Killer Powder Day at Burke

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Thankfully for powder hounds, Burke Mountain stuck to their scheduled first day of operation. Even though two feet of snow was added to Burke’s slopes this past week and skiers have been coming down with that rare illness known as powderitis, Burke held true to their first day. Massive powder reports from the more well known mountains and Burke’s perception as being off the beaten path and not a major mountain combined to make for an amazing powder day without much competition. Powder hounds killed it in Burke’s glades all day while most skiers were bumping elbows in long lines to fight over a few left over well hidden scraps at ski resorts along the spine of the Green Mountains.

Today was simply sensational. Boot deep untracked was found on every single run right through closing time with the first few runs featuring untracked snow almost top to bottom before the main trails and glades started getting chewed up. By noon time, the main routes and trails had a fairly choppy and bumpy packed snow but the glades and trees skied extremely well all day.

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Powder Day at Jay

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Fringe benefits of working in academia include University shut downs on powder days. With a foot of snow walloping much of New Hampshire, I ventured up to Jay Peak for a mid-week powder day. Thankfully, the new Michelin X-Ice snow tires had been mounted on Friday or else my day would have been substantially different and less powdery due to an unplowed six inches of dense compacted powder at go time. Three hours later, I was clicking in at the Stateside Lodge and skiing towards the Jet at Jay thirty minutes past first chair.

My unexpected tardiness combined with an abundance of College kids (due to the new Triple Major pass) and the lack of uphill capacity (Bonaventure and the Freezer were not spinning) resulted in quickly readjusted plans and expectations. Much to my dismay, almost all of Stateside was completely tracked out by 9:45 A.M. when I plopped my butt onto the Jet Triple Chair. I immediately went for the trees but found lots of tracks.

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Early Season Trees at Jay

Trees at Jay

Considering what we were skiing on last year at this time, I really have no right to be anything but thankful and grateful for the tremendous early season bounty of natural snow blanketing Jay. But familiarity, perspective, and relativity often combine to suggest strange things, such as half the mountain being open and three powder days within two weeks of opening day is not enough to satisfy.

Yes, when I arrived at Jay I was disappointed to see “only” a few inches in the parking lot. That disappointment escalated as I made my first run finding the wind had removed most of the powder from Derick, Haynes, and U.N. as I madly cut across the trails on Stateside’s southern flank searching for the goods. As per usual, high winds at Jay indicates the powder will be found in the woods. But I “only” found a few inches in the first few open glades I skied. Perhaps the expectations were a little too high today considering it is “only” December 1st!

The trails at Jay quickly melted away from my mind as I searched for powder in the woods. I was eventually rewarded later in the afternoon with six inches of fluff which I repeated three times before calling it a day. The crowds showed up en masse around ten and proceeded to lay to waste the few precious inches of good snow in the open glades. With lines at The Jet backed up out of the corrals and the groomed trails featuring a despicable mix of hard pack, frozen groomer tracks, rock, and ice, it was definitely a day for trails untouched by the groomers. Lower trails near the Bonaventure Quad were stupendous natural snow romps. However, the trip down Montrealer to Northway to Taxi made those trails almost unworthy of the effort required to reach them.

With a storm rolling in Sunday evening through Tuesday of this coming week, Jay is seriously setup for one of its best December’s ever. Half the mountain is already open and two dozen trails on the other side of the map have enough snow to open once the Green Mountain Freezer fires up next week. For those able to take a vacation day on Tuesday and Wednesday, epic things are awaiting. The rest of us will have to settle for sloppy seconds next weekend. But I am okay with that because it is “only” December.

Photo Gallery

Backcountry Magazine Post Couloir Merger

Backcountry MagazineOn April 25, 2007, Backcountry Magazine announced that it was merging with Couloir Magazine. These two magazines were the leading “earn your turns” styled magazines along with the revived Telemark Skier Magazine. Backcountry Magazine retained its brand and incorporated photographers, writers, editors, and arguably some edge from Couloir.

As a loyal Couloir subscriber for the past few years, I was somewhat concerned about this merger having never read Backcountry Magazine. Couloir subscriptions were passed onto Backcountry Magazine for which I have received my first two issues including a Gear Guide and a “White” Issues pre-season special. Overall, I am blown away by the combination and have nothing but positive things to say about the merger.

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The Ski Journal: New Ski Porn Hits the Newsstands

The Ski JournalLooking for an authentic magazine to drool over that focuses on skiing issues rather than the skiing institution? You can skip such commercialized standbys as Ski, Skiing, Powder, and Freeskier that cater more towards advertisers than readers. Fluff free and mostly subscriber driven, The Ski Journal is an amazingly beautiful production that looks and reads more like an anthology of ski literature and photographs than a typical ski magazine.

Published by the same outfit responsible for Frequency: The Snowboarder’s Journal, The Ski Journal is a new quarterly periodical that shuns typical magazine production techniques on both the front and back end. The magazine is printed on thick high quality paper that brings to life its exceptional photography and beautifully designed layout. Photographs are matched with generally well written articles that range from one page quick shots to double digit page numbered in depth articles without commercial interruption. While The Ski Journal does take advertisers on for revenue, the ads are limited to full pages and generally relegated to either the front or back of the magazine, never breaking up content or articles (sixteen full page ads out of one hundred and twelve pages in Volume Two Number One–compare that to Ski, Skiing, Powder, Freeskier, or even Backcountry).

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