Jump to content

samurai

SnowJapan Member
  • Content Count

    992
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Posts posted by samurai

  1. I had two of mine removed last year, here in Japan, I'm in my 30's.

     

    My dentist novicaned me up, pushed my tooth out, packed it with gauze, charged me 3000 yen (insurance paid more), and I never experienced any pain or troubles. I was quite shocked at how much it wasn't actually troublesome.

     

    I have to have my two lowers removed too, as they are hard to keep clean. I'm not sweating it at all.

  2. I was playing some Oakenfold from Oslo Norway several years ago in my mom's jeep. It was a trancy cd, but quite mellow and not very housy or bassy or hip-hoppy. She compared him to a modern maestro the way he integrated sounds together into a compilation. I quite liked that analogy.

     

    Many techno-heads who are much more into electronic music than myself may not be a huge Oakenfold fan, but he is in the guiness book of world records for being the world's most successful DJ. whatever that means. Nonetheless, I dig it. I think he also did the music for the Matrix. (but I'm quoting someone else's words there.)

     

    I don't like clubby, bassy, housy, heavy trance. I like precise sounds nicely integrated that build up to a climax over several minutes. I also like wondering what in the hell made that sound. I like how it's often difficult to identify. (unlike bassy yada yada.)

  3. as stated by a famed aussie running a hostel in hakuba (not fattwins, though I'd bet they know each other. Nor do I think this aussie is on this board, maybe I'm clueless.)

     

    "Poaching, getting caught, losing your pass, buying another, and repeating that process ten times a day is still cheaper than heliskiing."

     

    It seems the banning thing is new this year. Maybe patrol did that in the past as well. but, my take on it two years ago was that many tourists were/are given the above advice.

     

    Sorry your BC access is getting threatened FT.

  4. I wasn't even talking about the gaijin card.

     

    I don't often see many people poach dangerous avi lines at zao. There just aren't that many. But when I do see them hop the ridge and drop into one specific area of gullies and steep walls, they never cut their entrance. They just duck the rope, and hurry up as not to get caught by patrol. They really have no idea how to safely enter lines like that. They think it's the same as going under the chair.

     

    Not looking to argue with anyone, just stating common behavior I witness in the avy-naive when they're poaching lines. and, that's what I meant by "text-book" (trees and lift lines not included.)

  5.  Originally Posted By: SerreChe
    Rutschblock.
    It is great to see responsible people able to say no to an inviting line when the conditions are not right. That is one of the hardest things to do.


    And, even harder?--- is dropping into a line you cut, that didn't rip. I fricking hate when it's supposed to rip but doesn't.

    I'm sorry, but this thread is kinda textbook.

    "Flick-off the patrollers, they're gay... yet I know nothing about snow myself... What do you mean 'cut'?--- you mean the rope?"

    (The point of this post is that I've never seen a poacher cut his line.)

    Just saying...
  6.  Originally Posted By: Fattwins


    Ive heard that some people were even told never to return to the resort as they skied an open face that couldve slide onto the whole resorts beginer area.



    I know FT is schooled enough to understand how flawed this mentality is, but I'll just reiterate it.

    How can they ban a skier for putting beginners at risk because the resort is too lazy to control that avi hazard themselves? If there is any risk to beginner areas, it should be controlled, regardless of whatever dimwit dropped into that line and "threatened" the beginners.

    Surely that snow can slide without the contribution of a dimwit triggering it?

    resort practices in this country piss me off. The same situation exists at Zao. There is this huge face of 100-year slide paths right above a beginner area at Zao. (paradise) (100-year slide path means a slide path that only rips every hundred years, during huge storms, ripping the trees out of it. They are easily identified due to the lack of growth while surrounded by heavy 100 year-old growth out of the path.)

    Yet, patrol never does any recon in that area. If it ripped from a big cycle, it would take out an entire piste area below. Yet, if I go in and control the smaller slabs to prevent the buildup that would result in the bigger slide, I'd get my pass pulled. Somehow, (kind of a shoganai mentality) the patrol can say it won't be a risk to the public if nobody touches that snow.

    amazing.
  7.  Originally Posted By: Go Native
    Being a passionate proponnent of sceptical and incredulous thought I am the enemy of all those who believe in the supernatural and so called pseudo-sciences. So I will happily battle anyone who believe in ghosts, god(s), psychics, horoscopes, numerology, etc, anytime, anywhere. I think it is the duty of all of us who have any shred of rational, sceptical thought to battle the ingnorance, naivety and stupidity that constantly surrounds us.


     Originally Posted By: Bushpig
    lol.gif Hang on! Then was I talking to a ghost in Hakuba over new years?? shifty.gif


    You guys should hang out sometime. \:\)
  8. Ironically, I read something on CNN talking about how Monday the 21st of January was supposed to be the most depressing day of the year for people... based on various statistics such as; holiday debt, weather, etc. I don't remember all the variables, but it was fairly well organized.

     

    I only note this because my Monday did in fact suck. So did my wife's- but we wrote it off as both being capricorns and being forced to experience our first monday out of our lunar cycle. (December 22- January 19th)

     

    I feel much better now that it's friday and tree season has arrived.

  9. I have a couple.

     

    A- Although she never cheated on him, I took his girl. he threw a rock through my window. I challenged him to a fight. I realized he was bigger than me. I backed down. He was man enough not to kick my ass. But I still hate him for throwing a rock through my window. It would be tense meeting him again. (His girl was lame, too.)

     

    B- He used to brag about being the most hated man in Yamagata. He was my roommate. I guess he's not technically my enemy, being as I never did anything to him. But I fricking hate that guy with a very strong definition of hate. Years down the road and I'm still surprised that people like him actually exist amongst society and aren't just made up in fiction. Other people in town have asked me if I have started the book yet. He would make a good book.

     

    I guess I don't really have any enemies, just a couple of people I hope to never see again...

×
×
  • Create New...