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miyahara

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by miyahara

  1. Apologies if this has already been discussed in a forum elsewhere (I've searched, but no joy), I'm wondering if anyone has any advice for a monolingual ski bum seeking work near a Japanese resort next winter.

     

    Currently I'm commuting to Hakuba every weekend by bus/train/bicycle from Saitama Prefecture, and as much as I love my white weekends, the 14-hour round-trip commute is draining my budget and patience. Next winter I'm dead keen to work at or near a resort, doing English teaching/bar work/cleaning/whatever, but my Japanese is at a painfully basic level. I've seen plenty of foreigners working around Hakuba, but their Japanese is pretty good.

     

    Is there any hope for a monolingual?

     

    Cheers

    Caroline

  2. I was on same course, I definitely recommend it if you want to do any backcountry at all (even just ducking under the ropes!). You're right Kumapix, the highlight of the course was the instructor (Dave), he really knows his stuff. If I'm in the area next winter I'll be doing the advanced course for sure.

     

    After the first day of the course I remember thinking "Beacon? $AUS500? I don't think so!" But after digging around for the beacon-less person on Sunday afternoon, I was converted - your only real chance of surviving an avalanche burial is if you've got a beacon.

     

    Since doing the course I look at the mountain a different way now, it's not about "where is the best snow", it's "where is the most stable snow". I can't believe the stupid risks I was taking before the course - I had no regard for avalanche safety at all. Avalanches aren't a big concern in Australia cos our snow is kinda poor, but out here you need to be alert.

     

    Cheers

    Caroline

  3. I've just lost the usuals - goggles, gloves, watch, all through my own stupidity.

     

    During the last days of spring I've seen people at Mt Buller (Australia) walk up slopes to scour for lost items under the lifts (cash, mobile phones, jewllery), cos most of the stuff is lost when you're on the chairlift. Hey, whatever floats your boat...

     

    All my belongings are now tied to either me or something else (goggles tied to my helmet, gloves with straps that go on your arms etc), I haven't lost anything for a while now. Comes in handy when you have a big stack too - no yard sale.

  4. Hell no, the season so ain't over.

     

    Sure, the powder days are finished and there are rocks and dirt popping up everywhere, but we've still got another good month left.

     

    It's all about the slush/sun/kickers/pipe now. This is my first season in Japan and I must admit that I was completely spoilt by the regular dumps of powder earlier on this season, but the snow now is still better than most of what I've ridden in Australia.

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