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Hornster

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by Hornster

  1. A ski resort in Bulgaria, Bansko, where I have spent a bit of time over the years skiing suffered a tragic avalanche earlier this week. A group of snowboarders and skiers were all caught in what I am told was a massive slab avalanche the day after very heavy snowfalls. Most of them were only partially buried but one snowboarder was not so lucky and was found until the following day.

     

    What amazed me was that the resort had put up warning notices everywhere warning people that the avalanche danger that day was extrememly high and that all backcountry skiing/boarding should be avoided. I suppose that the lure of fresh powder after a long period of no powder proved too much for them to refuse.

  2. Living in the UK, I have been mountaineering in Scotland and the European Alps (as well as bigger mountain ranges around the world) for quite a few years now and have enjoyed many adventurous and sometimes downright "sketchy" routes. Ask any mountaineer why they climb and you are more than likely to get variations of the same reasons:

     

    1) Love of the remote mountain regions

    2) Feeling of achievement and self satisfaction after taking on a route or mountain that presents a particular challenge for them.

    3) That feeling of being exposed in what is often a hostile environment where your skills and ability (or lack of) are being constantly tested with no certain outcome. That fear of the unknown and therefore an unknown outcome. It does get really very addictive after a while!

    4) That rush of adrenaline that is ever present whenever your mind starts to waiver and you doubt your ability to make that next move - FEAR! Fear is always there but an experienced mountaineer can often harness that fear and use it to their advantage.

    5) Getting genuine pleasure out of constantly challenging yourself and testing yourself against what are often personal "fears" and barriers preventing you from taking on a route or an environment that has been "haunting" you.

     

    But at the end of the day it is often the passion and genuine love for the mountains, regardless of level of ability, that keeps mountaineers returning to the mountains time and again. Every mountaineer is well aware of the risks involved and have therefore made a conscious decision to accept those risks. Some more than others. I believe that mountaineers really do have a life wish and not a death wish as many people seem to think. Being 4000m up a sheer vertical ice and rock face will make anyone feel alive - believe me!!

     

    Every mountaineer who has been climbing for any length of time will undoubtedly have either lost a friend or know of someone who has lost a friend in the mountains and it is never an experience that anyone wants to go through, but at the end of the day at least they died doing what they were truly passionate about which is why they accepted the risks in the first place.

     

    To a certain extent surely you can throw extreme backcountry and big mountain skiing/boarding into a similar category, can't you? There have been many extreme skiers and boards around the world who have perished whilst takling some of the worlds big mountains whilst pursuing their passion for what they love doing. Don't they accept the very real risks just as much as mountaineers?

     

    Like most other people, my condolences go out to their respective families and friends.

  3. How many skiers/boarders who ski the backcountry in Niseko actually carry a shovel, probe and transceiver?

     

    I will admit to skiing the backcountry in Niseko last season for the first time and not carrying any of this equipment but I wouldn't choose to do it again. Hence, why I will be taking all this equipment with me this season.

     

    I did notice that there was a lot of other skiers and boarders who were riding the backcountry last season without even a backpack never mind avalanche safety equipment!

    I suppose that it goes back to my original question for this thread..."does it avalanche in Niseko?" Perhaps there were a lot of people who didn't (doesn't) believe that it avalanches in Niseko!

  4. Thanks for the reply Mike and I totally agree with you about the significant achievement should someone be skilled and experienced enough to be awared with a UIAGM badge. I have done a lot of mountaineering in the European Alps, South America, Africa and elsewhere where I come across genuine guides i.e. UIAGM.

     

    I suppose that for the purpose of this thread I am referring to "guides" who are familiar with the Niseko powder locations as well as being a skilled skier with avalanche training and experience.

     

    Is 44,000Yen a fair price for 4hrs of private "guiding"?

     

    Thanks again.

  5. For someone who considers themself not to be a specialist in this field you certainly seem to know what you are talking about. Thanks again.

     

    What I enjoyed about skiing in Niseko was that there is just so much powder in the in-bounds off-piste areas that there is honestly no need to duck ropes to ski powder. I tend to get up early with the first gondola etc so I always get first tracks everyday. I suppose that if it is fresh tracks that encourages people to duck ropes then the simple answer is to get up earlier!

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