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I can't help but think this was a case of not knowing, not realising and if he had known perhaps disaster could have been averted.
Fences, warning signs, or education. I don't know whether any have a valid place here or not, but I would think something could be done to improve the outcomes
A few years back they had a "Don't Catch Your Death" campaign in Europe with something like a million beer mats and posters printed because every year a couple of British people died in the same circumstances. No idea if it reduced the number of deaths, though a quick google shows that deaths are still occurring
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Still a crap excuse. If you bought a hundred faulty and smelly TVs would you a) send them back or let them stink out your multi-million dollar hotel?
If Scotland goes its own way and the English foist RBS on them I reckon they'll have to start printing a lot of new pound notes to pay off RBS's debt
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They were old style (cathode ray) TVs. To be honest when you turned them on they did put out a similar whiff from the cooling vents at the top and back, but I think the TVs were just infused with the room smell rather than being the cause. Management just had a crap excuse ready for those who complained.
However I doubt few Japanese guests complained. My wife used to work at a big hotel in London. The hotel policy was to give Japanese guests the worst rooms by default because they never complained (or would accept crap excuses), whilst Americans used to always get the best because they always complained. (Needless to say my wife, being Japanese, used to give the Japanese guests the best rooms when she booked them in!).
I reckon the Yuzawa hotel simply had some naff rooms that they reserved for those who booked cheap online deals.
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Maybe they were smell-o-vision tvs? Instead of being upset about the nasty smelling room I should have been grateful for state of the art equipment installed
Would have made a great sketch in Fawlty Towers
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The town of Yuzawa. "Yuzawa Kogen - Nunoba" - http://www.snowjapan.com/e/resorts/resort_map.php?resortNo=10
We stayed at the Toei hotel, which was OK but the rooms had a strong kipper smell! (we complained but the alternative rooms were just as bad, the management said the smell came from the TVs! ). On the plus side it was ski-in/ski-out, next to the kids park & beginners runs and the food was good.
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Last year I stayed in both Happo-one and Yuzawa Kogen with a 3 year old and a 1 year old. Both were fine. On both trips it snowed quite a bit and the kids couldn't cope with playing outside for long (max 2 hours for the 3 year old, 30 mins for the 1 year old) and we were pretty thankful that we stayed in big hotels with onsens so that we could entertain them.
Happo-one was quiet enough in February. We booked the 3 year old into a group lesson but he was the only one who turned up so he got a private lesson at group lesson prices.
Both times we drove from central Tokyo. Door-to-door the time is about the same if you don't get caught in a jam. However you do need winter tyres on your car. The car came in handy most at Hakuba because the hotel was a few minutes drive from the slopes. My better half let me slope off for a few hours here and there and when you have so little time available you really don't want hang around waiting for hotel buses.
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I've met some lovely Australians in the last couple of months in Niseko. But I've run into a few undesirables as well, including a group of men who were swearing loudly and close to fighting amongst themselves in a restaurant. Kind of spoilt the romantic evening I was having with the mrs.
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From today's avi report
15cm of broken snow crystals in the last 12 hours. 40cm in the last 24 hours.Doesn't sound too bad to me
The microclimate here never ceases to amaze me. I live close to Hanazono and didn't see that much snow, one blog reported "only" 14 cm in the last 24 hours as well (I think the writer lives in Hirafu), but the avi report lists 40 cm at mountain base.
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A measly 5cm overnight. Bah humbug.
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But not in Niseko :sadface:
2011/2012 Japan ski season - how many times?
in Snow talk, trip reports, Japan avalanche & backcountry
Posted
54 days, mainly half. Snowboarded until midday then worked until midnight.
Pretty tiring. Ran out of steam by March. Needed a holiday