A Cranmore Quickie

Mount Washington from the top of Closed Alberg

A benevolent fellow wanderer and ambassador of good will sent me an offer I couldn’t refuse. A chance to knock another mountain off The List; the third in a week’s time. The price was right (it could in no way be wrong!) and provided me the impetus to snag my third three day weekend in a row.

I was startled by the complete lack of snow in the northern Lakes Region right up through the Mount Washington Valley. The mountains suggested the month was only November; but the bitter cold suggested otherwise. Without the benefit of much natural snow–just fifteen inches year to date–Cranmore is currently relying entirely on man made snow. Without snow making, Cranmore would be completely brown.

And Cranmore was indeed blowing away today. But they are focusing on the mountain’s main routes, most of which are still not completely edge to edge; some trails were only two or three cat passes wide. Where the snow guns were blowing, the snow was soft and skied well. Other areas varied from very firm hard pack to frozen granular to loose frozen moth balls to scraped and slick frozen base. Knowing it was a discount day and conditions would not be at their best, I arrived early and left before things got too crowded. Cranmore needs natural snow badly both to freshen up open trails and to begin terrain expansion.

Close Up of Mount Washington from Skimeister

That said, Cranmore is doing well with what they have (or don’t have: not even an inch of natural snow base). From the summit of the wonderfully named Skimobile Express, there were somewhere between a half dozen to a dozen ways down the mountain (depending if you are counting unique runs or routes). Essentially all beginner terrain was open and nearly all of the groomed black diamond terrain was open. I was delighted to find that with exception of the Slopes (North, South, and East), all of Cranmore’s trails are fairly narrow and–excepting trails on the main face–generally curvy.

Cranmore only disappoints in how it skis. Despite the 1200′ vertical drop and high speed quad, I felt like I was on a smaller mountain. Nearby Black Mountain (1100′) and Mount Abram (1150′) both ski significantly larger than Cranmore though neither have the snow making powder to have even half as much terrain open as Cranmore does in this lean snow year. And Balsams–dropping 200′ less than Cranmore–was much more interesting and lively despite significantly less pitch. Cranmore is steeper than its shorter mid-sized competition but not nearly as fun or interesting.

Despite its awesome history and once premier destination status, Cranmore is more a mountain for families than for hucksters. Which is fine. My expectations were low going in and I was not disappointed. I confirmed my prejudice that there is a reason I had always overlooked Cranmore. But as noted last week, part of the reason for such explorations are to ensure I have not erred in my prejudgments.

Now back to your regularly scheduled powder chasing content. 🙂

East Bowl Double -- Not a High Speed Lift

Skimeister

North Conway and the Moats from the Ledges Trail

New Year, New Area: Mount Snow

Bumps on Beartrap

When I wrote that I would attempt to rekindle some lost passion for skiing by exploring new locations, it was written with deliberate intention. Not some whimsical spur of the moment New Year’s resolution, so easy imagined yet more easily neglected.

Following through takes effort and often involves disconcerting action in direct contrast with normal habits. It involves deliberate and mindful mental recalibration. Creating a moment in which we allow ourselves to engage in something different and novel. And allowing ourselves to enjoy it for what it is rather than fighting against it, resistant to changing hard ingrained habits. It’s easier to make excuses than take the ride.

Mount Snow is was the furthest distance from home and most southern destination on my list. Driving south to ski is normally reserved exclusively for Magic Mountain powder days. Yet I found my car pointed south down I-91 on dry pavement and passing by the normal Magic exit. List aside, I had no other plans today and Mount Snow was one of the few ski areas not on holiday black out for vouchers. Reports of good bumps and warm spring-skiing-like weather solidified my decision.

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Balsams Wilderness, NH: Finally

The Summit Triple

Cross Balsams Wilderness off The List! My long awaited first visit to Balsams Grand Resort in Dixville Notch New Hampshire is in the blogs! Holiday weekend blackouts on vouchers combined with excellent early season snowfall made Balsams a top prospect for New Years Eve day. Add in no lift lines or crowds on Christmas vacation week and the decision became a total no brainer.

Dixville Notch is way up there. The drive north on Route 3 was arduous coming from central New Hampshire. I can only imagine what that kind of drive is like from the metro Boston area. Never having been north of Lancaster on that side of the state, I was not impressed–excepting an incredible view of North and South Percy Peaks from Route 3.

The Balsams Wilderness ski area is disconnected from the hotel by a quarter of a mile. As such, you never see the hotel nor the notch approaching from the west. Views of the ski area from the approach on Route 26 are excellent as the mountain meanders in and out of view with most trails visible. Balsams features clearly defined top to bottom trails which fall off the summit in a very picturesque way, both on the hill and from a distance.

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Every Turn a Face Shot: Cannon

Understanding a mountain’s subtitles pays immense dividends. Last January, I missed out on Cannon’s biggest dump of the year and learned the hard way about Cannon’s weather patterns. The same pattern has repeated itself multiple times this December, yielding significantly more snow than average for December at Cannon. After many quality smaller powder days, Cannon got a jackpot of epic proportions.

The snow report this morning modestly understated eighteen inches overnight. By the end of the day, Cannon corrected that understated report to more properly reflect reality: 28-31″ in the past 24 hours. I can vouch for the accuracy of this measurement and by the time this storm is done tonight, the grand total will likely be at least three feet.

After catching the first tram, I quickly determined that “steep and deep” was the best option. The only other choices involved straight lining blue squares if a track was available or suffering from the misery of poling and stepping your skis straight down the marginal fall line.

I quickly found my way to the party on the Front Five. Tearing down Paulie’s Folly yielded a face shot on every turn (no exaggeration). A snorkel would have been helpful. Everytime I opened my mouth to hoot, holler, or huzzah, a glob of powder snow was lodged into my orifice. This was knee deep explosive powder at its finest. Drifts and troughs were waist deep.

The runs off the Zoomer Triple came fast and furious. Paulie’s, Zoomer, Paulie’s, Echo, Echo, Banshee. All runs excepting Banshee tossed snow into my face on every turn. Taking trips into the Powder Room on Paulie’s was divine. Its much more adventurous and concerning when the Powder Room opens its doors in Echo Glade.

After less fruitful labors, I would later return to Zoomer where I found deep untracked under the snow guns on Avalanche. At first I was incredulous that Cannon would be blowing snow on a massive powder day. My incredulous feelings became those of gratitude as snow gun spray created a powder hound deterrence and a massive powder stash. Late in the day, I was still able to find in bounds knee deep untracked powder. Avalanche, Avalanche, Avalanche, Avalanche, Banshee.

Other options were explored thoroughly once I believed enough tracks had been laid down on more moderate pitched slopes. First tracks were deadly on anything less than steep. I choose my favorite line in New England for my last run where I claimed second tracks; which were likely even better than the first.

Today was not the best ski day of my life, but it does rank quite high. I had more face shots in one run today than all other runs in my life combined. And that face shot filled run kept repeating itself. The powder snow was amazingly explosive and stunningly deep. I lacked only for want of some of Cannon’s most choice lines which were still not in play due to lack of base.

Cannon: Six Runs in Six Hours

Fourth Tracks After Already Taken First Tracks

And you know what a title like that means!

The original plan called for skiing Mad River Glen on its opening day. But due to a skiing partner phoning in a trip report from Cannon on Thursday evening, an audible was called. Cannon had received twice as much snow as Mad River this past week without suffering from excessive tracking from turn earners.

Days after the snow had fallen, I was still able to claim first tracks on a variety of shots during every run. Even on the more popular slopes that were well tracked and packed, the snow was high quality dense loose powder with occasional pockets of untracked.

Untracked Chute

The dense snow was not bottomless due to a very minimal base layer. Ski base damage was a given on the more well traveled slopes. Untracked yielded the best results but an occasional rock could still be found more than a foot below the surface.

The soft woods were caked with snow. Lack of color in the trees combined with the mountain being in the clouds all day created challenging photography conditions; everything was various shades of white or grey. Whatever color was lacking from the landscape was more than made up for in copious amounts of boot deep untracked powder and excellent line choices. The pictures do not do the day justice.

Cannon is off to an above average start to the season. One more foot of dense snow on top of the current base will open up select tree skiing options and two more feet should put all options on the table.

Third Tracks on my Favorite Line in the East