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Stuntcok

SnowJapan Member
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About Stuntcok

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    SJ'er with 200+ posts
  1. THe most common cause of falling out of a chair lift is the act of putting the "safety" bar up or down. This is especially the case for children.
  2. The terrain it accesses is more dangerous than the lift. If you are not comfortable with the "sligshot lift" don't get on it. The reason it is a drag lift is because wind issues would keep a chair down more often and the reason it is fast is because it is a steep ride and would make for a difficult t-bar ride. That lift is in Chile, not Australia and we can only thank god that the Andes (and the Alps) are not in litigious countries.
  3. This is all I could find. You hit speeds that would ve compparable to bombing a green run.
  4. The top of portillo is serviced by a drag lift. It is like no other drag lift I have seen. Like a tram there are two lifts, one going up the other down. It is like a large tbar and 4 get on at a time and then it shoots you up the mountain at a really high spead. It holds the record for highest speed drag lift in the world, it is also one of the steepest drag lifts I have seen. It is almost like skiing up hill. There is no proper exit at the top so right after unloading you are already on the pitch and skiing backward. The lift and the terrain it services are for experts only and it is s
  5. I assumed he meant snoblades, where a misty would be possible. On a snobike, I would be quite impressed. The funniest thing I saw on snowblades where at the Saitama water ramps. This guy was launching off the big kicker with snowblades and a jump rope. In the air he would " jump rope" as fast as possible. That is something you can do on blades that you can't on skis.
  6. Sounds like a misty 540. Anyway, it is impossible to make snowblades look anythhing but awkward in the park. Every year at the whistler freeride camps on the glacier at least one person drags up a pair for a laugh. Everyone has a go on them and the carnage is quite fun. Due to terrible fore and aft control, slow speeds and no pop they are very limiting in what you can do. Without long skis to balance rotations, all the balance during a spin comes from the upper body. As a result, you never see a nice, steezy spin with a solid landing but a lot of flailing and a survival landing. I don't
  7. I have never been to Alts Bandai but looking at their webpage it seems they do put a lot into their park. What else is around there? If it is just park, then it is kind of a waste to come to Japan where the BC and powder skiing is so good. Nowhere in Japan that I can think of has good both but if you had a car you might be able to pull it off in Gunma, where Tenjindaira has good sidecountry and there are nearby resorts that specialise in parks. Otherwise I would recommend Hakuba. The parks are small and crowded but still better than Niseko's limp parks and the BC riding is second to none.
  8. THere are decent small parks. There is no equivilent to the big parks found in places like Mammoth, WB, PArk City, etc. Nothing even close, actually. The same goes for Europe though. The best parks are all in the US and Canada.
  9. I think you will find that ski industry jobs pay a lot less than their equivilant in other businesses. It is simple supply and demand. For the same price I would soooooo much rather be a marketing director at Niseko than a marketing director for lion toothpaste. The two salaries will diverge until they find equilibrium. BTW the average household income is over 4.m yen in Japan, average salary is 3.6m.
  10. Joetsu's pro park that holds the Japan open is good but the day to day park is poorly maintained. They have 2 pipes but they don't grroom them enough. Naeba's park is smaller and the pipe is on the other side of the mountain but both the pipe and the park are well maintained. They even have kiwi diggers from Snowpark (who are skiers so the rails are more ski friendly with less aggressive ollie on's ect). In the area, Kandatsu's small park is amongst the best maintained but there are no huge features. Okutadami is the area you will find the Japanese pros when they aren't in whistler or Mam
  11. Wiping out in the water is the point. Wiping out on the inrun sucks. Use your board and then try a big corked spin, the resulting crash will be amusing...
  12. Sorry, of course you can do it on a snowboard and the issues are the same. Use old equipment if you can.
  13. You can rent everything but it is nice if you have some of your own gear. You need a wetsuit, even if it is warm as it protects against bad splashdowns. You need a helmet as well. Ski helmets are a bit warm so many use skateboad helmets but it is best to put tape around the earflaps to protect against water slapping your ear on a side landing. A life jacket is also a must. In Japan, they almost allwear board shorts or even ski pants over the wetsuit to not look so soy. You also need gloves. Old spring gloves or even just auto work gloves are fine. Then you need ski equipment. I u
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