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01-06-2019, 10:16 AM #1
Best Alaska skiing situation in March?
Been before. Camped on Thompson Pass with sleds. Loved it. Skinned most of our vert. Heading back, haven't decided whether same spot or Haines? Going with the lady and a buddy or two. All strong skiers. Would love to get on a heli if the price wasn't too absurd. Open to anything that will get us a lot of vert/skiing. Birds/cats/??? Headed up 3rd week in March this year. Thanks in advance.
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01-06-2019, 12:15 PM #2
Check out SMG they’re flying out of Knik river lodge that time of year. You could also likely get a plane into somewhere awesome and camp and skin.
But Ellen kicks ass - if she had a beard it would be much more haggard. -Jer
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01-06-2019, 12:46 PM #3
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01-06-2019, 01:03 PM #4
Haines with a couple days in Juneau. Ride lifts at Eaglecrest and hike out ridges, etc.
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01-06-2019, 01:45 PM #5
^^this^^
Eaglecrest is awesome. My friends run Alaska Powder Descents in Juneau. It’s reasonably priced heli skiing on the Juneau Icefield.I didn't believe in reincarnation when I was your age either.
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01-08-2019, 05:37 PM #6
Juneau is nice, I lived there a few years. Eaglecrest is a fun hill if it has the snow. Girdwood is a fun town and Alyeska is usually still good in March, I know there are a lot of help/cat operations out of there. Hatcher pass is good for backcountry. Check out the Alaska Backcountry Ski Addiction group on Facebook, lots of good info.
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01-09-2019, 12:52 AM #7
can you make a game time decision?
Cause that's what I'd do. I've flown with APD in Juneau, highly recommended, but Juneau in March could be amazing, could be raining... Same thing with Haines and really all of southeast. However heli time is generally way less expensive in southeast due to the absurd number of helicopters. Juneau does have a ski lift that often has amazing snow in March so there's that. I think Eaglecrest is the best ski area in Alaska, just because of the vibe, terrain and backcountry access. But again... global warming makes things hard.
Chances are though that the second week of march is going to be badass around Anchorage because I'm going to Mammoth.Its not that I suck at spelling, its that I just don't care
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01-22-2019, 03:41 PM #8
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01-22-2019, 04:41 PM #9
We flew with AK Heli a few years ago outside of Haines. Did a bunch of days touring up on Chilkat pass too, and wished we had sleds with us. Seems like camping somewhere in the vicinity of the Haines Highway summit with sleds, and then popping down to AK Heli (or Seaba) when the weather cooperated would make for a sweet trip. AK Heli is relatively cheap, and at least when we were there, there were plenty of guys that seemed to be skiing as walk-ons (they'd hop in an empty seat for a lap or two). That obviously presents the risk of hopping in with gapers though.
No idea about weather up there this year.
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01-22-2019, 05:10 PM #10
your best skiing situation is what you already did. Chilkat Pass in March will most likely be a shit snowpack. I spent a few years skiing there and that is my observations. haines may be ok with a sled but access is difficult if you are touring with out. Juneau is really not worth considering. If you live there you could probably get some great days and cheap heli. But if the weather turns to shit you are stuck in Juneau. AKPM had a point sea level in 2019 is not a place to base yourself for skiing. Thompson Pass is off to a good start. I would just check www.mikerecords.com.
off your knees Louie
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01-22-2019, 05:12 PM #11Registered User
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01-22-2019, 06:35 PM #12
Alaska Rendezvous! Near Thompson Pass, for $25 a night you can plug your RV into their lot, use their showers, bar/restaurant/pool table. Single day Heli is 1100. They might even do half days for half that if you ask nicely. Great operation.
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01-22-2019, 09:43 PM #13
I've been skiing Chilkat Pass for the past decade+, have had phenomenal, ski anything you see, pow turns in March and April. The past few (5?) seasons have been pretty bad. Last March was the worst, extremely low tide and sketchy snowpack. Juneau is currently low snow - could change easily, but the return of the warm blob in the Gulf of Alaska isn't helping.
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01-22-2019, 10:08 PM #14
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01-22-2019, 10:30 PM #15
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02-06-2019, 09:43 PM #16Registered Useless
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Bumping this thread as I've literally been gifted a free trip to Anchorage in March by my work (all the more improbable, as I work in public media).
I am trying to turn this trip into a heli ski trip and a few days at Alyeska or bc. Am solo, looking for people to ski w/ at Alyeska or bc around there and looking for rooms / couches to sleep on. Will be skiing Feb 28 through Mar 3, hopefully a heli day on Mar 3. Looking for a place to stay on the cheap those days.
Thinking of renting a car in anchorage, driving to girdwood, staying there for a few days, then back to anchorage for work meetings. Does that plan make sense?
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02-06-2019, 11:21 PM #17
Makes sense. I would stay in anchorage while working there. If your work brings you in contact with the editor of the Alaska Energy Desk you could enquire about her husband as a bc ski partner. But to be forwarned you better be fit.
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02-07-2019, 12:21 AM #18
If you have Facebook find the Alaska backcountry ski addiction page for partners and bc conditions beta.
But Ellen kicks ass - if she had a beard it would be much more haggard. -Jer
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02-07-2019, 07:03 AM #19Registered User
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Best Alaska skiing situation in March?
I wouldn’t pin the heli day down, it’s not how it works. Be flexible and maybe PM Akturnandburn.
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02-07-2019, 09:54 AM #20
Try and be as independent as possible and not limited by what a heli guide will take you on. Most heli guests are pretty average skiers who are not comfortable in steeps, and that is the level that heli ops and their so called "guides" cater for.
Do exactly what you did last time and dont bother with the heli ops unless you are best friends with a guide who is a ripping skier and he guarantees he'll get you onto rad terrain.
Either way the down days suck, and there are lots of them in AK.
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02-07-2019, 12:29 PM #21Registered Useless
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Meaning ski backcountry/tour unless I know a heli guide? Seeing as I may never have the chance to do this again - I'm thinking I'll just stay in girdwood and fly any of those days if it works. Don't really want to spend $1400 to ski dentist terrain though...
And thanks, chugachjed - no facebook account unfortunately
will reach out to some of the alaska public folks too
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02-07-2019, 12:34 PM #22
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02-10-2019, 02:00 PM #23Registered Useless
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Thanks. Worth bringing out the protests? Or should I just bring bibby's and call it good?
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02-10-2019, 02:13 PM #24Rod9301
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02-11-2019, 07:12 PM #25
We were there when Warren Miller was filming. We had a rainy week--skied about a day and a third of soft snow, but apparently the following week things got icy. My son saw the film and said the footage was of guys trying to hang on for dear life. Couldn't have made the owner happy.
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