I found the woods that are not steep above mid to be better than the marginal open trails , i.e. L. Domino , Moonshine , Mall and Lexi's. Core shot on Lexi's. Didn't hit a thing in the woods.Originally Posted by atkinson
Originally Posted by HowieT2
Yes things are looking quite nice for the weekend!
Fri - normal operation
all lifts 9AM, w/p, c/p
Sat-Sun-Mon 8AM start at Bravo/GMX
All other lifts 9AM (except Slide Brook - 10AM I think)
w/p, c/p
I found the woods that are not steep above mid to be better than the marginal open trails , i.e. L. Domino , Moonshine , Mall and Lexi's. Core shot on Lexi's. Didn't hit a thing in the woods.Originally Posted by atkinson
That's no surprise. The base holds up much better in the woods. It's just more dangerous from the point of view of hitting some unexpected hidden obstruction. Snowboards do a little better from that point of view. You can get over more stuff and you're less likely to break your leg. Also, I think 'tip up' is easier to execute than 'tips up'. Early season, I often like to let others forge a path and clear off all the stumps and horizontal deadfall. Later in the season, I can focus on finding my own tracks.I found the woods that are not steep above mid to be better than the marginal open trails , i.e. L. Domino , Moonshine , Mall and Lexi's. Core shot on Lexi's. Didn't hit a thing in the woods.
My guess is that todays snow is better base snow than the snow from the last few days. Any word on that? How was the skiing? Did the wind shut everything down?
That helps. So does hiking in the woods during the off-season. Helps give you an understanding of what lines are clean and what lines have the snow snakes. Mid-mountain hardwoods at LP and ME, along with upper mountain lower angle stuff at ME is usually your best bet at low tide. Need to be high enough to get the better snow depths but not so high that the steepness requires deeper turns and faster speeds. Also, for some reason the mid-mountain hardwoods tend to have a lot less deadfall than up top.Originally Posted by Hardbooter
That helps. So does hiking in the woods during the off-season. Helps give you an understanding of what lines are clean and what lines have the snow snakes. Mid-mountain hardwoods at LP and ME, along with upper mountain lower angle stuff at ME is usually your best bet at low tide. Need to be high enough to get the better snow depths but not so high that the steepness requires deeper turns and faster speeds. Also, for some reason the mid-mountain hardwoods tend to have a lot less deadfall than up top.Originally Posted by Hardbooter
Lift will likely turn on Friday, so plan your weekend.
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