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skidaisuki

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by skidaisuki

  1. How are you getting back from Hakuba? By bus or train?

     

    If you are flying out of Narita, the alternative area to stay would be in the Ginza or Tokyo Station area. Plenty of shopping there, and easy access to Ryogoku (for the Kokugikan, i.e. sumo) as well as all other parts of Tokyo by subway lines and the Yamanote line. It's really up to you, because you can catch the Narita Express from Shinjuku as well...

  2. Thanks, Mr Wiggles,

     

    I know I was being a bit lazy not wading back through all of this thread to dig out the answers... Anyway, I have done Kagura day trips via Echigo Yuzawa more times than I can count, so I know the tricks and exactly how long that takes (our record's about 95 minutes from Tokyo Station to arrival at Mitsumata Ropeway if you catch the 07:00 fast train and assuming there's no taxi queue at Echigo), but I'm really looking forward to the chance to go somewhere decent on the Nagano Shink, which is traditionally a lot quieter than the Niigata.

     

    For those who don't know, Hakuba is really not day-trippable - once you have caught the first bus from Nagano Eki Higashiguchi it will be late morning before you are likely to be on the snow - even if you going to Goryu, which is the first place the bus stops in Hakuba. Taxi is a possibility if you are sharing with others but it won't be much faster and it will be a lot more expensive. Same story for Shiga - great bus journey, but it takes time, and a taxi to the far end costs 15,000 yen, I know this from personal experience.

     

    Should be interesting to see if Myoko or Madarao is realistically worth the effort for a day trip. Maybe. If only Karuizawa had more decent snow and a bigger mountain, I often think. Prince Hotels probably think the same.

     

    SdS

  3. Can anyone tell me:

     

    1. How far is Wakinoda Station (basically where the new shink station is being built) from Myoko Kogen skijo?

    2. When will the shink to Myoko Joetsu open?

    3. How much further in travel time will it be from Nagano (i.e. total travel time from Tokyo - I'm guessing about 2 hours).

     

    Whatever the case, with an early enough departure, you'll be able to do day trips from Tokyo.

     

    Thanks!

     

    SdS

  4. Who cares whether it snows more in Tokyo or not? I never ski in Tokyo...

     

    I have no idea what this winter holds, but I do see that this thread has turned into a debate on climate change rather than the specific predictions that I always enjoy thinking about at this time of year.

     

    Snowdude's prediction is completely unsubstantiated and if it happens to agree with what the Met Office is saying, then that's mere coincidence and nothing to do with practical observations.

     

    At times, most Japanese resorts will be epic this season. Gear up to get out there, I say!

     

    SdS

  5. Wow, look how my thread has grown !! Nice to see it's still going now winter HAS arrived - and what a winter it's shaping up to be...

     

    Got my first turns for the season at Kagura on Sunday. It was still a bit shallow in places, but the weather stayed cold and it snowed throughout. I'm also thinking of going again on Friday, but will leave the decision until Thursday. I love the place, but it's a drag on windy days when you make it over to Tashiro then you immediately have to turn back because they start closing lifts. In previous years, we've avoided having to take the "wrong" ropeway down, but it's bound to happen one day.

     

    New year will be spent at Alts Bandai for a couple of days at least - anyone been there yet? Then, whatever I can get away with in Yuzawa / Shiga / Hakuba on January weekends until we get to Hirafu at the beginning of February.

     

    Bring it on, bring it on, bring on all the snow that the Siberian powder factory can possibly throw at us.

     

    Enjoy

     

    SdS

  6. It's true that Japanese hotel breakfasts are massively variable. Often you get a western style buffet breakfast, but it's more about bread, eggs and salad than about the traditional western meaty staples or cereals.

     

    The traditional Japanese breakfast is usually grilled fish (especially salmon), rice and miso soup. Quite a healthy choice, but can be a bit on the light side in advance of a morning's skiing.

     

    Watch out for salarymen drinking bottled beer with their breakfast - quite a common sight, but still does my head in.

     

    SdS

  7. Beg your pardon, David. I must've been mistaken, but I thought I looked the other day and the mid-mountain Niseko cam (close to the King Triple) wasn't being displayed. I assume it's back up now. That's the really interesting one, of course, because it's a lot higher on the mountain.

     

    Going through and checking all those webcam links - and finding new ones - must be a big job, but I know that a lot of SJ visitors really appreciate the effort.

     

    Keep up the good work, and I'm looking forward to seeing the pre-season Now reports re-starting in earnest.

     

    Cheers

     

    SdS

  8. Keep us posted, GN!

     

    Have been keeping an eye on the weather charts, and it looks like a good strong, cold north-westerly airflow over Hokkaido for the first half of the coming week.

     

    I suppose the snow won't hang around, but it'll be good to see some on the ground in Hirafu before November.

     

    On that subject, have you any local webcam recommendations? The Niseko Now! ones seem to have changed...

     

    Cheers

     

    SdS

  9. minamax 10,

     

    I agree with the balance of opinion above. Hakuba's the obvious choice in terms of access, variety of places, to stay / drink / soak in onsen. Skiing for 2 weeks in Hakuba is plenty of skiing, and trying to find other things to do for 2 weeks for the non-skiiers is a big ask, even if you can arrange transport and they like onsens / Matsumoto Castle etc.

     

    I would advise 2 options, either:

     

    A) Persuade them to try some gentle skiing if they're up to it;

     

    B) Suggest that the gramps (or the whole family) cut back on the skiing idea and do some other sightseeing in Japan (Tokyo, Kyoto, Nara, Hiroshima etc.). A 1-week JR rail pass plus a week in Hakuba or Nozawa. Ideal.

     

    If I didn't ski, unless I was accompanied by an incredibly hot lady I think spending 2 weeks in a ski resort would be my definition of hell, even with onsens and bars to go to...

     

    Cheers

     

    SdS

  10. At least in Kanto, we have another 5-6 days of this heat level, if not more. The evenings are getting perceptibly "cooler" - cooler meaning not quite as unbearably hot as before, rather than actually cool - and then we'll see.

     

    Usually in the second half of September and early October we start to get that nice balance between warmth and freshness, but this year, when this weather cracks, I guess it's really going to crack big style.

     

    Only the likes of GoNative would have the data to tell us how hot summers relate to winter temps and snow volumes in Japan. Usually such things don't correlate in any simple way, or we'd all be weather forecasting geniuses.

     

    No reason why, if the winter weather pattern sets in early, we can't have an early start to the season regardless of the average summer temps, I guess.

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