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IM

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by IM

  1. I think the best way to start is to join a school sessions so that you can rent equipment before you decide to buy them. The only thing in common with alpine skiing in terms of equipment is the skis/poles. Boots/bindings are different. If you are a good alpine skier (can parallel on a fairly steep trails) you can master the basics in a couple of days of instructions.

     

    You can probably start with the following pages. There are many schools around Japan.

     

    Telemark Association of Japan:

    http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~tt3k-ktd/taj-main/taj-main.html

     

    Telemarktips and instructions (US centric): http://www.telemarktips.com/

  2. There are two types of tranceivers (beacons), so called digital and analog. (This is not right forum to discuss the details - other sites will go very deep into the topic). But. analog tends to be chaper Peips Opti for about 2,2000. Autovox F1 Focus/Survival on snow (SOS) ~ 2,9000. Digital ones like BCA Tracker and Autovox M1/M2 run about 3,5000. If you have acontact in US, you can get cheaper.

     

    Beacon itself won't do you any good, though. you also need a shovel and a probe AND the training to go along with it.

  3. If you factor in things like access, and terrain, here are my recommendations:

     

     

    Arai: Modeled after Whistler. If you stay at any of the hotels (The Club being most expensive) the atomospher is posh. Very good choice of restaurants. Trails are also interesting. You can pay extra to hop on a gondola 45min. early to eat all the pows before anyone else. Shuttle bus pick up at Nagano station.

     

    NASPA: Hotel is pretty good (New Otani) and access from Tokyo is 1hr on train, 10 min on the shuttle bus from Yuzawa. Skiers only resort but trails are few and do suck the big one! This place happens to be a destination of Tokyo American Club exec. ski trips.(figures!)

     

    Personally, I can't stand to stay at any resort hotels - makes me feel like I am on a business trip, oops, it is a business trip for you. I prefer places like Kusatsu, Nozawa, Togakushi - the resorts sort of grew out of old Onsen regions, and which still maintains the traditional style atomosphere.

  4. Time to go is about now till mid-June, but the snow will melt away farely fast this year. But if you like the powder, go at the end of November when they close down the alpine route. This is typically marks the beginning of the season for many skiers and borders. It is lika a morning rush hour in Tokyo with people dressed in ski/board outfit. Even you do not have a car you can still approach from Ohmachi station using all pub. transportations.

  5. Access to Iwanai in winter could be long. you either have to go around the Niseko range around west (Rankoshi) or North (Kotohira). From Kuchan, it would take about 1-1.5 hrs. I typically do not go there, unless pows are gone from all the places around Niseko including Chise, Moiwa, Weiss.

     

    BTW have you heard of Asahigaoka? It is in Kuchan, 2 lifts and 2 Nordic jump ramps.

  6. I did go there during the first half of GW. And managed to ski on the North side from the peak, spent a night at Chise skied Chise and Iwao. The resort did close on 4/29. The place was like a ghost town except a few rafting operations. But did go to many onsens and got the whole places just for ouselves, too.

  7. Tele was the original way to walk around on the snow - as depicted in the oldest petrigriph of skiers in a cave of Telemark region of Norway. "Natual" probably has as many definition as there are people. As a telemarker, alpine skier, snowborder, my feelings is that all are natual, but each has its own subtle differences. But as far as mobility goes, tele really wins and board loses miserably, alpine in somewhere in between. I'd really recommend that you to experience all before you reach your own conclusions.

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