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Thread: ‘20-‘21 backcountry prediction
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05-29-2020, 06:56 AM #26Registered User
- Join Date
- Nov 2014
- Location
- Montana
- Posts
- 187
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05-29-2020, 09:10 AM #27
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05-29-2020, 09:39 AM #28
I mean personally, I'm split right now between "damn, touring this much has been really fun, maybe next year I'll tour a lot more," and "damn, I'm lazy, if the tram is open next year I'm not touring at all."
I'll probably just go back to being one of those LCC bros boissal is talking about. I don't own carbon anything though, so I've got that going for me.
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05-29-2020, 10:15 AM #29
You obviously like to ski too much to qualify. And you do both inbounds and BC too consistently to be lumped in with the gotta-get-into-it-cause-it-looks-rad-on-the-gram crowd.
Listen, I'm all about people getting into the BC if they're psyched. They have to try it sometime and decide if they like it. The fact that I took that step 10+ years ago doesn't give me the right to shit on people who are making the switch now. My observation has more to do with the fact recently lots of people have been talking up BC skiing as it it were the 2nd coming of Jeebus yet when you dig a bit it's clear they like the idea of it, not the execution. I can't count the number of conversations I've had with acquaintances who get all excited when I mention that I tour and immediately want to make plans to go together yet when I start talking specifics there's nobody home. They're only interested in skiing Superior, the Y, or some other gnarly line it took me years to build up to. But then there's a lot of bitching about how long it takes to get to something that others have already skied. If that's their take on BC skiing, they're doing it wrong. If their imagination bottoms out on the most popular roadside lines or biggest ticks in the canyon yet they pass on an opportunity to ski the TriChutes in blower conditions because it takes too much walking and doesn't looks badass enough, touring isn't for them. What they're looking for is heli-skiing. Touring is about walking in the woods for extended periods of time, not shredding the super-gnar all day. It's a possibility but it takes an amount of time most people aren't interested in investing into the pursuit. My biggest ever touring days have been 12+ hours and that many thousands of vert, something you can bang out in 3 hours at the resort if you're not stopping at the bar between runs. People who get into BC skiing for the skiing part realize that pretty quick, they spend the bulk of their time logging miles at the resort and only tour a few times a year when the conditions are prime. Nothing wrong with that... Personally I like the walking part a lot and my misanthropy is boundless so touring is the perfect fit.
I could have sounded less judgmental about the whole thing but I gotta feed my superiority complex somehow. I'm also not ready to accept that not getting a pass for 10 years has made me a mediocre skier at best and I have resort-shredding FOMO. When the January dry spells hit and there's nothing but shite snow all over the range touring can be a fucking chore and the resort would be a welcome change.
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05-29-2020, 10:25 AM #30Well maybe I'm the faggot America
I'm not a part of a redneck agenda
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05-29-2020, 10:29 AM #31
Backcountry skiing is skiing across the street from Alta and complaining about the parking. Resort skiing is skiing at Alta and complaining about the traffic. You'd be amazed how different the equipment requirements are for these two activities.
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05-29-2020, 11:22 AM #32
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05-29-2020, 11:39 AM #33
Its getting harder every year. Make a plan the night before, get up early, hope for the best. I don't ski saturdays either (work) or I may feel more cynical. I really hate dealing with crowds in the BC though.
That being said, I'm happy to take noobs out and teach people how to be good bc partners. If you are an instadouche you probably won't gain my respect. It also helps me to remember its just skiing. COVID has made me mellow out a ton in that respect.
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