Sorry for the lack of updates recently, I’ve been in Michigan exploring West Grand Rapids bars for the last 3 weeks.  But Wilson recently moved up to Alaska since Utah doesn’t have any snow, and the conditions are seem best described as incredible so there should be plenty to come soon.  We finally got out today , despite the cold temps, and it was incredible.  A binding failure kept us from going exactly where we’d planned, but the day was incredible none the less.

I’m still to cold to really go on much longer, but the video bellow should make clear that Davis Creek is skiing really really well, hopefully we’ll be able to report on the rest of the range soon.

Thanks to veterans day, and a series of storms blowing through, I’ve spent the last 3 days doing nothing other then ski powder and watch football.  My progarm has been as follows.  Leave home each morning before the sun is up, spend all day swimming in the snow, a nervous drive home (today the car in front of us lost a wheel, etc.) in the dark followed by lounging at home, eating some pizza, and disinterestedly watching football.  Friday I went up Eddies with Max and Mikey, and returned there again on Saturday with Andy.  Friday was pretty deep, and it continued to snow through that night and all day Saturday, so both days were deep and wet with lots of faceshots.

Today, Andy and I were headed back to Turnagain and the sun was coming out, we really couldn’t believe our luck, but once we got out of the car at Sunburst we instantly noticed the wind, which battered us all day.  It was also worth a laugh that after cruising past and overflowing Tin Can lot, Keille and friends were the only people parked at sunburst, and the next 3 cars all contained friends of ours whose first words were to remark on the crowd at tin can.  It made for a kind of a class reunion fare as everyone caught up after the long off season.

So we headed up Magnum and braved the winds, which were of the super nasty sustained type, with gusts to 40 or so as well. As predicted they torched the snow in places.  Luckily, Davis Creek is small and somewhat sheltered, so after a turn or two we found some extremely nice powder.  I’ve only got a handful of pictures from today, with the heavy snow friday and saturday and the intense wind and cold today weren’t very conducive to picture taking.  I also set off a non consequence windslab lower down by slashing on the crest of wind loaded gully.  Picture bellow.  Oh, and I have to mention Jamie Pierre, RIP.  He’s made an appearance in each of our full length films, and talked shit to all of us back in the Utah days.  Very sad news.

On Friday, while struggling to find anyone who wanted to ski, and reading the weather forecast calling for sunshine and extreme cold I was bit worried I would spend the day fighting the urge to quit early and go warm up.  Well a late night call from Paul solved the issue of having no ski partners, and when he showed up at Tesoro with a team of hungover but extremely motivated future doctors set on turning as many laps as possible, an early retreat for the warmth of the car was never a possibility.  The skiing yesterday was nearly perfect, making me glad to have put in a long day, with hardly a breath of wind, cold slow sloughing snow,  and decent stability (at least on our laps) made for a perfect day.  Like a free agent (or Damphousse) I swapped teams throughout the day and kept being rewarded with perfect runs followed by more perfect runs.  Anyway, due to the big day the video bellow is a little longer then usual, enjoy.

 

On Saturday with the wind ripping Charlie, Max and I headed up Cornbiscuit, dropped into the third north facing shot and scored some turns on some windcrust before heading up Magnum, randomly meeting 6 or 7 other friends,  and finding excellent snow on the southern aspects making for a fantastic day (whew long sentence).  Due to the abrasiveness of the weather I had minimal expectations for the day and yet at the end of it found myself driving back to Anchorage absolutely thrilled with the days events.  The wind did a number on my ears, but there was still plenty of good snow and everything worked out.  There must be something about the smallish shape of Davis Creek that helps resist the wind because this is the 3rd or 4th time that going in there on a super windy day has paid off huge.  Anyway,  enjoy the video bellow.  Also, make sure to read my childhood ski buddy Ben Nobel’s article over at Mystery Rants.


I feel like I’ve posted the picture above a couple hundred times around these parts.  I used to stare at the peaks in the background amazed, it seemed so vast.   Now  with a bit more knowledge less so, but  it doesn’t quit bringing a massive smile to my face.  Today Hunter and I cruised up Magnum, it was a mellow afternoon session marked mostly by my skin failures and Hunter’s first day of the season exhaustion.  Standing at the top of Magnum for a good 30 minutes with the golden horizontal sunlight was the best thing I’ve done in months.   The days are getting shorter, but the long sunrise to sunset light is as beautiful as ever; I’m so relieved winter is back.  First video of the year bellow…..à demain.

Wilson and I headed back to Turnagain today without a clue as to what we were going to ski;  since we weren’t at all clear on what the weather was going to do to the lovely snow we enjoyed yesterday.  The further we drove from Anchorage the more holes appeared in the clouds, and we ended up going up Magnum, partly because a women had cut a good deal of the skin track on her way up Sunburst.  It was fairly easy getting to the top, but once there a large mobile home sized cornice broke off  a couple feet to my right and both Wilson and I became a bit nervous.  Walking the ridge was a fair bit worse then normal, but we made it to the later spines pretty quick.   They both skied fine, but were reactive in obvious areas, you can see a picture of our tracks here.  We skied back to the car, but with the light improving we went up Sunburst for a sunset lap, bumped into Graham and Jeff and finished off the day.  I got a some video again today, I ended up crashing at the bottom of my line so it makes for some good comedy.

The skiing has been so good lately I’m really at a loss of words.  After spending the week up in Hatcher with some fantastic light powder, I’ve gone down Turnagain the last two days and the weather and snow has been fantastic .  Saturday I went up Magnum with Hunter (who took the photo), Sue and Walter.  We found some perfect dense powder that didn’t show the faintest trace of wind.  I was still a bit shocked at how well the new snow had bonded to the buried crust so didn’t push it to far and settled for skiing from Magnum into Davis Creek where we found the baby beluga untracked.

I’ll have more tomorrow on today with Jimmy in Peterson Creek, my internet is slow and I can’t upload anything currently.  In the meantime if your bored you may enjoy some pictures that have me craving a couple days in the Pyrenees, oh and add Japan to the list of necessary ski trips.  And this article on the growth of electronic lift tickets and the corresponding increase in fraud is good, but I always thought the point of the new tickets was that it’s easier to scam. Oh, and we’re not the only ones enjoying the pass.  A demain…

from magnum looking towards sunburst

Yesterday afternoon the sun peaked out in Anchorage for the first time in 8 or 9 days and I was instantly excited about the chance of skiing in something other then stormy weather.  After spending the week working I had little choice but to take friday off and go skiing with Graham.  We started out on Sunburst where the snow was a little wind effected but good cruising.  From there we cut a trail up Magnum, took a run down the southern side run, I took the Baby Belgua (Vidoe from Piper in 2007), Graham took the Fuzzy Bunny.  There were quite a few people enjoying Davis Creek, and with a trail we headed up for another lap on the sunny side of Magnum before skinning back up for a run down PMS to the car.

turnagain pass uphill

The snow was great, 6″ of creamy powder on top of a the settled 7 feet from the last storm.  Much less wind effected on Magnum then Sunburst.  There were quite a few natural slides visisble that must have cut loose durring the last storm but everything seemed stable where we were.  It seems only weeks ago I was constantly angry and frustrated with winter’s slow start, and now it seems like february; cold and plenty of snow.  The alders are gone, confidence is growing, and with a day of high speed turns and short spine runs I’m extremely happy.  But no video, that will have to come later as I left the firewire cable at work (typically) and don’t really feel like hunting for another one.

Tuesday, after skiing Tin Can Proper, while Graham and I were sitting around drinking beer, someone mentioned how it was nice that a storm was coming, as it’d give us a couple of days off.  Everything was skiing really well at the time, and I was a little afraid another storm would mess everything up; but I was exhausted and some rest did sound really nice.  Well the storm came, and I took two days off.  I watched a bunch of soccer, and ate a lot of bacon, things were good.  The initial reports were that the mountains had received a mere three inches, nonetheless I was anxious to get out and see how things were doing.  And now I’m looking back fondly on those couple of down days, as after the last 3 days I’m again exhausted.  

Hunter and I took the dogs up Tin Can Friday afternoon, once Hunter returned from a job interview.  We saw the cars of both Graham and the Hope crew in the parking lot, but didn’t see anyone we recognized on the way up.  The dogs are both getting a lot better at skiing, and Hunter, while skiing with Walter, is a mustache away from being Scott Kennett.  We found a lot more than 3 inches, up top the wind had wiped some of it into deep drifts, but generally things were covered by about a foot of featherweight  snow. 

Saturday I woke up to the sound of my phone ringing, eventually I got my act together and began stumbling around my room looking for it.  At least half an hour passed before I found it with a text message from Graham saying “Get Up, It’s Sunny!”  I thought about that for a moment, then looked out the window and realized that it was, in fact,  sunny.  I’m still adjusting to waking up after dawn.  By the time I called Graham he was already on his way to Hatcher Pass, so I woke Hunter (who was sleeping on the couch) and soon the two of us were on our way towards Turnagain.  It was bright and sunny along the arm, but climbing the pass we were met by light fog.  We skinned up Magnum, emerging from beneath the fog as we gained the ridge, and slowly made our way towards our lines, soaking in the afternoon sunshine.  No one had put a track down what we wanted to ski, a pleasant change from last weekend.  I was shocked by how deep the snow was when I dropped in, the cold had kept it from consolidating, which allowed me a couple face shots along the run.  I filmed Hunter’s turns, my hands burning from the cold, I really need to learn to work a video camera with gloves on.  We didn’t stick around long, Hunter’s skins were failing in the cold, we’d attached them with zip ties from the start, and as we began to feel the winter chill of inactivity we weaved or way through powder and alders to the car and headed home.  A phone call with Graham on the drive set my plans for both the night and the next day.  We decided to take advantage of the conditions,  get up early the next morning, and head for Eddies ridge.

Things didn’t follow my plans for an easy night, getting to bed early.  Kim came over and I was again unable to resist drinking beers and playing PES for hours, but when my alarm went off the next morning at seven,  I felt fine, the whole hiding out in my room while trying not to wake anyone routine was reminiscent of  my working days.  As Graham and I drove along the highway near Bird I remembered that it was Super Bowl Sunday, which was the day last year when we skied Proper on a crowd-free sunny day, and I began hoping for a repeat event.  Again we found the pass to be pretty deserted. I’m pretty surprised about the depth football love felt by the AK ski community.

 The approach went really well as I couldn’t get us lost in the Eddies woods, with the skin track so established from the crowds it resembled an arboreal highway.  We were forced to drink out beers on the upper ridge as it was so cold they were starting to freeze in our packs.  They made for a nice treat as we traversed the Eddies ridge, which is very wide and flat and makes for a great ridge walk.  After 45 minutes or so we reached to a rock we couldn’t down climb, and in the process of finding a way around it, Graham kicked off a shallow windslab.  Our proximity to two tasty spines, combined with the other events, convinced us it was time to descend.  I went first, made my way down the bed surface of Graham’s slab, and found my was into the bowl, before cutting over (photo bellow) to my chosen spine.  The snow was light bottomless powder, sluffing lightly in the gullies on either side.  The apron was covered with half buried debris from the last storm cycle,  but that was only a minor inconvenience.  I slid to a halt, sat on my skis, began fiddling with the camera, and waiting for Graham’s run.  Graham sped along his spine before slamming into an alder at the bottom that didn’t slow his progress.  After a couple rounds of pictures we got started on the slow walk home. We were back at the car around 4, so we took about 6 hours round trip.  Another good day completed, but it’s only a beginning, we’ll see what this next storm does to us and get back at is as usual.

 

Interesting stuff on my down day

Hunter and I went up Magnum and took a run off the south side towards Davis Creek today.  The snow was light powder (5 degrees today) that wanted to blow overhead, and it sluffed just a little.  Playing with ridges and rocks in deep snow never gets old.  The picture bellow is of Hunter’s and my turns, he’s to the left, I’m on the right.  More thorough reports coming once the goodness subsides, which could be soon, we may get buried in ash, and it.  Too bad I won’t be enjoying any Roquefort during the down times either

neighbors

neighbors

Seany B has has rented a large log cabin, with Matt, in Hope for this winter. I had the opportunity to check it out for the first time this weekend.  Sean was in town getting groceries, and his brother Kyle, so they picked me up while I was playing PES with Kim on their way to back last thursday.  The cabin is in a large open yard, with a huge front porch, a lofted second story and an open main floor.  The place is decorated with trophies, a small black bear above the staircase, a couple of Dahl sheep, and an upstairs closet full of caribou antlers.

  We spent the first day talking to the neighbors (a subaru mechanic with chickens, a hunting guide with tales of their landlord) before gathering and splitting fire wood. We skied for the following 3 days.  Our nights were pleasantly slow, we spent them in front of the wood stove eating large cabin worthy feasts, or catching up on some much needed reading. I finished Speak, Memory and loved how the book’s memory enhanced tales of rural aristocratic living in northern russia, along with my thoughts and love for Sawkaw (that lasagna and sap smell), complimented the nightly Hope cabin surroundings; among other things.  Tuesday morning, with the peaks along the highway glowing in a predawn heliotrope color, I was sad to be leaving, despite feeling content with the past 3 days of skiing and knowing I’d get some more later that day (video of that soon).

Seany Bs tele turns

Seany B's tele-turns

Outside of marveling at the suns slow slides across the souther horizon that cast deep blue shadows across the souther faces and setting the rapidly glowing surface whore aglitter, or at stupid stuff like the way snow clings to my skis, the theme of the days was seeing people we know. The first day we saw Graham and his friend’s on Corn Biscuit before bumping in to Max and Hunter while making a couple runs in the clouds on fast easy surfing snow.  Saturday Kyle and I were shocked, initially by the crowds skiing Magnum’s south aspect, and then by the fact that we knew 75 percent of the people responsible for the tracks.  Despite the crowd we bagged a great lap on gold pan just before dusk (colored in winter’s arctic sepia I read Nabokov yearn for).  Sunday we saw Sean’s friend Megan with Scott – the kid that once described my roommate as a small jawed scruffy kid in a U of U class ski class trip – while on our way to Super bowl.

Monday we had a flawless day for skiing Super bowl, it was cold,  both cloudless and crowd-less, which allowed us to take our time while enjoying the sun on the way up.  The rocky ridge walk before the top was worse then I remember, the snow was sugary and unsupportive,  I was gasping for rocks the entire way.  Sean was a good sport and went first.

After taking a couple minutes up top to figure out exactly what was and was not a cornice, Sean let me go first.  After a quick ski cut I skied and obvious chute and found silky powder with no sign of a bottom.  Matt followed, and Sean, going last, took the ridge.  Towards the bottom he tried to take a similar line through the rocks as he did last year, except this time he got a little confused and went over a 15 foot band of rocks he didn’t see coming.  Other then scrapping his poles on the way down, nothing came of it and he rode away clean.  A quick skin from there put us on top of Corn Biscuit, which allowed us to take another steep shadowy north facing line on the way back to the car.  More to come, with some cheesy and excessively long video at some point in the next couple of days, until then I highly suggest this tale of rural bootlegging.

High winds and periodic snow made sitting in the office all last week painless. With the adverse weather coming midweek I knew the only thing I was missing while in the office was long hours face first on the couch. Friday, expecting our mercilessly random weather to show it’s abrasive side Saturday, or at best leave us with horrible instability, I promised Kim and Max I’d be social, and possibly go out for a change.

Friday night didn’t work out as planned. After work Max ordered “The Motherload” a 256 piece knife set (with 7 Earnhardt switch blades, 12 pearl multi-tools and a broadsword) from that cooky QVC style Knife Show, I always half suspected of being a farce. The thought of a giant box of worthless knives arriving on my door step got me laughing, and eventually drinking Jim Beam. It wasn’t long afterwards, while enjoying my book, that I realized I was reading with only one eye, decided I should stand up, crashed to the floor, and crawled my way to the couch where I passed out face down. I woke up hours later, it was still dark, but conveniently, thanks to our far western timezone, was able to turn over and catch the Michigan game halfway through the first quarter.

Sunbursts Wasatch impersonation

Sunburst's Wasatch impersonation

As that started to turn ugly I slowly became distracted by more urgent and less depressing concerns, like the level of sunshine in Turnagain Pass or whether Somali Pirates are rum drinkers. Max called, just as I’d seen evidence of sunshine in Portage, saying he was at the shop buying some AT boots. He’d woken up next to a loaded .45, decided to get new boots on the drive home (a full 24 hours of impulse shopping) and would be ready to go in an hour. I got started on lunch (we bring food now!) while watching Real Madrid crumble against Valladolid.

Despite the dire avalanche warnings the pass was absolutely slammed with people, in a typical early season fury that will hopefully die down once Alyeska opens and distracts most of them. Max and I avoided Sunburst, with it’s Wasatch like crowds, and headed up Magnum, where there was a skin track, but only 2 sets of turns. We didn’t see anyone going up, but were able to watch the ant farm like chaos on Sunburst, as groups of black specks climbed and descended from the ridge.

We took our time up top, dawdling around, checking out a fallen cornice that survived the summer and eating smoked salmon burritos as the sun sank. We dropped off the south western side of Magnum into Davis Creek and took advantage of the nice new snow, that was a light fluffy 18″ with a delicate wind crust which was detectable with a ski pole but became imperceptible once moving. The surface hoar was glittering and the snow died in a warm twilight orange as we descended toward the creek, before working right towards the car. We found a decent path at first, but as we got lower we ended up in a full brown bear style thrash through thick alders that had me wondering if Max’s new knife set included a machete while laughing about the people that would follow our idiotic path looking for an easy way out. We hacked our way out just before dark, and headed back to Anchorage hoping the sun would hold for Sunday.

looking towards Davis Creek just after dusk

looking towards Davis Creek just after dusk

I’d like to say we returned for more on Sunday, but despite another lame early exit from the night’s events (again face first on the couch), Max ended up blacked out, banned from all downtown bars, and eventually in handcuffs at a lame discotheque. Charlie’s warnings of thick fog kept us rooted at home, passing the day with books, talk of Kim’s new Russian woman and hours of PES before being nursed to sleep by the some Italian soccer. More to come real soon, winter is just getting started.

Friends Update:

  • It looks like winter has come to Montana and that Bo is taking advantage.
  • A loyal reader and ex-Utard steered me towards this post. So I guess Alta has opened for the season. The true gem though is this photo which was described to me by the reader as “typical of what happens when you combine a luger, a slutty skier, and the boredom Utah.” I laughed, but will abstain from commenting.
  • Some people enjoyed themselves on Tin Can this weekend as well.

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