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Blair

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by Blair

  1. Hi there

     

    Thank you very much for all the questions. I'll answer them in random order:

     

    1. ARAI will open on the set date of Dec. 14th;

     

    2. I have yet to try boarding, but do ski throughout the season. I ski either when I'm helping to guide guests or assisting the ski patrol with setting up the mountain following a big dump (All hands on deck!);

     

    3. ARAI gets so much snow because it is a coastal mountain. The Siberian winds blow off the sea, hit the mountain and dump on us. Thus, it was necessary to build the only heated plaza in the world;

     

    4. In 2001 Kogenashi # 1 lift at ARAI was closed for that white season due to some subsidence appearing around the No. 17 support tower of that lift. The situation was remedied by driving approximately 100 hollow iron bars of 30 meters in length into the area concerned. These bars were then filled with concrete. Though the process took approximately 6 months, there has been no further subsidence since then; &

     

    5. ARAI switched the lift tickets for the exact reason mentioned earlier in the thread. I apologize for any inconvenience this type of ticket causes our guests, but such action was necessary to avoid asking paying guests to pay more.

     

    Thanks again for reading the setting journals

     

    Blair.

  2. Hi Rach

     

    The devil is in the details.

     

    There are different types of insurance for different resorts. Some policies do not cover personal liability while others do.

     

    If the accident occurred at ARAI and a report was filed with the patrol, then personal liability as well as injury insurance applies. If an injury results in hospital admission, there are also funds available to cover daily costs at any hospital in Japan.

     

    The manager that explained this to me said that of the 600-700 resorts in Japan, only 20-30 have coverage such as that explained above.

     

    So, the answer to your question depends on where the accident you are talking about happened.

     

    Thank you very much

     

    Blair.

  3. I'm very happy this subject is continuing to be discussed.

     

    One of the last things I want to see again in my life is a partner of somebody who skied out of bounds and did not come back. The survivor not only has to try to come to grips with the fact that they'll be going home alone, but live the rest of their life with the unpleasantness surrounding the situation.

     

    One of the key points mentioned in this forum so far that ARAI agrees with is that industry standards need to be implemented.

     

    We have gone so far as to organize conferences of the world's avalanche experts in Nagaoka, Niigata Prefecture.

     

    From the Nagaoka conferences, we adopted and implemented clear guidelines for all patrollers to wear avalanche beacons, and to carry shovels, probes and first aid equipment among other items.

     

    You can see in the photos posted in the column concerned that Ko-san does have a shovel. Please kindly trust that he also showed me all the other equipment mentioned above as well and has it with him at all times on the job.

  4. Thank you very much for reading the article and discussing it. I've felt for years now that we need more dialogue on the issue.

     

    Please understand that there are some mountains that you can safely ski out-of-bounds, and others where you cannot. ARAI is a mountain where you cannot safely ski out-of-bounds.

     

    Imagine the feeling of going to a ski resort with three friends and returning only with two. Also try to picture what it would feel like knowing that your intentional action had harmed others.

     

    Is endangering the lives of others really worth it?

     

    Blair.

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