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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/18/18 in Posts
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Grand Montents today, I’ll let the pictures tell the story. It’s still nuking. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk8 points
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7 points
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Great groomers this morning. Some runs closed because they blew a ton of snow. Good for them. Moderate crowds. Blue skies. JADIP.5 points
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Teacher's sometimes good, too. Had midterm exams today, so I was done at 10:30 but hung around for free lunch. Am at the bar at the valley lodge now waiting for the shop to adjust my RTMs to my boots. Me and Salty: RTM Squad.5 points
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5 points
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Perfect conditions today, corduroy packed powder everywhere except Tunk is being allowed to bump up for first time this season. Lots of smiles today.. Sent from my SM-G930V using Tapatalk4 points
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Nothing says good seafood like a buffet in Wilkes barre! Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk3 points
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The only thing that took off from that was the Med-Evac. Every single year.3 points
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Not as awesome as being there at 8 but still the best conditions I have had at Blue this season and no lines, so no complaint. Had to wrap up work stuff before I could take time off. Better late than never.3 points
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3 points
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Obviously. I’d take a junk pair of skis to ski on a road too. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk3 points
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2 points
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That last picture reminds me of the scene from Beetlejuice when the food comes to life and grabs everyone's faces2 points
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There are no experts.....well extremely few and they are far greater skiers then we could ever hope to be. That said way to get your dick wet, this was probably a good introduction to a much larger world...........whatever you do don't fight the pow rather you must flow with it. It's like sailing, you can't change the wind so you gotta change your sails.2 points
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only if they close it for the college race teams first. I don't think we're gonna be hitting any gates this week. we'll prolly be lapping paradise, NM-DW, Switchback, and Razor's.2 points
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It wasn't about the skis getting messed up it's that the person fell face first into snow covered rocks..for low tide conditions like that you'd want to be light on your feet with s flat ski and sort of hop around and he carved his edges in like he was in a perfect turn clinic with Salty.2 points
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Buoy buoy buoy buoy poppin’ everywhere, poppin’ everywhere, I found you, big snow buoy. Get it together and bring the snow to me. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk2 points
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2 points
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You just don't get it. Slow lifts are to skiing what waiting for a good wine or scotch to age. They build anticipation. https://live-large.com/blogs/news/ode-to-a-lift Skiing's not all about the vert., the lift ride is part of the experience.2 points
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I'll take it for -$5.00. You give me the sticker and $5.00.2 points
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Salty you'll likely be some sort of low intermediate for a couple seasons unless you take lessons.2 points
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Went to Les Houches today with the guide, had a coffee to start the day off then rolled down for first tram. When we woke up we did not think skiing today was going to be an option, the wind was ripping and very gusty in town, by 830 it had calmed down significantly and by 9 it was pretty much still. Did a few laps with solid over knee turns and it was easy to link knee to waste deep turns together. It continued to snow all day and it just kept getting deeper and better. Our guide kept showing us to new zones and more deep turns, we generally skied the trees and lift lines. The snow was overall pretty light at elevation but you had to watch out for the snow snakes towards the village. We had lunch around 1, followed by a few more knee deep plus turns and finished the day off with a beer in the village with the guide. It is still snowing a bit and should pick up overnight for more good turns tomorrow. We only paid for two days with the guide but he said he will follow up for the rest of our trip and give us weather updates and a plan on where to ski daily. The guide was well worth the money, he was a super cool guy and and absolute ripper. Having a few beers at our place now and about to go get some food and a few more beers, it’s karaoke night at an awesome little watering hole we hit up on Sunday night so we may head there for a bit. Again I did not get many pictures maybe justo will post some, he has some good shots. Little stream crossing towards the base Money shot of the day Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk2 points
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This is what's really interesting, to some extent we don't know how humans actually get the ski up on edge. Conceptually it's easier to think of skiing as standing on a platform that is moving and is perturbed in two directions, we can ski because the COM does not move with the full force of the perturbations because we have momentum and the rest we use movement of the body to balance out the forces. Static tests suck because they can't impart inertia and thus alot of the way we think about skiing is useful but incorrect, in an energy sense it's more accurate I think to think of skiing as a flow of energy. In the simplest sense we must use the muscles of the feet to flick the ski up on edge but while doing that we must maintain balance, so beyond just the muscles in the feet all kinds of other shit is going on with all the other muscle groups as we impart a flow of energy into the ski, as we progress through the turn that flow transfers into the body and into the finish of the turn. Think about how it feels to crank out a big sweeper, the force builds and flows, it's a constant experience but not at all and it's just as dependent on other muscle groups like in the quads and back as it is on the ankle/foot. At the extreme end you can see this is in WC. Shiffrin is so much better because her turns are as symmetrical as humanly possible, her next best contender is probably Wendy Holdener who is probably a better athlete but because she cannot get the same hip angulation on left foot down turns she's considerably slower and that has jack to due with muscles of the foot/leg. This dude says it even better because he's actually really smart. "Hirscher progressively engages his edges, especially on his outside ski then hooks a tight arc close to the gate to establish his line. Once he has established his line, he no longer needs his outside ski. He gets off it in milliseconds and uses the rebound energy to project forward with only enough pressure on his uphill (new outside) ski to influence his trajectory of inertia so his COM enters the rise line at a low angle of intersection. He gets rebound energy from the loading of his outside ski and from what amounts to a plyometric release of muscle tension from the biokinetic chain of muscles extending from the balls of his outside foot to his pelvis. The energy is created by the vertical drop from above the gate to below the gate similar to jumping off a box, landing and then making a plyometric rebound" So although the question appears simple it's actually pretty hard to determine what is doing what when your skiing at least to me it seems carving is a concert in which at various points various parts of the body are carrying the tune. What's cool to me about skiing in some sense is how human it is. It's kind of stupid right, I mean it doesn't actually do anything in a utilitarian kind of way, no other animal would spend the kind of energy humans due to go skiing and we can do it instinctively because its a thing we can feel. Think of the number of humans who can arc a turn and yet while we have some idea if we are honest the knowledge side in which X does Y which = Z of skiing is still a mystery, I can know nothing of the balancing physics of skiing and be a very good skier. Nobody who can ski thinks skiing, you don't go down the hill going impart force at angle X, angulate skis at position x in the turn. It's why at some level you can't teach another person by saying you need to do X because that's very useful but they still have to learn how it feels to do X. That's what being a human is all about, we are this thinking, tricky box in our heads while at the same time defined by something as vague as feeling.2 points
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I'll be up this evening a little before 7 especially since I'm gonna miss the next two Thursday nights cause I'll be in Jackson hole...1 point
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If you were a mountain biker you'd probably say you were going out driving lol1 point
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I'm usually there Wednesday and Thursday. Not next week, I'm going away. But I may be there next Friday. I'm definitely getting full pass next year.1 point
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Wow just wow...if you give me a cold beverage I'll throw you my snotty balaclava lol..1 point
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They didn't forget to groom it. They left it that way for the bumps.1 point
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Mountains designate their trail rankings based on the other runs at that particular mountain (not the region). Some people put way too much stock in the whole black diamond, blue square, green circle stuff. I guess it's a newb thing. IDK.1 point
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this is 100% accurate. i wish somebody had told 18 year old TP4 that a general business degree is essentially worthless. hell, a bachelors's degree outside of STEM fields is pretty worthless other than a prerequisite for grad school1 point
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