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AK 77

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by AK 77

  1.  Originally Posted By: tsondaboy
     Originally Posted By: dwh
    Or are Japanese trees not worth worrying about :)?


    Would you ride this without a helmet? \:\)
    tsondaboy_141.JPG


    Yes.

    But that is beside the point.

    This has discussed in previous threads many times... have a search and get everyone's experiences (hint - nobody is going to tell you to ride without a helmet!) of helmets / which helmets fit and work best.

    More to the point... you say you want a helmet due to 'the amount of off piste in Japan'... well, there is off piste everywhere (heaps more in USA/Canada/Europe) so as well as a helmet consider your abilites and the wider safety issues of riding 'off piste'.

    Other than that, have a nice trip.
  2.  Originally Posted By: Stuntcok
    A bad type II took me 4 weeks until I could get on skis and about 8 until I could hit kickers etc. There was a psychological recovery that took months: everytime I landed an air, I would stomp but only with my healthy right foot. I did twice weekly physio for my recovery. A type III will have you gone for the season. Good luck


    I agree with this timescale, perhaps even a week or two more, from experience.

    I have sprained my ankles numerous times from skateboarding, so didn't think much of another Type I sprain last November 23rd - indeed it was such a nice day, I just sucked it up and kept skating for another hour. It was a stretch, rather than a tear, and had no swelling, just light bruising of the outside ligaments.
    I only gave it 2 weeks rest, and then powder started falling.... so of course it tweaked again jumping off cat tracks into the powder.... so now it has 90% healed after 8 weeks, instead of 100% after 4 weeks.

    Give it time to recover... but if you want to ride hard, then give it about the same again to strengthen enough psychologically trust that ankle.

    FTs advice of coming in March is a great idea - good chance of powder, better chance of sunshine, fewer people on the pistes. Great time to visit, if you can.
  3.  Originally Posted By: al from scotland
    First of all, thanks everyone - some good suggestions there!

    AK - i am mates with some lecht regulars - Jamie Reiach for example, he has a 2090 tattoo which is pretty much as dedicated to the lecht as one could possibly get!!
    Gimme some names and ill let you know...Im not big into it on account of the lecht is shite, but i do try and go up as often as possible. Prefer glenshee - if they could lift the park from 2090 and chuck it at glenshee, i would be much happier.
    I know boys who work in Boarderline, one of my good mates Andy used to work there so i ken those boys ken. Braaap.


    Small world, eh. Jamie Reiach is a ripper for sure. I know him, Sketch, Pete Wier and Craig Howie, and some of the Hillend boys from a summer spent on the bristles there, and heard about the other rippers at the Lecht from my mate Matt Hines from Stonehaven, who I did a couple of seasons in Bourg with.

    Are you coming up to Hakuba for a shred?
  4. No overnight trips.

     

    Kit-kats are lovely with a cup of tea (there is even talk that you can bit both ends of a stick and suck tea up through the wafer in the middle), but i'm afraid snickers (or Marathons, as they should be called) kick their ass outside.

     

    Dave sleeps in the day. He is part cat.

     

    I was wearing (at rest): Helly Hanson, Microfleece, mesh body, synthetic packable hooded insulator jacket, shell jacket, down bodywarmer.

    No pink. But my boxers were light blue with silver mizutama all over.

     

     

    Heaven helps those who do some work instead of piddling around on the internet all day.

     

     

    PS> FT - I'll get you the low-down on the interview format / last year's questions tomorrow.

  5. Single's lines? How many Japanese resorts have them? They are a N.American thing, I think - hardly ever see them in Europe (but you can snake the ski-school gate if you are feeling naughty).

     

    I am over it. Queuing in France has it's own downsides too.

     

    It is a good example of the relativity of manners within a country - plenty of manners here are based on not inconveniencing others, yet that is exactly what people do when they so socially backward they can't get on a chairlift with other people.

     

    It doesn't go for everyone - I totally understand families want to go up together, and will happily drop back / shuffle people in the queue to let that happen. It's the people who want to take pair lifts on their own 'cos they are 'Enryo sugiru' that piss me off.

     

    Ha ha. I am clearly not over it.

    Oh well, worse things happen at sea.

  6. Hello 'al from scotland',

     

    Good list there already, add maybe.... go to a 'maid cafe' and watch the 'otaku' (nerds obsessed with manga / anime, etc) in Akehabara in Tokyo (no sexual aspect to those, despite amazing maid outfits - apart from in the imaginations of sad nerds who go there).

     

    ... go shopping for the cheapest random bit of techno-tat in the same district, at night.

     

    ...staying in a love hotel is also great - very kitch - especially the cheapest ones that haven't been renovated recently.

     

    Go and look at the monkeys in an onsen - if you are in Nagano.

     

    also:

    if you can, find out if there are any local festivals on in whereever you are going, at that time, and go to those / local shrines.

     

    Tokyo disneyland is only crazy as in a waste of your time in Japan.

     

    go up the metropolitan government building in Tokyo at dusk and have a drink and check out the view.

     

    Lots of onsens.

     

    Wander down some side streets and see what you find.

     

    Buy the cheapest thing you can find in the poshest department store you can find, and say it's a gift, and watch the amazing wrapping skills.

  7. There was a big slide on Norikura, above Tsugaike, (presumably) on the morning of Monday 14th January.

     

    Click on Hakuba Daily Report for the info.

     

    It was not triggered by a human, and didn't hit anyone, as it probably went off first thing in the morning, but it was big - 200m wide at the top, and funnelled down through a quite narrow run-out for nearly a kilometer, all the way to the flat you exit over, near the hut.

     

    It's the slope you can see from the valley.

     

    Windslab on rain crust on lee slope, so be careful on South (and East and West) facing slopes in Hakuba for a while.

     

    Be careful on North facing too, as the N faces of Happo looked totally wind-scoured ice/rain crust.

     

    Be careful crossing the road too, though, whether facing North or South.

  8.  Originally Posted By: Creek Boy
    whats her level of English? that school means nothing to me. is it considered good? Their Eng dept looks mediocre at best judging from the 5 or 6 Q&As they had posted.

    can she hold a conversation in Eng mate?


    CB - It's a pretty good school, the second best in Matsumoto, but it also has an 'English Course' where they have more and higher level English classes (similar to some of your thematic classes, for example, on environment issues). This has a separate entrance interview with a Japanese part, and an English interview - about things like what they have achieved in their school life at JHS.

    This English Course is pretty hard to get into.
  9.  Originally Posted By: Fattwins
    What questions do you guys ask at high school enterance tests BP and cb?

    Have to do an interview today with a student and would like some hints.

    she wants to go here
    http://www.avis.ne.jp/~agata/


    Is she applying for the English course there?
    I did some mock interviews for that last year. They followed a set pattern, but I can't remember off the top of my head what they were (*wear a helmet, people*) but I think I can help you with this. I'll ask my colleagues.
  10.  Originally Posted By: thursday.
    Well this is not the fault of the lifties. I was in the singles line at King 3 hooded no less. I walked towards the chair and the couple in the queue did not want to get on. They did not like me. So I ended up going alone in a 3 seater hooded. Nice.......


    That is the fault of the lifties. In countries where they have singles lines, etc, the lifties CONTROL the queue, not just thank it for being there. It is the job of the liftie to tell people to get on, if they are hanging back and causing delays, just as it is their job to stop people trying to get on when there is no room!

    This would actually give them something meaningful to do, rather than just repeating unnecessary greetings which must be a form of brain damage.
  11.  Originally Posted By: Fattwins

    kumapix_191.jpg

    kumapix_189.jpg


    Great pics and even better lines - I love the shot of the long track, and a nice air over the bushes and rock.

    Can't wait to see Kuma's pics he's kept for himself too!

    That is a fun zone - and hit on a perfect day by the look of it.
    I was in 47 park that day, having a day riding with Oyuki.... it was fun, but somehow doesn't compare! Ha ha ha.
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