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tripler

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by tripler

  1. Can you get to the top of the mountain? "Now" page says:

     

    "Operations at Naeba and Kagura will be as follows:

     

    Naeba:

    - Prince 2 Gondola and 5 lifts.

     

    Kagura:

    - Mitsumata Ropeway

    - Mitsumata No1 Quad

    - Mitsumata No2 Quad

    - Mitsumata No2 Pair

    - Kagura Gondola

    - Kagura No1 Quad

    - Kagura No5 Pair lift"

     

    But reception at Prince Hotel said only 10% is working at the moment. Is it worth hitting up Naeba this weekend?

     

    Thanks

  2. Originally Posted By: Captain Stag
    Have to go this week or next though or chances of new snow are getting a bit slim.

    We just had a dump last night through till about 10am here in Nozawa. I'm off to hit it now.

    Considering how few people were on the hill this bank holiday Monday, I'll be outraged if I bump into more than 2 punters today.

    This season just keeps getting better and better!
  3. David I hope you won't hate me for saying this, because I totally think you're doing a great job, but sometimes you take people's posts a bit too personally. So he accuses the Now report of lying? So what? If you feel you absolutely need to respond, then just correct him on the facts. Whether he's made inflammatory posts in the past is irrelevant.

     

    PS. I hope I'm still welcome in the office. With so much time off at the moment, I'm planning a visit.

  4. This is a friendly little resort with one 2 man chairlift, which moves damn fast for the benefit of the local ski team who make up 95% of the punters. I was the only boarder and only gaijin. A cafeteria offers the usual Japanese fare. The resort is accessed by a right turn off the main road coming into Nozawa Onsen.

     

    Stats

    Vertical: 200 meters

    Steepest run: 40 degrees

    Tree runs: yes

    Gondola: no

    Lift ticket: 2200 yen

     

    Hokuryuko Onsen's unfettered awesomeness is not at first apparent. First you think, "Like, hey dude, this is just a one horse town." But then you get off the chairlift, bear left, round a few corners, you arrive at the bottom of the slope with another long slope in front of you. And you think, "Hey, dude, why wasn't there a sign saying we gotta hike up the hill to get out of here?" You start walking up, when a voice calls from what looks like a derelict wooden shack. An old geezer comes out, speaking in an unknown language, not using any English words at all. He holds up a metal contraption and points at a wire hanging from a pulley 3 feet above the ground. A little further up the hill the wire sags and is buried in snow. Suddenly - like a flash - you realise this is the long lost nutcracker of ancient times!, as mentioned in New Zealand ski mythology. Then you're like, "Hey, dude, this is freakin' awesome!" The old geezer explains something (you wonder if he might be speaking an early version of Mayan used by the Aztecs in 2000 BC) and attaches one end of the metal thing to the wire and hands you the other end, a handle on a chain, flips a switch and the wire starts moving. Geronimo!

     

    Here's a video of the nutcracker, and a few pics below.

     

     

    tripler_18.JPG

    The nutcracker of Maori legend

     

    tripler_21.JPG

    A friendly little resort

     

    tripler_20.JPG

    A blue plaque cellotaped to the wall acknowledges MacGyver's visit to the resort (note 20-year-old tractor engine donated by local farmer)

     

    tripler_24.JPG

    A ladder, tractor engine and some mature bamboo - and bam! you've got a ski lift. Niseko you can suck on on my pudenda, this is where's it's at bro!

     

     

     

  5. This is the collapsed ceiling of the Nagasaka gondola restaurant in Nozawa Onsen. This part of the resort is currently closed but only requires an easy 30 mins hike up snow mobile tracks to access the runs under the gondola. A further 10 mins hike gets you to Skyline.

     

    tripler_16.JPG

     

    Earthquake damaged Nagasaka gondola restaurant

     

    tripler_17.JPG

     

    Top of Nagasaka gondola after closure of Yamabiko area of the resort. Restaurant on the 1st floor.

  6. You could check "My Way" on the karaoke machine, it's always on there. I sang it the other day, complete with ad libbed Japanese obscenities, but I can't remember how they spelt it. Though I can't see anything wrong with マイライフ, except perhaps a space between the two words. As someone mentioned above, vertical or horizontal isn't an issue - it just follows the format of the rest of the text. If it's a stand-alone tattoo, either is ok. Personally I think vertical would look better.

  7. I'm riding the silver lining of this mega disaster, and lovin' it! Instead of having to suck my boss's Japanese dick to get a morning off on a powder day, I've got all the holidays I want. Got paid a few days ago, all of which I'll be donating to Nozawa's snack bars and izakaya, in an effort to single-handedly save the Japanese economy in this time of need.

     

    Temperature has plummeted, been snowing all day. Not sure if the powder was Bollinger or Moet, but definitely champagne. No punters to get in the way, still snowing hard; tomorrow should be bottomlessly awesome!

  8. Originally Posted By: JackY
    I'm just scared of the radiation exposure, it appears that it all depending on how strong the wind's blowing and which direction that it's blowing...

    Man up, dude! Chernobyl was 1000 times more intense and went on for months, but the only people who suffered health issues from radiation were those living in the same (small) town as the reactor. Fukushima is 600km (400 miles) from Niseko. The wind can blow in that direction all it likes, it's not going to give you cancer or grow you three heads.
  9. Both gondolas are out at Nozawa, though Higake gondola will be open at weekends. Nakasaka gondola's pylons have serious structural damage and I assume it will stay closed for the rest of the season. Today the top of Challenge pair lift (about half way up the mountain) was as high as you could get, though that still accesses the best runs on the mountain. With a dump forecast for tomorrow, Wednesday should be awesomeliously sweeeto! If, like me, you hate all other skiers and boarders, hit up Noz and you'll have the place to yourself.

     

    I walked 15 mins up the length of Paradise quad (which will open tomorrow) and had a chat with Ski Patrol and the lifties, so this info is from the horse's mouth. Also begged them to take me up the top tomorrow on a snow mobile, and of course Japan's favorite word was used several times - dame! Something about it still being dangerous, yeah, yeah, BS. But if anyone else wants to take me, you'll be 1000 yen richer.

  10. Originally Posted By: iiyamadude
    Been speaking to a few friends in Nozawa - lots of cancellations coming in now.

    A visiting friend said her mother saw on television that one of the Nozawa gondolas fell over. Is that true? I haven't been in Noz much the last 2 days so I don't know what's going on.

    The only damage I saw wondering around early Saturday morning was a broken window in one of the hotels.
  11. I've just felt tremors on the second floor of a building in Nozawa Onsen. Strong enough to wake me up at 4am and topple everything from the shelves and knock over snow boards. Several lesser tremors in the last 20 mins. I've put clothes on so I'm ready to get out if the building looks like it's coming down.

     

    Wow, I didn't know they have earthquakes in the mountains! Though a guy told me he'd experienced one in Kokusai Lodge in Hakuba.

     

    Wonder if this one was the same strength on the pistes.

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