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peaker

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by peaker

  1. South or South Eastern facing slopes are the most dangerous areas in Niseko. That includes a large amount of the terrain you ride through if you ride back to the hanazono lifts from the summit which is the most popular "hike".

    As you head up to the summit the obvious bowl that you see on your right has been the site of fatal avalanches in the past. The safest line down is to follw the ridge line and avoid the bowl. Ironically that area is probably safer now than it used to be, thanks to the large numbers of people who are happy to blast in there and test it out on a daily basis. The compaction caused due to frequent riding by aussie avalanche poodles makes things a bit safer but Id still be careful in there, particularly on a windy day. It goes without saying that beacons probes and shovels are pretty much a necessity for any riding outside the boundaries of the resort.

    The other really dangerous spot is the steep gully

    that is between Hirafu and Higashiyama. Under Niseko local rules all riding in there is completely banned. Reason, several fatalities including people who were just snowshoeing.

    Have a fun trip

  2. Im sure no one intends to cause offence but the topic of equipment and guides comes up because there are a lot of Aussies coming over each year that reckon they know a lot about riding powder and the right gear etc. but the reality is that lots of holidaying aussies have pretty limited experience and generally fit the profile for potential Mountain accident victims.

    ie. Highly motivated to ride powder

    High confidence in ability level

    Group mentality

    Limited local knowledge

    Limited experience

     

    Im not saying that the above is you, for all I know you could be a backcountry expert but the question "where should I go hiking?" doesnt really inspire a lot of confidence in your level of knowledge and most experienced posters here dont want to give out "advice" that could end up getting someone killed.

    Maybe if you tell us exactly what kind of hike youd like to do, what sort of hiking gear youll be

    using and some details about your group, people might feel a bit more comfortable about giving you some more detailed info.

  3. That depends what you are into. If you are freeriding and dont spin and trick it up in the park and pipe very often Id highly recommend dee luxe le mans hardboots (you can unlock them for a soft boot feel) and plate bindings. they will never break and will last for ages. Ultra responsive edge control, great for speed and no nonsense air, take no time to clip in and out because there is no ratchet crap to deal with just one clip down bail. Super comfortable thermo moulded inner.

    Great for backcountry too.

  4. Burton boards are ok but anything else by Burton including bindings is crap. Im not just Burton bashing here, I have had several Burton products which just didnt cut it. I even emailed burton and got zero response.

    I get absolutely livid when strap bindings break beacause its a safety issue. Comapanies shouldnt be allowed to get away with making shit bindings.

    Anyway I got my revenge by switching to hardboots.

  5. No worries at all. If you want to use an advanced unit with map data youll need to look into whether you can download japanese maps onto your machine but the best bet is to go with a basic unit that displays your coordinates coupled with a standard (paper) topographic map. You can program your waypoints in off the map manually before you set out.

  6. you may be thinking of makomanai subway station.

    Buses to kokusai ski jo and makomanai ski jo.

     

    otherwise sapporo station will have buses to most out of town places ie niseko rusutsu kokusai

     

    If you want to go to teine catch the bus from teine railway station.

     

    Basically its easy to go to a ski resort in Sapporo. Just front up at any bus stop and youll probably be able to get a bus to a ski hill.

    Do Make sure you have a ski or board bag, bus drivers in sapporo get realy pissed off with nude boards.

  7. Havent heard of that and I cant see how it would help as a bag of sand will be buried along with you in all likelyhood. I have heard of an old technique using a long ribbon, in this case you attach the ribbon to yourself and hope that a part of it stays above the snow when the avalanche stops . Rescuers then dig up the remaining ribbon and hopefully you on the end of it. I wouldnt like to try it in this day and age. It sounds like it would be so time consuming that you would most likely be dead by the time they got to the end of the ribbon.

  8. Mate I used a couple of uniden radios on the same band (purchased in Australia, may have even been the same model) for a couple of years over here and never had a problem, I even tested them when I got them over here by talking to my girlfriend on the other side of sapporo city. I wasnt even aware of the bandwidth issue. I seriously doubt youll be locked up or anything. If you have rechargeable batteries youll need to go to the shop and pick up a transformer that fits the Japanese power sockets.

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