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Ocean11

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by Ocean11

  1. Who uses a helmet or other protective gear?

     

    One of my best purchases was my helmet. I have a Lavance full face racing helmet that I got for 8,000 yen, reduced from 12. It has a peak and an adjustable chin guard. I've wiped out violently, sometimes landing on my head after jumps, and haven't had any injuries. Last season, I used to come home from boarding with a cracking headache from smacking my head on the gelende, but this season, with the helmet (and better control), I haven't suffered at all. It's allowed me to ride much more as I want to, without fear of the consequences. While it looks a bit over the top, the chin guard is quite useful, preventing too much movement of the neck in a backwards roll (it presses against the chest stopping the neck hyperextending). Also after wiping out in powder, it gets packed with fresh snow which you can munch on - very refreshing.

     

    I also have snowboard insurance. For 6,000 yen per year, it covers theft or destruction of the board anywhere on the trip, as well as injury and death. Actually, it seems like an invitation to fraud (something I'd never contemplate, much, for long, very often, not really) but it's nice to have.

  2. In Nagano prefecture's Alpen shops and Xebio they have those boots in 28 and 29 - if you pester them enough in Tokyo, you should be able to get them to send them to your nearest shop. I got Xebio to get hold of a 29 but it was too small.

     

    But service in Japan is nearly dead - these people won't sell to you unless you threaten them. They'll probably try the 'if we order them, you'll have to buy them' line. I always enjoy asking Taro Partimer the 'salesman' if_he_would buy snowboard boots on that system. Taro's brow furrows at this, and sometimes a little light appears to come on, but only briefly. Then he says 'Probably not' and goes back to being an obstructionist jerk.

     

    Good luck with getting boots - and don't go asking Switch either - they don't give a sh!t whether you buy their boots or not.

  3. gorilla, I wouldn't know about that. I'm not_that_much of a fan despite appearances. But it may well be true - I have seen pictures of the two lovely tarts getting about in NY.

     

    Ayumi is the pits though isn't she? Her squawk seems to be getting worse while her 'penetration' becomes more invasive.

     

    I have Van Morrison, Oasis, Uncle Tupelo, Eminem, and Lauryn Hill lined up for my drive to Nozawa tomorrow. And some Puffy! Yeaaaah!!

  4. The conventional wisdom has it that you should get a board that comes up to somewhere around your nose - so I'm 182 cm and my board is 169 cm - nearer my eyes than my nose, but great in the powder and at speed. I was riding a borrowed board in the 150s when I started and it was terrible - no stability at all.

     

    Actually board manufacturers say that it should be decided on weight rather than height, so to modify the conventional wisdom, if you're a fatty, get a board that you can't look over the top of. Also if you have really big feet, say over 34 or something, you may need to get a wide board.

     

    Basically, unless you're going to be doing tricks, get something a little on the big side, for stability and a good floating ride in the powder.

  5. "Getting to ARAI MOUNTAIN & SNOW PARK is easier than you might think. One of our shuttle bus services is linked with the Shinkansen arrivals at Nagano Station (please confirm with the posted timetable below). You only have to travel to Nagano Station, step off your train and onto our shuttle bus. An alternative is to catch a local train to Arai station on the Shinetsu Honsen line and step onto one of our waiting (please check the schedule) complimentary shuttle buses. "

  6. That's one of the biggest drawbacks of snowboarding (that and having to skate on flat stretches.

     

    You generally have to sit down to do your back binding up after you've undone it to skate or ride the lift. Those with step-in bindings don't generally have to sit down unless they're inept at stepping in. Sometimes you can get away with standing up and adjusting the binding, but this tends to result in a slide down the hill (and a clash with the inevitable skier who is standing in the way not doing very much skiing.)

     

    Now what are those sticks that skiers use for again?

  7. NoFakie, you put it so well. I wanted to mention the English skool ski-trip scene too, but had to run for my train instead. That was indeed a real turn-off.

     

    I think snowboarding and skiing are quite incompatible at some level. Skiing was originally a practical activity whereas snowboarding is pure sport. You wouldn't want to go hunting with a snowboard, whereas it's feasible with skis. You can actually get over pretty much the whole mountain with skis but not with a snowboard. You can enjoy moguls on skis (boink boink...sorry) but not on a snowboard. And you can stand around wherever you happen to stop on skis and gaze bovinely up the slope while you rest on your stocks, whereas a snowboard will tend to start sliding down the hill as it was designed to.

     

    These reasons make it desirable to separate them, or at least make separation an option for those who would prefer it. You don't hold figure skating events at the same time as an ice hockey game, although both sports are held on ice - the figure skaters find the goals to be an obstacle and a hazard, and they don't like getting hit with the sticks.

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