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ole2planker

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Posts posted by ole2planker

  1. I here at Park City, also. Arrived Saturday and leave tomorrow, Thursday. The snow is awesome, but for an older guy like me the flat light is tough. Sometimes the mountain skis me.

     

    Glad to read that someone else was taken out by the cat track on Widowmaker! That was a big surprise.

     

    I spent a lot of time yesterday lapping the moguls on Thaynes and the groomed Double Jack. It is nice to have some groomed blacks to help my thighs recover.

     

    Here is a photo of Thaynes yesterday.28af35baca2e0e44ed79d43f5ac59b22.jpg

     

    Bryan

     

     

    Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

    • Like 4
  2. Sounds like one of our trips, the elevation just brings it out sometimes.

     

    Absolutely. In the medical literature, it is known as HAF, high altitude flatulence!

     

    I was at Vail the first week of January. It was excellent New England conditions. Unfortunately, it was in the Rockies!

     

    The Vail grooming staff and lifties did a great job making the front side skiable everyday. For my first trip of the year, it was a mellow time.

     

    I'm heading back to Beaver Creek next week and then Keystone at the end of February.

    • Like 1
  3. Hey, Ole2planker, long time no hear from.

     

    Already had posted that video and another one in the Jackson thread.

     

    Today

     

    post-68-072670500 1291681246_thumb.jpg

     

    Such a beautiful view and a great mountain. I'm planning trips to Deer Valley/The Canyons and Vail this winter. I'm hoping to sneak in a third trip on my wife's accumulated AmEx reward points.

     

    I decided to stop by this place and see if it had changed at all. I quickly learned that it hasn't!

     

    Bryan

  4. They're all new....although we have a big junk pile in the back because sometimes people buy a gray monument and then after they see it in the cemetery decide on a black monument with an etching. We also have people that give us the wrong name and date info and then sign off on the proof and have to order an entire new monument and then there's another stone in the junk-pile. You'd be surprised how many people don't know their parents/spouse birthday and sometimes they don't even know which cemetery...It's a bright sunny day, there should be a family coming by with a check book very shortly.... :wiggle:wiggle:wiggle maybe I can get them to buy something all polished...gotta make that paper stack... :wiggle:rock

     

     

    Doug,

     

    My message was a reference to Tricky Dick Nixon, which I expect only the old timers on this board will get.

  5. I have a PM Gear Double Trouble ski bag -- designed by a ski racer to hold two pairs of skis, poles and lots of other stuff. Very long bag (for race skis, of course), with wheels. I pack one pair of skis and poles and lots of ski equipment in it to just about 48 pounds. I put the boots, helmets and other stuff in another bag, packed to about 48 pounds.

     

    I have looked at shipping equipment out, rather than taking on the plane, and it is very expensive.

  6. I go to both areas to mix up my experience. My sense is that Blue's runs are straighter down the mountain, while Camelback's meander a bit more like old school New England ski areas. I'm sure that everyone can point to trails at each area that belie my impression, but, hey, its my impression, not your's.

     

    From Delaware, Blue is closer than Camelback.

     

    I'll probably do Blue this weekend because I think they do a better job of blowing snow and I want to try the new directions people posted here.

  7. Man, that is cold.

     

    Cold feet are always my problem skiing. I can be toasty everywhere else, but my feet are ice cubes. When I was in Colorado the end of January, I managed a little improvement with two changes. First, based on a friends's recommendation, I purchased a pair of Smart Wool socks. I also used foot anti-perspirant to reduce the sweating in my feet. I used the toe warmers only once over four days.

     

    The problem for many people, especially women, is Raynaud's Syndrome. People with this syndrome suffer constriction of blood vessels in their extremeties when it is cold. My older daughter suffers from it; she will have so little blood in her fingers that her fingers look like they are wax. More information is available here http://www.lef.org/protocols/prtcl-128.shtml

     

    I am seriously considering buying a set of battery powered heated foot soles for my boots.

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