Simon
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Posts posted by Simon
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If your browser is having problems with that link, you can find the same vid on YouTube:
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Definitely not as close to Sapporo as those mentioned by quattro, but Tomamu is around 90 mins by train from S. JR station. It's not the best resort of the world, but it's ok, especially if you have beginners in your group.
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Sorry Mantas, I didn't want to single out your comment. I quoted it because it was the perfect synthesis of what a lot of people think about skiing in Switzerland.
Quote:I just checked the snow report of the places I skiied in Italy and Austria. Both have less than 50cm coverage today. -
Quote:Originally posted by Mantas:
Snobery, crowds and expense. -
Ciao db.
If you're in Milan on thursday try to have a very loose schedule: traffic is *insane* in these pre-Christmas days (today it took me almost two hours to cover 17km). The trip to Chamonix looks great: fingers crossed for the snow.
I'll be in Switzerland for three weeks (and then every week-end after that) from next monday: the season pass at the 4 Vallees comes with several free day passes at other resorts and I'm quite sure that Andermatt is one of them, so I'll definitely be there on jan or february. Chamonix is also very close to us, so... I'll track your movements around the globe and alert you when we have a good chance to bump into each other.
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Quote:Originally posted by boardbaka:
sweet pic- bro is that you?
The pic comes from fuorivia, a very small italian forum. -
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Thanks for the link, SerreChe.
(it has probably been discussed in other threads, but there is also a "Australians pouring money into Japanese ski area" video on the same page)
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Quote:Originally posted by _spud:
I wonder how the London Olympics will be termed by the press etc in Italy?
London Olympics
or
Londra Olympics.
As you've seen, every city name gets italianized (not even sure if such a word exists) over here. -
Marco,
give me five minutes and I'm gonna send you an e-mail (in italian) with the infos you need.
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Marco,
it all goes down to how much time do you want to spend in Japan (and how much skiing), when do you want to go, ecc.
The links above should answer your questions. If you need a ultraquick roundup, just send me a PM and I'll give you 'una panoramica generale'.
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Quote:Originally posted by _spud:
Not looking good in the NW Italian area. After last week's nice dump we are seeing an immediate follow up by the hideous warm foehn wind and temps up to 8 degrees at 3000m -
Quote:Originally posted by _spud:
We are near to Piazza Maggio which is a really short tram ride from to Porta Romana.
Giulio Pane e Ojo. Excellent roman cuisine. Again, 5 minutes walk from Porta Romana.
http://www.giuliopaneojo.com/
Pizzeria Da Willy. If you are in XXIV Maggio, you probably have already tried this one. It's at Piazza XXIV Maggio 7. It doesn't look that much from the outside, but pizzas there are amazing. And at those prices, it can't be beaten.
And, if you feel adventurous, Strippoli. Via Palmanova 127 (nearest subway station: Cimiano, on the green line). Cuisine from Puglia. Go for the 'burrata' for appetizer (a kind of mozzarella made in southern Italy) and the 'orecchiette' for pasta (beware: I'm 101% sure noone speaks english there).
[ok, enough for the off-topic stuff. If you need more infos, of any kind, send me an e-mail whenever you want]
I sure wish an european version of SJ existed. Most of the euro sites are focused on local scenes and it can be quite difficult to get comprehensive infos on different resorts. One of the problems is that the average user of the forums on these sites is very young, possibly under 18, whereas a lot of people on SJ has moved to Japan for work reasons (and being the average age higher it's easier to get helpful answers and lose less time skipping the "OMG!!11 I'VE JUST DL'ED THE LAST MFM DVD AND ITS THE SH*T!!!11" threads). Another reason is that a lot of city people has a small flat/studio somewhere in the Alps. And once you have a base, all your stuff there, a season pass there... You don't wanna try different places. Or, you wanna try different places, but you're just too lazy to do it. -
If you're going to do the one-day trip thing, remember to avoid sundays: driving back to Milano from Val D'Aosta on sunday night could transform you into a serial killer (one time it took us almost six hours to do Aosta-Milan). The resorts Meathelmet has listed are on spot: if the conditions are good, Pila is pretty nice too.
Other places you might want to try on your day trips:
Madesimo (Lombardia). 150km from Milan. Some years ago driving there was crazy, since the last part of the road is quite narrow. And long. And parking was a nightmare. But now you can leave the car at Campodolcino (a really small village) and take the gondola there, avoiding the last, tedious, section of the road. This, of course, has transformed the resort in an even more popular place for milanese and it can get really crowded. But on weekdays, it's good.
Chiesa di Valmalenco (Lombardia). Again, 150 km from Milan.
Andermatt (Switzerland). 180km. It's an excellent spot and the drive can be really fast (mostly highway). The drawback is that you have to buy the permit to drive on swiss highways (valid for one year) and it's 27 euro.
San Domenico (Piemonte). 150km. Local spot. It's a really small place near the Simplon pass, but it can be great. It's never crowded and the bc is good (slopes are not that steep, but for one day is ok). What the hell, they even have a webiste now! In english!!!
http://www.sandomenico-ciamporino.it/in_en.htm
Montecampione (Lombardia). 120km. This one is as fast as it gets from Milan. Not a lot of bc, but I've seen worst places.
And if you don't know where to eat while in Milan, try Dongiò.
Via Corio 3 (a five minutes walk from Porta Romana subway station)
Tel. 02/55.11.372
(it's better to reserve your table, since it's quite popular)
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Quote:Originally posted by Meathelmet:
If you want good snow now, head to upper dolomites, closer to the austrian border. That area is LOADED now, especially austria.
Nasfeld (AU) rocked a week ago.Tigh deep pow, no people. And last weekend they got more...
(Meathelmet, excellent description there ) -
Sahoro Resort is closer than Furano.
Less than 200km from Kushiro. A couple of hours by train.
IMO that's the biggest resort you'll find without driving 4+ hours.
[yeah, not a great help, I know ]
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Whooops. Too late.
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MS,
if you buy one, get Metroid Prime as well. Awesome game.
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Good call: 1080° Snowboarding was dope. The sequel is coming out in mid-april (on Gamecube).
Best game for me gotta be Winning Eleven 6 FE. If you love football, you can't miss that.
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Terrible.
My lack of english skills doesn't allow me to describe how bad this game is.
One of the worst PS2 games I've ever tried.
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Taking out Niseko, I would say Rusutsu and Tomamu. The second one IMO is good if you're staying in Sapporo, wanna do a day trip somewhere and don't have a car. You exit from the train (90 mintes from Sapporo), cross a bridge and find yourself on the slopes, ready to go. JR has pretty good deals on train+skipass combo.
Furano... argh. I think the reviews on this website sum it up pretty well.
I agree completely with Big Dave's review: "On-piste skiing is very flat and completely lacks any interesting bits. Very difficult to find any good powder off-piste, and when you do the local ski patrol are relentless in their pursuit of 'offenders'".
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Mog,
I've travelled to the US (with United as well) and Japan with my board bag AND my backpack without paying ****.
If they want me to pay when I'm checking in, I usually use the old "Whaaat? I've spoken with Jennifer Stewart (or Giovanna Rossi or Yuki Tanaka, depending on the airline I'm using) at your main office and she said it was ok" excuse. Showing your frequent flyer card also helps.
I've done this a couple of times and it worked. But most of the time, they simply told me to drop my bag at the oversize luggage counter.
Stress the fact that you have only one bag to check in.
Back from the 3 Vallees
in Snow talk, trip reports, Japan avalanche & backcountry
Posted
Lufthansa is not alone in this. I've been forced to pay for my snowboard bag on Air France (US->Europe) and Delta (again, US->Europe). As far as I can remember, Air France was quite expensive: something in the 75/100 USD range.
Anyway, the fact you had to pay in HK dollars is insane. Bah.