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hem now

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by hem now

  1. miteyak,

     

    in response to your question, there is nothing wrong with movign the bindings back a tad for pow skiing. Gives better float.

     

    In Australia its no biggie, but given your stats I'd be worried having a 180 in Japanese powder. I am 175cm/80kg, and would not ski on anything less than a 180 in Japanese pow - otherwise tip dive would become more of an issue. You've got another 18kg on me, so don't go too short! This is less of an issue with Garmonts and Crispis, but more of a problem with scarpas.

     

    crazyski, I've been teleing a while now, I'd like to think I'm reasonably proficient, and buggered if I can tell the difference between a tele ski and an alpine ski. Dimensions, stiffness and length are all of course factors that help differentiate between different skis, but if you gave me a whole bunch of tele and alpine skis with white topsheets, and asked me to do the Pepsi Challenge, I reckon I'd be stumped. Personally, I buy my skis based on colour. cool.gif

     

    hem now

  2. Miteyak,

     

    when I first went to my Head Monsters (old model, about 117-84-??), I had very old T1's. The skis rocked in the pow, but I felt were too much on the groomers.

     

    I was then given a pair of newish bumblebees, and ohmygod the extra stiffness the boots gave me really did help drive the ski so much more. I became more of a driver rather than just a passenger, and was able to control the ski so much better.

     

    So my answer is yes!

     

    I have since bought a pair of Big Stix 106, and they rock in the pow too - although I'd rather have something a touch narrower on the groomers. Not a one-quiver ski!

     

    Hope that helps,

     

    Hem now

  3. Jared,

     

    yep, it was 199 soldiers that died. 11 lived, and only 3 of those had nothing amputated.

     

    It is still the biggest mountaineering disaster in the world, even some 90 years later!

     

    There is a dinky museum in Aomori with photos and stuff. For anyone using the ropeway, there is a photo of the soldiers at the top of the stairs just before you get in the tram.

     

    hem now

  4. Hakkoda is my local hill, so I feel I can prolly offer some comment.

     

    Danz, when you came to hakkoda, I didn`t know the hill that much better than you guys, and at the time I was inclined to agree with your comments. However, after a season, your perspective changes a bit.

     

    One thing I can`t disagree with is the flat comment. It doesn`t matter which run you take, at some point it will be flat. Once you come to accept this, its OK - you are only disappointed when you have expectation.

     

    So is it flat everywhere? No! OK, so it ain`t Corbetts Couloir or anything, but there are alot of great pitches on the hill, you`ve just got to know where they are. I didn`t when Danz came, but I do now, and man they are fun!

     

    The weather? I`ve had about 50 days on the hill so far, and only had wind hold once. Kintaro, not saying you`re wrong, just saying you`re unlucky! Of course it is often windy, but usually its from a direction that doesn`t cause a problem for the lift (ie parallel to rather than side on).

     

    The visibility is a problem, but once you know where you`re going, the trees provide some depth perception. Of course the drifts and tree wells are an issue, but thats half the fun!

     

    So anyone who comes to hakkoda, please bear a few things in mind - a)don`t judge it by the two official courses - the best stuff is under the ropes, B) accept that you have to deal with a bit of flat somewhere c) stick to the trees in white out conditions.

     

    I felt like Danz at the beginning of the season, but I have grown to fall in love with this place. For all its quirks, there is a lot of good powder to be had!

     

    Hope this helps anyone thinking about paying Hakkoda a visit.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Hem now

  5. iggy, how far is Hachimantai forest from Appi?

     

    Jared, nope Hakkoda wasn`t as good as the previous week, not by a long shot - but I`m still happy to say I skiied powder. Sure, you had to sniff it out (which wasn`t too hard), and yep, the bottom was goopy, but anything which faced northish was pretty fine. Wouldn`t call it sketchy!

     

    Hopefully this snow we`re getting at the moment in Aomori will be a decent dump at Hakkoda - the longer we can stave off spring the better!

     

    Cheers,

     

    hem now

  6. Hey Ray,

     

    will head up Friday, maybe tomorrow if I can scam something, but the weekend is out - some buddies have free accom at Appi and I thought I`d check it out. I`d actually rather go up to Hakkoda, but am curious to see somewhere different.

     

    Don`t worry about transport doing the backside - just hitchhike, it isn`t that difficult! The Japanese seem pretty happy to pick people up.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Hem now

  7. Steeno,

     

    rope ducking policy varies from no enforcement to violent assault. POw is best in Jan and February, steepest runs and tightest chutes are probably Nagano backcountry (looks like Valdez!), but avvy danger always present. In general, though, Japan is pretty flat by Euro and Nth American Rocky standards - but the pow more than makes up for it!

     

    As for tele comps, festivals - none that I know of, but there`d have to be something somewhere, I guess? Try posting on www.telemarktips.com, thats the definitive international telemark website.

     

    Hope that helps!

     

    Hem now

  8. Steeno,

     

    from what I can gather, Niseko is the ducks nuts. There are also heaps of freeheelers here in Aomori, but we have a woeful selection of equipment to choose from. The few guys I tele with rip pretty hard. Hakkoda has heaps of backcountry with one hut, but only recomended for March-June, otherwise the weather sucks too hard.

     

    Warning - the pow is non-stop - bring some fat skis otherwise you`ll be tip-diving til the cows come home!

     

    Hope that helps,

     

    hem now

  9. I don`t resent boarders at all, most of my best days on the hill have been shared with boarders.

     

    However, its hard to dispute the fact that on their heel side, boarders have less peripheral vision than skiers. It isn`t hard to imagine that collisions towards the heel side would be more likely than if the person was a skier. Not trying to be a high and mighty skier here, just looking at the physics of it.

     

    On the other hand, boarders have a better view towards their toe side - maybe they have avoided accidents which a skier wouldn`t have?

     

    Don`t flame me for this, I`m not anti-snowboard - I`m just looking at the realities.

     

    Cheers,

     

    hem now - who has prolly been hit by more skiers than boarders.

  10. seanbird,

     

    you`d have to be a masochist to spend a week in the Hakkoda backcountry!

     

    I`ve been here all season, mostly skiing the hill. I`ve been backcountry twice. Whilst the terrain is awesome, the weather is a beyatch. If you fluke a bluesky day, you can go for a day trip, but the chances of having even 2 days in a row of visibility are super minimal - so far this season I don`t think its happened.

     

    There is a lodge at the base of Odake you can stay in, or camp. If you go for a week, I guarantee you`ll spend at least 5 days sitting inside, bored off your nut, cos the visibility outside is 2m and you`re afraid of getting lost.

     

    If you wait until March or april the weather is more conducive to backcountry. In the meantime, I`d stick to the lift. There`s plenty of turns to be had!

     

    Hope this helps,

     

    hem now

  11. Ah, db, someone who understood my post!

     

    Jared, I wasn`t taking you literally, just trying to make a point. Maybe I`m way out of line, but I sensed an air of condecension in your post, that anyone who hasn`t been doing this for years is somehow inferior. Sorry if my sarcastic response was either not understood or misplaced. Without the benefit of body language, alot of communication is lost!

     

    cheers,

     

    hem now

  12. Ah Nekobi, you`re making me jealous! I`ve always wanted to go to Madang - oh well, maybe next time.

     

    At least people have showers on the coast. The highlands are too cold for it, and goddam, don`t you know it when you`re sharing the cab of a truck with a guy on night shift, the windows shut and the heater on full bore...

     

    What is hamamas?

     

    hem now - likem iu, nating tru, 96.5 Iume FM, Port Moresby

  13. hmmm, I`ve seen a few wearing them - but when I think about it, it is certainly no less than the number of gaijins wearing them. I`d be reluctant to make any comparisons.

     

    If I was (like most) Japanese and spent most of my time on relatively flat groomers, with no trees, few moguls, not much ice, and not hitting many jumps, I`d be tempted to not wear a helmet too. It just doesn`t seem that dangerous. I know it can be, but unlike steep gnarly treed runs with cliffbands, there aren`t too many "danger will robinson" signs flashing in my head when I`m on the groomers.

     

    hem now - who prolly should wear a helmet

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