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olivermauss

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by olivermauss

  1. Anyone read Dogs and Demons by Alex Kerr? Good for long time residents, bad for newbies...

     

    Pretty indepth analysis of some of the reason behind all of the $%ed up spending in good ole Japan. You dont have to gree with everyting he sez, but you can certainly see where he`s coming from.

  2. I've heard the stories, been there once and was majorly dissapointed by the short steep section at the top and then the long flat ride back to the gondola.

     

    What gives? Do I give it another try? It Asahidake one of those "awesome on a blue sky, fresh dump day but crap on a cloudy/snowy day" mountains?

     

    TRying to sort out my boarding life in 2006 and would love to add some fresh lines to the repertoir...

  3. Ditto on Kicking Horse. Still trying to finagle a trip to KH in FEb with the boys, but the birth of my second son is making that a littel bit difficult logistically. Ive skied in several places on the west coast including Whistler ans this time chose KH becuase I hear that the powder and dependability is comparable to Niseko which is my stomping ground. Plus you have cat skiing helibaording and tons of offpiste so ive heard from people that swear by the mountain. Coming from Japan is also realtively easy if you fly via Vanc, transfer to Calg and then car it the 2.5 hours from there....

    I think key is to get a guide for a day or two. Generally speakig the cost is negligible if you spread over a few guys/gals and they will show you all the good stuff right off the bat, so you dont waste half youre time there fishing around. Plus its safer. Defo get your helmet, beacon, shovel, snoshoes, probe, walkie/talkies polished before you go tho methinks.

  4. Also if you go to stay overnight, stay at the sangorogoya at the top. Cheap, decent food, run by a gaijin/japanese couple who are pretty cool, plus you can go out at night and build jumps on the slopes right outside the lodge without people bugging you....

     

    Ive always had lots of fun at Zao, not too much off piste although it can be had if youre willing to hike a litte and duck a few ropes. If youre a bit of a speed demon, you can defo have fun as long as you stickj to the runs that drop you back in town and not on the back side of the mountain which I agree is flatish...

  5. @ iambenw

     

    You need to take the #3 ropeway, go left out of the peak station, all around the hill, pass under the gondola and then takes the closest bee line that will take you back to the bottom station of said gondola. I cant remember how long it took us to do this run but it was between 5-10 minutes. If you do it right(i.e. dont stop) your leggs will be shaking seriously when you hit the bottom and there will be more adrenaline coursing through your body than you know what to do with...

  6. Bubble or no, more gaijin or no, i think we gotto do something. I like the transition between last addrenaline fuelled run to nice cold wet one, to food to onsen. The last part is what needs to get EXPORTED, in my opinion...

     

    What i really miss tho in Niseko is that the restaurant at the top of the Alpen quad used to have tables outside on nice days. Guess there werent many takers to make that a regular event.

    Too bad. I could think of lots of places where they could do that, Alpen hotel at the bottom of the quad, that littel funky restaurant half way up the Hirafu side underneath the gondola.

     

    Which reminds me, does anyone know if they still serve the excellent kaniramen over at the restaurant in hanazono(bottom)? Since the take-over, I understnad there have been some changes... That was one of the places where at least you could enjoy an outside lunch in Feb/Mar which was key in the pre-"lets segregate those people that want to smoke actively versus those that are forced to smoke passively" days.

  7. Anyone ever stayed at the J-First in Niseko? They have a fantastic deck outside their caffe that accomodates about 100 people. Anyone familiar with European apres ski will agree that that is seriously lacking in Japan(i.e. a place either indoors or outdoors where throngs of ski/boardwear clad people congregate to have all sorts of spirits and talk about the days adventure from 4pm all the way to dinner time). Ive organised a couple of hot wine/beer parties out on said deck later in the year when there is still some sunlight at the end of the day and they are a lot of fun. So, "my point is", i'll be doing it agian this year and would love to see some of you guys there, or join forces with other like-minded members....

  8. Ocean11, I'm a humble man by nature, dont like to get people to excited. I've been boarding Niseko every year for 7 years. In fact last year I didnt go to any other mountain. Looking at the total package (snow, terrain, weather, lodging, access, price, entertainment), its numero uno in Japan, and seriously outranks some of the larger resorts in Europe and the US, in my humble opinion.

    I know that opinions differ, but try getting run after runof untracked, champagne-esque powder 3 day weekend after 3 day weekend in any other resort in the world... Rather a difficult task.

  9. Agreed, if it snowed lots and there is a danger because they havent been able to get the cats out to groom stuff fair enough, then open the lifts once everything is prepared and safe. As for closing stuff after big dumps in Europe and the Americas, can t speak for Canada but I can for Europe and the US and I dare say I cant remember many days when they shut places down and didnt open for the rest of the day due to consecutive days of snow. Im not talking about freak storm that dump meters upon meters of snow. Generally speaking in Europe at least they groom slopes from 5 pm onwards AND do it again in the morning if it snowed really heavily over night. This is even on top of the glacier resorts where it snows quite a bit.

    My point is that in other parts of the world, the resort is there to a. make money, b. keep people happy and skiing/boarding, and they do that by doing everything possible to open up the mountain. In my humble opinion, thats not the case in Japan, at least not at Naeba.

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