That's right...winter sprung back and in the past week we've gotten over two feet of snow and are back skiing in the woods and getting face shots of powder! Who would have thunk! Just goes to show you that global warming just has everything about mother nature's biological clock all screwed up! Whatever the reason, I LIKE IT!
Monday, April 9, 2007
Spring sprang, then winter sprung back
That's right...winter sprung back and in the past week we've gotten over two feet of snow and are back skiing in the woods and getting face shots of powder! Who would have thunk! Just goes to show you that global warming just has everything about mother nature's biological clock all screwed up! Whatever the reason, I LIKE IT!
Monday, March 26, 2007
Utah in the Springtime
Colleen relaxing in the chic base area of Snowbasin. Gold-plated water fountains...a little too over the top for us.
View of the Wasach Range from the air on the way home.
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
What's out your window?
Monday, May 1, 2006
A Rite of Spring


Well, on the last day of April, we put in our last few hours of skiing and riding this season. Although much of the season simply sucked, at least we went out on a good note! The skies were blue, the snow slushy, bodies tanning, the band played and we offered our last toast to the snow season. Seth and I had a blast. I have a good pink sun tan. It's all good. Now to put the gear away until the snow falls again.



Saturday, March 25, 2006
Big Powder @ Big Jay

So it's been a rough year...we all know that. We've had to work hard for the powder turns we've found. With the wind hold that has plagued Sugarbush, my best days have come when I've hiked for the stashes that the winds kept lifts from reaching. This week, Seth and I, together with a bunch of ski bums from Sugarloaf, made what I'm sure will be an annual pilgrimage at least -- to Jay Peak, for some tree skiing adventures. In the span of a few days, we explored, dropped in to the unknown, found which way the winds had been blowing, and hiked for the deep, untouched powder that makes the run out worth it all in the end.

It's always an adventure when we hook up with James and crew from the 'loaf. Last year we had a few days of fun up at Jay, but we had stayed on the mountain proper, simply sniffing out what lay in between trails and trees. This year, we were armed with GPS's, a few friends who had been out of bounds before, and a real driving sense of snow deprivation that made the search for freshies our soul motivation.


Day one was "The Dip" -- repeated runs off the back side, where we found fresh lines through trees and rock drops back down to where we had stashed the cars, right around back for more. I know that the first crew that loaded in the back of hte pickup is probably still sore from the whiplash that comes from being a passenger when I'm driving a stick shift in snowboard boots!


Day Two was the big adventure of our first time hiking Big Jay. I must thank the guys for convincing me to come along. I had thought of wussing out because I'm old and my legs were tired and since we hadn't done it yet, we weren't quite sure how a knuckle-dragger would fair. Well, it was well worth it and I'm glad I joined in the fun. What a typical scene -- Colleen and the guys...lone girl and lone snowboarder among a group of skier guys looking for a mountain challenge. After the ~ hour hike over, we dropped in to delightfully deep untracked lines that led over 3-6 foot rock drops, knee deep face shots and the quiet solitude of only having your friends hooting and hollering powdery bliss as the sonic backdrop.


Of course, there was the runout...on which I somehow found myself sucked onto the low road that led me into a half-exposed streambed drainage that I had to navigate through to find my way out. A little shwapple slalom, post-holing into a river and knee-buckling into rocks later and I made the exit, giving the guys enough time to down a beer in celebration of our newest back country victory.

So now we have a new semi-local back country stash we can seek refuge in when the need for steep-n-deep takes over. It wan't the trip out west into bottomless bowls that we may have dreamed of, but for this year, the Big Jay experience will do!
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
Remember the dumps
Thursday, February 2, 2006
Dreaming of Powder

It IS winter, right? This blog IS about dreaming out loud? Well, what I am dreaming about these days is powder. I miss those fluffy days of winter, where work isn't on my mind, where I take the morning off and disappear into the woods, just me and my board, to find the turns that await me.
This has been a rough winter for us powderhounds thus far, and this weekend seems to offer only more of the same -- a tease of snow, turning into rain and who knows what or how much of that questionable perecipitation.
Seth and I just wrapped up two demo days down at Stratton, testing out all of next year's ski and snowboard equipment. Fun as always. What got me though was that despite the fact that Stratton is two hours SOUTH of Sugarbush, they managed to have pretty decent snow coverage on almost all of their trails. It's amazing to see that snow making really does work when you turn on the guns with intent.
I just hope soon that mother nature starts making up for what she owes us...
Wednesday, January 18, 2006
Things you should not see in Vermont in the winter

This is WRONG. All of that green and yellow (rain) should be blue and white (snow). Why is Ullr somad at us? Why are you being so stingy and mean? We've had our January thaws before, but all this rain is REALLY driving some of us over the edge. I haven't been snowboarding in like two weeks now because there's no snow. The dogs have found all the frisbees and yard toys they lost in the end of November because all - yes ALL -- of the snow pack has melted. Hell, we're not even having an icing problem because NOTHING is frozen. Just rain. Wet, depressing, soggy freakin' rain.
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
Thinking and living winter

So it's time to start thinking and living winter! No better way to get psyched up for it than to look back at the first run of the best day of our heliskiing adventure in Alaska last April. That's Seth there ripping the line.
So my body is really not ready for the mountain yet. After the first 3 day sor so snowboarding, I've had thigh burn like I've never had before. I guess pushing 34, maybe I'm getting old? Nah, I just work too much behind a desk when I really should be outside living life.
Even the dogs haven't been doing their job of nagging me to exercise with them. This morning when we let them out, they immediately wanted to come back inside and hop in bed. You can't blame them -- it was MINUS 9 DEGREES! You gotta love high pressure systems. At least we'll be able to see the stars well from the hot tub tonight. But if you ask me, I'd rather we get a dumping of snow. That's supposed to come Friday...just in time for John and I to be getting in a car and heading down to Jersey for our pre-Xmas visit. As Seth said, whenever I leave, it snows!

Actual Vermont snow pix soon to come.
Thursday, December 1, 2005
Last week's snow was a tease!
So last Sunday I got my first day in snowboarding at Sugarbush. Wasn't half bad, considering that it was still November. Of course there was no reason for half the trails that were open to be open -- more dirt than snow, but where they had made snow, we had nice groomers and icy bumps. A few runs for FIS got me breathing hard and feeling good. But all the rain this week has forced the mountain to close and most of it to all melt away.
Good news though -- 2-5 inches in the forecast for tomorrow! As Seth pointed out today, seems as though whenever I leave town, it snows. Well, hell, it that's what it takes!
Alas, I wait some more...
"...the waiting is the hardest part..."
