Jump to content

Greenroome

SnowJapan Member
  • Content Count

    236
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Greenroome

  1. Originally Posted By: Soft Landings
    You can get a K winter pass that from will let you access Rusutsu Resort, Sapporo Teine, Sahoro Resort and Nakayama Toge Ski Area.
    Not a bad range of options if you are based in Sapporo!

    K winter pass


    Does anyone know what this year's earlybird price for the K Winter Pass is? From the Kamori website I can tell that it's available from the 1st of October to the 16th of November, but my Japanese is shaite and I can't read the price. Anyone?

    Any general info on this pass would be appreciated too. I plan on using it for Teine until mid-Feb, and then hitting the road and going to Rusutsu and some other hills for the rest of the season. Would I be taking too much of a gamble buying the pass just to save money when I haven't tried Teine or Kokusai and don't know which I prefer?
  2. Originally Posted By: tsondaboy
    I am able to catch shoulder size waves on a longboard by now, but I could not catch a single wave all weekend on the shortboard (5.8).
    You'll need to take off later and steeper than you did on the mal, Tsondaboy. You can get a bit of a boost by jamming the tail of your board underwater into the base of the wave face before you start paddling. Tricky, but worthwhile. Once you've perfected it, you can even catch the odd wave without paddling - handy after three hours when your arms have turned to jelly but it's too good to go in.
  3. Originally Posted By: Ezorisu
    Originally Posted By: Greenroome
    Been beautiful sunny 27 most days here in Sapporo, with warm outdoor evenings that I would easily trade Perth's (West Australia) summer evenings for.


    I don't know about that - it was overcast and rainy for the past several weeks in Sapporo until the beginning of this week...
    confused


    Rainy? No. There were showers and it was overcast at times, but I've ridden to work 9 days out of 10. I haven't bought a travel card for about six weeks. The showers have rarely lasted more than an hour.
  4. I'm not joking, folks here in Sapporo seem to start getting edgy if there hasn't been a festival for a day or two. I recently thought I'd made it through a day's riding around without riding into the middle of festival, and then I turned a corner and rolled straight into what appeared to be a fire services festival. It had extendo-ladder rides for the kids, 'see if you can hold on to this high-pressure hose' challenges, 'try and light these flame-retardant babies clothes' opportunities, and a jazz band smack in the middle of it. The winner for me was the smoke alarm demo tent. I was ushered into a tent filled with dry-ice smoke, screeching smoke alarms and an unknown number of other people. Visibility was zero so I was encouraged on my way in to clap my hands so that I didn't bump into other distressed fire victims. I would have gladly obliged had I not been pissing my pants laughing...

     

    Around the next corner was four closed-off streets worth of street-drinking and eating - a rehearsal for the real Susukino Festival, apparently. Sapporo, as I said, is ace.

  5. Originally Posted By: Tubby Beaver
    I'm maybe not being clear about what I mean. So I won't try to muddy the waters anymore, but the fact is I don't believe in this "offsetting" nonsense that has sprung up. Give us extra money so yo can feel less guilty about the pleasures you take part in....screw that!!

    I like meat


    I offset my flight in May from Oz to Japan through Greenfleet. I paid about 40 bucks and they organized some cubs or girl guides to plant a dozen mixed-species native trees on degraded saline ex-farmland for me, thus re-building habitat for struggling native fauna, removing my CO2 from the atmosphere (over the life of the planting) and increasing awareness of the issue in the community.

    And you say 'screw that'? Yeah, real nasty conspiracy...
  6. There's no way I would set foot inside a fake skiing joint unless they gave me an independently verified guarantee that 100% of their power comes from renewable sources. Same goes for wave pools, fake kayaking rapids, and (if the global warming predictions continue getting grimmer and grimmer) maybe even nighta.

     

    It's gonna be tough enough breaking our fossil fuel habit as it is.

     

    Apparently the dudes in Perth, West Australia are gonna use renewable.

  7. I miss swinging the axe too, Soubriquet. I love it when you really hit the grain you were aiming for and the round splits so easily you could have used a quarter of the force and still aced it. And then there's the challenge of choosing an entry point to split a round with a nasty knot through it.

     

    Unfortunately, in Mama Bear's neck of the woods (my home town too), the burgeoning population growth has seen a ban imposed on the installation of any new wood combustion heaters. Won't stop me and my axe - I'll be moving to a village on the south coast on my return. Nothing like dry split jarrah...

  8. I'll bet you're glad you're going to Thredbo second, not first, Mama Bear. Check out the news story called 'Unreliable snowfalls prompt business rethink' on Page 2 (july 7) at:

     

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/video

     

    (apologies for this not being a direct link - I'm getting used to a Mac. What I wouldn't give for a right click)

     

    Along with woeful images of grassy pistes and exhausted snow-making machines, there is some classic archival footage of sixties cats grooving in the chalet by the fire.

  9. Being from Perth, I know what you're talking about, JA. Travelling to snow is a big deal and that's why, for the third time in my life, I'm here in another country getting ready for a season. Short trips leave me stoked but longing for more. Snow is far more important than career for me. And seeing first snowfall right through to Spring slush is a beautiful thing. I think that's what Charlotte is talking about - a whole season.

     

    My main aim is not to blow my money before the season ends, so that means backpackers, supermarkets, buses, shoe-shines, in-store appearances, organ sales, book-signings, card games and other degrading alleyway tricks. The only places I've come across that have cheap food, accom and transport are Furano, Niseko, and Asahikawa (which sounds like a big industrial town). So I think I'll go for a month in Furano, and a couple of months in Niseko. Like Mike Pow said, there's a reason Niseko's so popular.

     

    I'm thinking of staying at the backpackers in Annupuri. Might be a bit more laidback than Hirafu.

×
×
  • Create New...