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NE Skiing: Intel needed
I'm in search of real-life intel on what the social distancing/crowd situation is at major NE ski slopes, NY in particular. Are the lift lines long or unbearable as a result of pandemic rules enforcement? Are you getting your money's worth?
I take my kids skiing during the winter school recess. My first choice places based on driving distance and lodging options are usually Windham then moving northward Gore and finally Whiteface. Out of state travel to VT, NH is not worth the hassle to me because I'll have to report that to my employer and probably quarantine even though I've been vaccinated because no one has adjusted that policy!
Many places are sold out completely because they restricted ticket sales and/or giving preference to season pass holders. Belleayre is selling tickets ($300 a day for two adults and two kids not incl. equipment)....honestly not sure that mountain is worth that premium. I'm reluctant to slap down the credit card without knowing what the lift line situation is and whether it's going to be remotely pleasant given all the other warnings such as "leave your stuff and food in your car" and "please eat outside."
Has anyone been skiing at one of the NY slopes? How was it?
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobonli
I'm in search of real-life intel on what the social distancing/crowd situation is at major NE ski slopes, NY in particular. Are the lift lines long or unbearable as a result of pandemic rules enforcement? Are you getting your money's worth?
I take my kids skiing during the winter school recess. My first choice places based on driving distance and lodging options are usually Windham then moving northward Gore and finally Whiteface. Out of state travel to VT, NH is not worth the hassle to me because I'll have to report that to my employer and probably quarantine even though I've been vaccinated because no one has adjusted that policy!
Many places are sold out completely because they restricted ticket sales and/or giving preference to season pass holders. Belleayre is selling tickets ($300 a day for two adults and two kids not incl. equipment)....honestly not sure that mountain is worth that premium. I'm reluctant to slap down the credit card without knowing what the lift line situation is and whether it's going to be remotely pleasant given all the other warnings such as "leave your stuff and food in your car" and "please eat outside."
Has anyone been skiing at one of the NY slopes? How was it?
We decided to make this a "cross country ski only" winter.
I have friends who have skied Hunter and Belleayre midweek and had a great time.
Here's the catch though: They're single adults going midweek on a season pass, and they ski for 3-4 hours and then leave.
I'm not liking the prospect of a holiday week, with kids, and wanting to ski all day but needing bathroom breaks and lunch break.
Good luck if you do go, I hope it works out.
Let us know because I'm curious myself.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Last week there were a couple of green days at Windham and they had walk up tickets sales. This week is $130/day. The weekends are sold out till end of season.
If your kids can play hookey Friday, I'd hit Catamount near Slow Poke Pete's in Hillsdale for the day. Adult ticket is only $50/day for an adult. The mountain is little, and you have to eat in your car, but it is the best you are going to do. But the proper way to look at this is the GOV is sending you a stimulus check so you can afford to take your kids skiing. You maybe even get a bonus on the backend of $3000/kid. It's your patrioted duty to spend the money and stimulate the local economies.
And trust me, you are thinking about skiing relative to normal life pre-covid. Even a bad day skiing compared to our normal covid existence is a really nice day on the slopes.
There is no real place to avoid the crowds. This is Mammoth 2 weeks ago when they had the mid-week 9 ft dump. Everyone and their brother headed up for the weekend including my daughter. It's like Disneyland long lines.
https://i.imgur.com/wCbcavO.jpg
The next week, going to Alta since they limit the number of cars allowed to park even, if you don't make it before the parking lot closes SOL.
It means an early departure up the Canyon.
Tail gate breakfast cook out.
But the snow is always worth it here.
https://i.imgur.com/MLGni9R.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/LJHdJZD.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/jN3j0A4.jpg
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
If you do come up here to ski Catamount, our former landlords in town (Hillsdale) are still renting their upstairs apartment in town. Just have to match up your dates with availability. You can see Catamount at night from the backyard. Very close. And there is an IGA, several restaurants, all obeying covid guidelines and with kid friendly food. Apartment has a small but functional kitchen also. The landlords are very careful about cleaning. It is on rt. 23, but they've done some soundproofing and conveniently skiing wears you out. Nice beds!
Plenty of snow here too. Catamount just got a big injection of capital through a buy-invest arrangement with the owners of Berkshire East Mountain Resort. New facilities and new runs. Butternut is nearby (20-25 minutes) in Great Barrington if you want to visit that as well.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cny rider
We decided to make this a "cross country ski only" winter.
I have friends who have skied Hunter and Belleayre midweek and had a great time.
Here's the catch though: They're single adults going midweek on a season pass, and they ski for 3-4 hours and then leave.
I'm not liking the prospect of a holiday week, with kids, and wanting to ski all day but needing bathroom breaks and lunch break.
Good luck if you do go, I hope it works out.
Let us know because I'm curious myself.
I thought about XC or snowshoe adventures but we'd need gear rentals and even that stuff can be hard to come by. The two ski shops nearest me are cleaned out. And, honestly, there's no comparison for the kids between working hard at XC or snowshoeing and screaming downhill.
Back in the day before kids, I wouldn't think twice about driving 3 hours by myself, skiing and coming back home at 11pm. And if it was crowded, that was just part of the day. Now the economics are different and I know my wife and kids won't tolerate standing in a line like Doug pictured or have to walk back to the car to eat a Subway sandwich.
Catamount looks appealing. Further north than I thought/recalled it: solid 2.5 hour drive and I can't push off until 11 on Friday because of work. Maybe I'll call them in the morning and see how bananas the place gets during the holiday week.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
vertical_doug
I can't think of a single place in NY, maybe the entire NE, that would make me want to wait on that line! This same time period last year we took our kids to Gore for the first time. The season got something of a slow start but it dumped snow the day before we left. Crowds were light; you could've parked next to the base lodge. Longest wait was maybe 10 mins because of a mechanical issue on the gondola. Kids' first black diamond and short glade run. There were grumblings of a virus in another part of the world......Seems like a million years ago. So....yeah, anytime skiing is a victory.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobonli
I can't think of a single place in NY, maybe the entire NE, that would make me want to wait on that line! This same time period last year we took our kids to Gore for the first time. The season got something of a slow start but it dumped snow the day before we left. Crowds were light; you could've parked next to the base lodge. Longest wait was maybe 10 mins because of a mechanical issue on the gondola. Kids' first black diamond and short glade run. There were grumblings of a virus in another part of the world......Seems like a million years ago. So....yeah, anytime skiing is a victory.
This place, Kenver, rents skis and equipment if you want to avoid the ski area's rental shop. In South Egremont (JP Weigle's birthplace I believe) so on the other side of the ridge from Hillsdale with Catamount in the middle. I don't know if the prices are any different though. Just less crowded.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Catamount it is, then. Scored a last minute AirBNB so we can do a couple of days. Online ticket vending sux, had to call them to complete the transaction nd they were helpful. We haven’t skied this area before so it will be a mini-adventure.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Catamount is nice. Smaller than our usual fare but enough to keep us busy. Parking lot is mostly empty, eat in your car, no lines to speak of. Rainy but skiing in the fog/drizzle is better than being at home. Only nit is their equipment rentals are......kinda tired. My boots had a lot of heel slop and were soaking wet right off the rack. Stuff takes a beating. I’m heading right to the shop to get my own kit when I get home now that I’m 3 seasons into with the kids and they still enjoy it.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobonli
Catamount is nice. Smaller than our usual fare but enough to keep us busy. Parking lot is mostly empty, eat in your car, no lines to speak of. Rainy but skiing in the fog/drizzle is better than being at home. Only nit is their equipment rentals are......kinda tired. My boots had a lot of heel slop and were soaking wet right off the rack. Stuff takes a beating. I’m heading right to the shop to get my own kit when I get home now that I’m 3 seasons into with the kids and they still enjoy it.
Tomorrow will be cold - in the 20's plus NW wind will take it into single digits at Catamount. I expect that means everything will ski faster? More ice at least. But the sun will be out supposedly. Take your sunglasses!
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
It was warm today. By end of day it was slushy.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
I grew up in PA and skied through college and into my mid-20s. During those years, I wore a helmet on the bike but never once on the slopes. In that photo, every head has a helmet. Love it. How warm are they? Guessing there is a huge opportunity to combine protection and warmth.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
gt6267a
I grew up in PA and skied through college and into my mid-20s. During those years, I wore a helmet on the bike but never once on the slopes. In that photo, every head has a helmet. Love it. How warm are they? Guessing there is a huge opportunity to combine protection and warmth.
Warm. They are comfy. I actually think the thing that made them ubiquitous is goggles. With a hard shell, and strap retainer, goggles are so much more comfy to wear with a helmet.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobonli
I can't think of a single place in NY, maybe the entire NE, that would make me want to wait on that line! This same time period last year we took our kids to Gore for the first time. The season got something of a slow start but it dumped snow the day before we left. Crowds were light; you could've parked next to the base lodge. Longest wait was maybe 10 mins because of a mechanical issue on the gondola. Kids' first black diamond and short glade run. There were grumblings of a virus in another part of the world......Seems like a million years ago. So....yeah, anytime skiing is a victory.
have you considered fahnestock?...i dont do nordic, but my shop owner does...it has been fantastic for obvious reasons...pretty sure you can rent there and not a long trip for you
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
I understand that this year the NY ski areas are limiting occupancy which might make for a better experience. So many places have invested in great lift capacity because everybody hates lift lines but all you do is trade them for hills littered with human obstacles where on a weekend its about impossible to make a single run without some clueless veering into your line and since the overtaking skier is responsible not to cause a collision you spend the whole day in evasion maneuvers swearing under your breath. Weekdays are often not much better. I sort of lost interest in skiing downhill because it could be so aggravating.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
gt6267a
I grew up in PA and skied through college and into my mid-20s. During those years, I wore a helmet on the bike but never once on the slopes. In that photo, every head has a helmet. Love it. How warm are they? Guessing there is a huge opportunity to combine protection and warmth.
ski helmets are incredibly warm. I even grab mine for coldweather MTB rides.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobonli
Catamount is nice. Smaller than our usual fare but enough to keep us busy. Parking lot is mostly empty, eat in your car, no lines to speak of. Rainy but skiing in the fog/drizzle is better than being at home. Only nit is their equipment rentals are......kinda tired. My boots had a lot of heel slop and were soaking wet right off the rack. Stuff takes a beating. I’m heading right to the shop to get my own kit when I get home now that I’m 3 seasons into with the kids and they still enjoy it.
What size are you looking for in a boot - I have a pair of Atomic Hawx Prime S 110 flex size 26.5 (9 US mens) - only worn once - paid $500 you can have them for a steal with a kick back to VSalon - most comfortable boot ever. I upgraded to the same boot with the Tech toe version 120 Flex.
https://www.sunandski.com/p/34310050...SABEgIPDvD_BwE
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
funcrusher
have you considered fahnestock?...i dont do nordic, but my shop owner does...it has been fantastic for obvious reasons...pretty sure you can rent there and not a long trip for you
Not renting this year because if COVID but yeah that was my first choice.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
spopepro
Warm. They are comfy. I actually think the thing that made them ubiquitous is goggles. With a hard shell, and strap retainer, goggles are so much more comfy to wear with a helmet.
I think state laws requiring children under 14 to wear helmets created a whole group of young skiers who just always wore one. If you are going to make your kids wear one, as a parent, you will wear one too.
For the younger kids, there is a cool factor because the cool kids in the park are wearing helmets.
Here's a photo of me and some friends on a snowboard trip in the himalayas in the late 90's. Helicopter and all off piste. Not a helmet to be seen.
https://i.imgur.com/c21RztN.jpg
23 yrs later, on the bunny slope...
https://i.imgur.com/ZqdVBMo.jpg
I look like a robot from a bad B movie.
Fortunately, Oakley Mod Helmets and Goggles fit together nicely with ventilation. So since you have to be masked up this year, it fogs less than just goggles and a hat, or sunglasses and a hat.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Back to NE intel. The suggestions above to try smaller venues are sound. Catamount had relatively ( my recent experience has been at Gore and Whiteface early last season) few people. No line was longer than a six minute wait, slopes not crowded. Even the lodge if you’re patient seats could be found in partitioned areas they put together.
I would like a partial refund from the people who suggested it. It’s been cold and icy the past 3 days but no new snow. I’m heading home to 6 inches of fresh pow in my driveway!!:cheesy:
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobonli
Back to NE intel. The suggestions above to try smaller venues are sound. Catamount had relatively ( my recent experience has been at Gore and Whiteface early last season) few people. No line was longer than a six minute wait, slopes not crowded. Even the lodge if you’re patient seats could be found in partitioned areas they put together.
I would like a partial refund from the people who suggested it. It’s been cold and icy the past 3 days but no new snow. I’m heading home to 6 inches of fresh pow in my driveway!!:cheesy:
Cheer up, the lifts will be on wind hold. Always are.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobonli
Back to NE intel. The suggestions above to try smaller venues are sound. Catamount had relatively ( my recent experience has been at Gore and Whiteface early last season) few people. No line was longer than a six minute wait, slopes not crowded. Even the lodge if you’re patient seats could be found in partitioned areas they put together.
I would like a partial refund from the people who suggested it. It’s been cold and icy the past 3 days but no new snow. I’m heading home to 6 inches of fresh pow in my driveway!!:cheesy:
Snowing now! And our landscapers are building a bonfire this morning to eat up all the cleared brush and pine. You could have stopped in for an outdoors warm up!
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Good gravy, that picture of the snow at Alta.
I like Mt. Bachelor's policy of requiring a parking reservation to go on the hill. Seems to be a sensible way to limit the lines, maybe better than limiting ticket sales. Are NE areas implementing policies like this?
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
j44ke
Snowing now! And our landscapers are building a bonfire this morning to eat up all the cleared brush and pine. You could have stopped in for an outdoors warm up!
As a native Californian, burn season came as a revelation when I first bought our land. I have had some epic burns clearing fields, all day affairs. That said, I have many large piles surrounding the fields left as coarse woody debris for habitat. Critters love them.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
I learned to ski at Catamount, and have lots of fond memories. It's a nice little hill because not only are there fewer people, the types of people who do go are usually more local and chill. I'd take Catamount any day over somewhere in the Catskills with easy thruway access for city folks. Plus it's a much nicer drive up the taconic or 22, if you're coming from the south. It's the equivalent of Badger pass out here in CA, a very small hill within the bounds of Yosemite NP. Small, local folks, more fun and less irritation.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ides1056
As a native Californian, burn season came as a revelation when I first bought our land. I have had some epic burns clearing fields, all day affairs. That said, I have many large piles surrounding the fields left as coarse woody debris for habitat. Critters love them.
We have those too. The white-throated sparrows spend the entire winter in them I think. And the only rabbit I've seen around here came out of one. Never lived in a place where rabbits were so scarce and state conservation is encouraging people to create rabbit habitat. So we have four piles for the animals. The burning today was new stuff.
Snow looks great. Big flakes. Soften over all the bumps but now finding icy patches is a surprise.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Snow looks great. Big flakes. Soften over all the bumps but now finding icy patches is a surprise.[/QUOTE]
Be careful. Nothing comes as a greater surprise than exiting the house and finding oneself on the ground. I am thinking about putting Gorilla Glue and crushed stone on my Vibram soles.
I am headed out to ski now that snow is falling, hoping that there will be more purchase on the ice.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
j44ke
Snowing now! And our landscapers are building a bonfire this morning to eat up all the cleared brush and pine. You could have stopped in for an outdoors warm up!
Yes, it started to snow heavily around 12:30 as my wife and son said they’d had enough. My daughter and I took a couple more runs including a run thru Upper and Lower Glade, then we went to O’s Diner for lunch before heading home to 4 inches of wet heavy snow.
The place was noticeably more crowded today with a lot of young people wearing racing team gear, perhaps practicing for a race. Racers practicing and parents with toddlers on leashes = lots of near disasters! But definitely better than being at one of the larger hills in the Catskills.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobonli
Yes, it started to snow heavily around 12:30 as my wife and son said they’d had enough. My daughter and I took a couple more runs including a run thru Upper and Lower Glade, then we went to O’s Diner for lunch before heading home to 4 inches of wet heavy snow.
The place was noticeably more crowded today with a lot of young people wearing racing team gear, perhaps practicing for a race. Racers practicing and parents with toddlers on leashes = lots of near disasters! But definitely better than being at one of the larger hills in the Catskills.
Glad it worked out. Like a lot of places, the area is more fun without covid, but some things are just more crowded.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
We spent last weekend at Lutsen in northeastern Minnesota. Tickets were two day minimum, and Saturday was a blackout for season ticket holders. It was still pretty overrun.
There was plenty of Covid signage, but compliance was pretty bad. People without masks in the lift lines, people in the lodge without masks, lifties packing the chairs full even though there was signage saying to only ride with your party, and just generally folks who had forgotten all about social distancing. The one notable exception was they weren't packing the gondola full.
https://i.imgur.com/k0UzKpO.jpg
It was still really nice to be out.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
I feel like COVID enforcement has reached TSA levels: different standards and levels of enforcement compliance locale to locale.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
I've continued to skate every day. Conditions vary widely depending on temperatures, but everyone agrees this was a stellar winter.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ides1056
I've continued to skate every day. Conditions vary widely depending on temperatures, but everyone agrees this was a stellar winter.
I am a little further east in Amherst, and despite the dearth of early season snow, February was a good skiing month. When we had a brief skirmish with Halloween snow, I was convinced that the winter would bust. Who knew that the weather does what the weather wants to do? We ski from the house onto the college golf course, and then onto the fields. Not skate skiing, but the therapeutic calm of moving the body remains. Darren articulated it well recently, when on Nordic skis, alone with one's work, cycling is dead.
I can't wait to log some early kilometres on the Zank.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Yesterday was 40F. Today is (currently) 12F. Tomorrow will be 40F. Had some scary winds up around 60mph last night. Snapped a skinny pine in half. Power out at 11pm so must be another tree downed somewhere in the neighborhood. Generator popped on immediately. Have a fire going this morning. One of the best things - fire in the stove first thing in the morning. Can see the top of Catamount from the house with binoculars and there are people up there. Must be icy.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
WFSTEKL
I am a little further east in Amherst, and despite the dearth of early season snow, February was a good skiing month. When we had a brief skirmish with Halloween snow, I was convinced that the winter would bust. Who knew that the weather does what the weather wants to do? We ski from the house onto the college golf course, and then onto the fields. Not skate skiing, but the therapeutic calm of moving the body remains. Darren articulated it well recently, when on Nordic skis, alone with one's work, cycling is dead.
I can't wait to log some early kilometres on the Zank.
We're in full meltdown mode here, with highs pushing 50 this week. That's about two weeks ahead of schedule.
We'll continue to ski the manmade trails for another couple weeks, but I'm looking forward to those first rides with green buds on the trees as well.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
caleb
We're in full meltdown mode here, with highs pushing 50 this week. That's about two weeks ahead of schedule.
We'll continue to ski the manmade trails for another couple weeks, but I'm looking forward to those first rides with green buds on the trees as well.
It is 20 degrees here as I write this; however, I do see spring on the schedule for next week. A few mets with some chops have been discussing the potential for another stratospheric warming event that may disrupt the polar vortex once again. If it occurs, later this month would be in the cross-hairs. Skiing may have a little renaissance as a result.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
WFSTEKL
I am a little further east in Amherst, and despite the dearth of early season snow, February was a good skiing month. When we had a brief skirmish with Halloween snow, I was convinced that the winter would bust. Who knew that the weather does what the weather wants to do? We ski from the house onto the college golf course, and then onto the fields. Not skate skiing, but the therapeutic calm of moving the body remains. Darren articulated it well recently, when on Nordic skis, alone with one's work, cycling is dead.
I can't wait to log some early kilometres on the Zank.
I thought the therapeutic calm was a by product of the legalization of Mary Jane at ski slopes.... silly me
Isn't this reason enough to ski in Mass versus NY
Obviously, it is not legal in Minnesota yet since Caleb stressing about melt instead of driving to the local White Castle in Minneapolis.
Caleb, you never did the White Castle run after First Avenue back in the day?
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Yeah, February was a good ski month in the Northeast.
Intel for today - stay home. It's cold and windy as f*ck out there, even if the sun is shining.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
Quote:
Originally Posted by
vertical_doug
I thought the therapeutic calm was a by product of the legalization of Mary Jane at ski slopes.... silly me
Isn't this reason enough to ski in Mass versus NY
Obviously, it is not legal in Minnesota yet since Caleb stressing about melt instead of driving to the local White Castle in Minneapolis.
Caleb, you never did the White Castle run after First Avenue back in the day?
I had three different houses within walking distance of the White Castle at Lake and 36th. When Surly first made the Pugsley (2007 or 2008?) I was helping a roommate put one together in the garage until late into the night, when suddenly we had the great idea for a White Castle run. We hadn't sorted the brakes on the Puglsey at that point, and I vaguely remember riding it up 36th brakeless and just hoping to hit the light at Lake to avoid getting smoked.
Sadly, that White Castle is no more. It was remodeled into a Tim Horton's, and now there's a For Lease sign out front.
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Re: NE Skiing: Intel needed
I was more the E Hennepin Ave to Central on the way to Columbia Heights.