Jump to content

axellieb

SnowJapan Member
  • Content Count

    24
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Posts posted by axellieb

  1. Dusty- about the Camelback. I have one that is designed for wintersports (as opposed to cycling etc) and the tube has frozen up occasionally. You can pack in a small chemical handwarmer or such somewhere along the tube as well as the bag, that will keep things liquid. And if you fill in hot tea or such, naturally it will take longer until things freeze up. I usually by a couple of hot tea cans (green tea) from the ubiquitous vending machines and pour them in the Camel.

  2. There is a contrarian opinion out there. Run a Google search on Leonid Kuzmin. This guy published a doctoral thesis on his investigation of this very question and he answered it with a resounding "No". His wife even won some Olympic medal without wax. The argument is that P-Tex is already the perfect surface to glide on and does not degrade. Wax, on the other hand, degrades quickly and also may retain dirt on the surface of your board, thereby slowing you down. Apparently, the manufacturers of P-Tex confirm this and have been doing so for decades. They have nothing to gain from this financially since wax sales do not impact P-Tex sales. Wax manufacturers' very existence is obviously threatened by this opinion so they have every incentive to suppress this and ridicule it.

     

    I really don't know what to believe. So I will put it to the test this season. I will try to compare without (first) and then with under as equal conditions as I can get them. I will measure temperature and I will time myself on the same run several times each. If the difference is minimal or even in favour of not waxing, then we might as well save ourselves the hassle.

  3. Hehehehehehehegggghhhh!!

     

    Originally Posted By: Oyuki kigan
    Originally Posted By: Youdy
    Watashi wa baka na gaijin!

     

    i see.

     

     

    Quote:
    Which way to the terrain park?

    shoshinsha shamen wa doko desu ka?

     

    Quote:
    Any cliff drops we can check out?

     

    Onsen ni hairitai kedo, hadaka no mama wa hazukashii wa

     

    Quote:
    That was steezy!

     

    tofu ni butsukatte shinjimae!

     

    Quote:
    Which run has some nice kickers?

     

    Omae wa chikusanjo kara nigete kita no?

     

    Quote:
    When are you gonna come for a ride?

     

    teashi no waza wo oshiete kurenai?

     

     

    You can thank me later

  4. One other thing. You do understand that Sakaya is fullboard, yes? Every morning and evening you will be served a full scale course menu that begs to be accompanied - in the evenings! - by beer, sake and shochu. (Note: try the horse meat sashimi!) If after that and a hard day of riding you are still capable of venturing out to town and yet again next morning be up in time for the best snow then you must have an enviable condition. What you may want to do is see if you can be accomodated half-board on a couple of days and use those for your excursions to town. As well, unless you know what Japanese traditional breakfast is like and enjoy it I recommend trying to get them to serve western breakfast at least on a couple of days. Both requests will meet with resistance but you can usually get your way if you - very politely - insist. Best to do this now through your travel agent.

     

    Also, note, Sakaya is an upscale place so partying on the room is frowned on. Tokyo, on the other hand, is definitely the right venue for all your escapades.

  5. I have been to both more than once. In my humble opinion, Niseko wins hands-down. The two don't belong in the same category, again imho. Where to begin? Niseko is glorious, grand. Myoko is "merely" a good resort of several of its kind in Honshu. The choice of restaurants and accomodation in Niseko is far larger and better than in Myoko. As has been mentioned, Niseko is an international resort. I am a fairly fluent Japanese speaker (I have lived in Japan for 11 years now) so I don't need the English language access but I enjoy the international atmosphere in Niseko immensely while in Myoko I found it hard to amuse myself at night. Really, no comparison. If you want a Honshu resort that can hold its candle to Niseko I would recommend Hakuba.

  6. Between Sapporo and Niseko / Rusutsu there are no toll roads (except maybe around Sapporo for a few kilometers). Between Sapporo and Furano there is a stretch of expressway you could use but it's not that long either. Rental cars often have a ETC device installed so you can slide in your own card. HOWEVER, all ETC cards I know are based on a credit card that is issued in Japan. You need to ask the credit card company to issue the ETC card to you. I just tried to find some info on the 1000 yen offer but I cannot find anything (and I do read Japanese).

  7. Originally Posted By: hknz
    I refer to this turning technique "when going toe to heel lift the front foot toes whilest pushing on the back toes and when going heel to toe do the oposite. ie push on the front toe and lift the back toes."

    So, i guess the technique you mention would be only suitable for softer board and without upper body rotation. it would more or less induce counter-rotation.

    correct me if im wrong.



    I guess you are asking soulboy, the poster of this, but I think you are right. At least this wouldn't work with stiffer boards unless you want to use a lot of force. I prefer to minimize the strength I have to put into anything. If anyone wants to use this technique, I recommend lots of resistance training for their tibia in the gym to prepare their muscles for this.
    Not too sure if this induces counter-rotation in itself.
  8. Originally Posted By: soulboy
    Interesting post. Actually I was taught about upper body and foot work. I am guessing by foot work you mean stuff like "pedaling" ?

    I was taught to when going toe to heel lift the front foot toes whilest pushing on the back toes and when going heel to toe do the oposite. ie push on the front toe and lift the back toes.

    Cheers


    Not exactly. The book I mentioned teaches to exert pressure on four imaginary points on the board (basically the four "corners") not to lift your heels or toes. You can read up on this here:

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2002/feb/16/wintersportsholidays.wintersports.france
  9. Errr... not too sure what you mean and not too sure why you apologize. There isn't any fundamental contradiction between what I reported and what GN says (except - possibly - for my assertion that Nozzie is safest). I reported my personal positive experience with Nozzie and I don't see the data GN posted contradicting that experience. What GN points to is snow depth which certainly is a good indicator but given that this is Japan where absolute snow depth rarely is a problem, I think that my point - risk of rain fall - is a fair one. GN's data don't say anything about that. What good are 200 cm of snow cover when it's raining cats and dogs?

  10. Two separate issues here. The first thing is that some small ryokan owners who do not speak English are simply imagining that foreign guests will mean trouble. Could be that they cause trouble because they don't know how to behave themselves (and then can't be told what the correct behaviour is) or could be the other way around that the ryokan owner feels he can't adequately serve the foreigner because they can't communicate. And both things can indeed apply.

     

    Second thing is the question of foreigners generally being rude etc. I talked with a *western* hotel employee at a Hakuba hotel last year about this. He had just recommended to the management to ban all Russian customers from the hotel. There had been multiple incidents where specifically Russian customers had behaved in ways that were totally beyond the pale. Russians were also the reason for the Otaru Onsen incident, I believe. What is the onsen management to do if repeatedly foreigners totally spoil the onsen experience for the majority locals? I can understand the defensive reaction. My personal observation is that Asians make the greatest effort to blend in. Aussies are somewhere in the middle. But truth be told, most misbehaviour I have seen in Aussies I have also seen in Japanese (being loud, getting in the ofuro without first showering, being totally drunk in public etc).

     

    Is that now a reason why foreigners shouldn't try their best to be considerate and polite? You decide for yourself. I, personally, go out of my way to impress the locals with impeccable behaviour. It is the right thing to do anywhere in the world. So it is in Japan.

  11. >As usual we shouldn't take one persons one or two experiences as a good indication of average conditions.

     

    True, of course. What I'd be interested to know is if there is any place that is safe from rain in late Dec and Jan. This was a problem in Niseko and Kiroro several times while I have never had that problem in Nozawa (at least not in the upper parts of the mountain). Furano perhaps?

     

    >Furano can often have better early season cover not because of altitude but because it is a bit further north and colder.

     

    You are right. I thought Furano was higher than Niseko but it is actually pretty much the same. I wonder why it's colder there...

  12. I am an intermediate-level snowboarder. I have learnt snowboarding mostly from Japanese instructors. They teach you to turn using upper body rotation. Having read up on this a bit it seems to me that this method is outdated and being criticized for the instability it introduces. Only French and Canadian instructor associations still seem to teach this while American, Swiss, etc associations teach making turns by working solely through your feet. There is a book by Neil McNab, a former British snowboarding champion, that illustrates this foot-dynamic approach very nicely. Does anyone know of specific instructors in Japan that could help me develop the right footwork? Any AASI or Swiss instructors around? Location is not important as long as they're in Japan.

  13. Over the last three years I have each year gone to Nozawa Onsen for a couple of days of early-season riding and things were always good. The snow was terrific, the weather beautiful and very few people there. I think Nozawa is safest in this regard. Only a limited selection of slopes is open before Dec 23 or so though. Good for a fun warm-up but after a couple of days it gets boring if you are more than beginning intermediate. By the way, at that time of the year the village may not have any snow and instead be subject to rain showers. But not to worry: just a few meters up in the gondola and you're in winter wonderland. Niseko, Kiroro and adjacent areas in Hokkaido are less safe in Dec/early Jan - had some rainy days there. Furano and Tomamu may be better due to greater altitude.

×
×
  • Create New...