For about a decade, starting in the mid nineties, I lived in
a fleece. It was the most comfortable
piece of clothing I owned. It was big
and black and fuzzy. It fit loosely and
made me look about twenty pounds heavier than I was. (Which at that time was about forty pounds
heavier than I am today) As I lounged on the couch in it eating chips and Oreos
I was transformed into a giant teddy bear. A giant, cuddly, adorable, crumb covered teddy bear. You
see, the thing that made it so comfortable also made it collect anything and
everything within five feet of my face.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Friday, January 11, 2013
Mapless Skier Found, Dead. Locals Fined.
The ski blogosphere exploded this week following news that yet another East Coast big mountain skier had wandered too far from the corduroy and gotten stuck tits-deep in a spruce pit somewhere in resort side-country. In the two week window over Christmas and New Years, Vermont search and rescue crews saved forty five skiers from a hypothermic death by their own design. And, to the dismay of local power hounds and non-skiing taxpayers alike, they were left picking up the bill.
Dick Cheney in blue jeans should pay his own SAR bill some say. Others are proud our SAR guys and gals were there to pull Yankees fans and their fat wallets out, to live and pay to ski another day.
It's a wonder that during this same time period yours truly at Noreaster BC were chided, ridiculed and scolded like schoolchildren for posting detailed maps of our recent trip report from Lincoln Gap (comments about Andy being a Masshole have since been deleted). Critics said we had committed an egregious violation of the sacred blood oath of backcountry secrecy, while our more forward thinking readership complemented us on the service we do, which saves them both time and mental anguish trying to schwak their way to popular top secret BC powder stashes.
I'd like to think that we've done a whole lot more for them though. I'd like to think that those maps, which are absolutely essential to us executing a successful BC tour, might just save your life someday.
Dick Cheney in blue jeans should pay his own SAR bill some say. Others are proud our SAR guys and gals were there to pull Yankees fans and their fat wallets out, to live and pay to ski another day.
It's a wonder that during this same time period yours truly at Noreaster BC were chided, ridiculed and scolded like schoolchildren for posting detailed maps of our recent trip report from Lincoln Gap (comments about Andy being a Masshole have since been deleted). Critics said we had committed an egregious violation of the sacred blood oath of backcountry secrecy, while our more forward thinking readership complemented us on the service we do, which saves them both time and mental anguish trying to schwak their way to popular top secret BC powder stashes.
I'd like to think that we've done a whole lot more for them though. I'd like to think that those maps, which are absolutely essential to us executing a successful BC tour, might just save your life someday.
Monday, January 7, 2013
Trip Report: The Mohawk Trail Slides
In the early morning hours of August 28, 2011 , thousands of cubic yards of earth cut loose from its anchors on the slopes above the Cold
River in Savoy ,
Massachusetts . The saturated ground, which had already seen
four inches of rain in the previous two weeks, gave way as tropical storm Irene
dumped another six inches in less than eighteen hours. The resulting avalanche of dirt, trees and
rocks cut three distinct slides down the mountainside, across the road, and into
the raging flood waters below.
Labels:
Backcountry Skiing,
Gered,
Massachusetts,
Mohawk Slides,
Slides,
Trip Report
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Santos Trails And the Endless Descent Dream
Turn, pedal, descend, turn, repeat. |
Every once in a while you wake up with no clue where you are,
what time it is, or how the heck you got there.
Ever since my diaper wearing drill sergeant arrived in August, those
moments have been occurring with more frequency than I’d like to admit. In that split-second, when you’re perched on
the precipice between the dream world and reality, both sides seem equally
plausible; and equally absurd. In those
moments your brain scrambles to dissect what was the dream and what reality is awaiting
you.
Was the baby crying?
Was I skiing? Am I in a tent on
top of Lafayette ? Am I sleeping in a chair again?
As I sit here writing about my most recent adventure, I feel
like I’m sitting on that divide trying to get a grip on reality. What the heck just happened?
Labels:
Dave,
Flor'Easter Backcountry,
Florida,
Mountain Biking,
Santos,
Singletrack,
Trip Report
Thursday, January 3, 2013
Trip Report: Lincoln Gap 12.28.12
If you're anything like me you'll spend most of your workday this Friday pawing through satellite images, psychoanalyzing canopy density, speculating on tree species and forest age, tracing shadow length and slope grade, and generally looking for the perfect backcountry tour. But before you do, burn this image into your mind. This is what the world's most perfectly spaced hardwood glade looks like. From the ground up.
If, by some stroke of luck, you can actually learn to read the signs and find yourself guessing right and standing some place that looks a little like this, there's a very good chance you will be somewhere in central Vermont, just south of Lincoln Gap Road.
Labels:
Backcountry Skiing,
concrete boots,
Gered,
Glades,
kirk,
Lincoln Gap,
Powder,
tree judo,
Trip Report,
Vermont
Monday, December 31, 2012
2012, The Hospital Bed, And Mr. Should Have
This year was all about finding adventure wherever we were,
whenever we could, however we could. Come to think of it, that might be a decent way to live a life.
Labels:
2012,
Year in Review
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