Mansfield: Worth the Effort

Skinning Gondolier

After two false starts, my season finally begins. The allure of an epic 26 hour road trip to West Virginia was considerable (especially after seeing the incredible reports). But with snow on the way, guns prepped to blow, and a potential storm on the horizon, I decided to stay put. Driving halfway to Florida for skiing would have been quite an adventure but I couldn’t justify it with things looking so good locally.

Instead of driving all day Saturday to ski Sunday, I drove on Sunday to ski on Sunday, returning to my own bed at night. And tomorrow, I’ll do the same but with lift assistance. The next day, I’ll recuperate and watch the storm come in and then repeat the process with better results.

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A Tale of Two Cannons

Mount Lafayette from Avalanche

If the density of skiers at Cannon is any indicator, demand is seriously exceeding supply. Much like last year, Cannon opened with one crowded route via Middle Cannon to Gremlin. Unlike last year, Thanksgiving leftovers were still available for turn earning.

Despite bringing both alpine and touring setups, I concluded it would be a lift serviced day. I thought the natural snow would be manky given the warm temperature. So I boarded the Peabody Quad for a few runs down the gauntlet.

While riding the Quad, I looked around and reflected on how Cannon continues to be my mountain. I’ll ruminate in a future post about what factors induce love of particular mountains. I won’t be spoiling anything by stating the nuanced connection is both irrational and emotional.

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Turns Sweet Turns: Sunday River

I hoped for a half dozen runs before the lines and downloading became overwhelming. Instead, I got a baker’s dozen before the lines and downloading became barely a minor annoyance. The guns were on and then they were off. The turns were good on variable man made blow with natural and skier induced terrain obstacles. Skier’s right on T2 was sweet and Upper Punch sucked the big one. Coming off a mammoth earned turn powder day last week, this wasn’t much to write about. But it was still turns sweet turns and I’ll be back for more next weekend if the natural hasn’t returned.

Opening Weekend at Cannon, WROD Style: Whoa!!!

Traffic Jam on Gremlin

I have done many things on skis that might be considered dangerous. Ducking ropes, solo skiing in the backcountry/sidecountry, suspect route selection, etc. But such ill advised exploits hardly compare to running the gauntlet opening weekend on the only open trail. Cannon’s lone route, comprised of Middle Cannon to Gremlin, was flooded with sliders. Surviving the WROD was more a matter of luck than technical prowess and staying alert.

Obstacles on the trails included three ski teams, a variety of lower level skiers, college yahoo straight liners, and the rest of the general skiing population. Trail density was highest when the Peabody Quad–a high speed detachable–was running full capacity, effectively dumping four skiers onto Middle Cannon every eight seconds. There simply was no break between skiers to get some space for turning.

Base of Cannon

My decision to ski with my new (to me) Volkl Six Stars was not helping matters. These skis are jaw dropping in high speed wide arcs. You can not put them on without feeling double dog dared to rip it edge to edge as fast as possible. Reigning them in is more difficult than stopping a runaway stage coach whose horses are galloping towards a cliff without a second thought. Whoa… whoa!!!

Reign in the big arcs I did but dancing along the sides of the trails was just as dangerous. Instead of skiing a human slalom course, I suddenly become a human gate for others. The best course of action was something in between the two extremes. Wait until you have a clear path, give it some gas, and then hit the breaks and wait for the alley to clear again.

The danger to fun ratio had decidedly tipped towards the dangerous side after five runs. I have all season to engage in dangerous skiing behavior. There was certainly no reason to risk life and limb on a WROD during Cannon’s opening weekend of the season.

River at Sunday River on Sunday

Barker Quad Now Online for the 2010-2011 Season

Inspirational credit for the post title goes to Pat at Ski Mad World. The originally proposed title was not to be but there will be other days for sure! As for Sunday at the River, conditions varied from sliding on golf balls to sublime cheesecake: carve out a slice and dig in–de-lish!

Icelanticskier spied me in line at the Locke Mountain Triple and we partnered up for the morning. T2 was skiing proper in the morning with fine grooming which gave way to a much more variable Sunday Punch. The top to bottom run ended with fine carving on Lower Punch which gradually scraped down and bumped up later in the morning due to traffic. Upper Sunday Punch featured the afore mentioned golf ball skiing. “At least we know what that skis like, now!”

Every other chair went empty due to the mid-station loading option. The line backed up past Rocking Chair onto the end of Lower Punch. I may ski all season without waiting in a longer line. Due to the lines at the base, we loaded at mid-station once before noticing the Barker Quad starting to turn. This saved the day as more late arrivals were still adding to the customer base.

Right Stuff was nasty! And I mean that in a good way. The guns were blowing top to bottom on Right Stuff which piled up several large mounds to bank around and jump off. Two especially nice hucks were available near the start of the trail allowing for a quick one-two huck fest. Skiers left had the goods with sublime turns in and around the bumps. As the morning gave way to afternoon, skier traffic took its toll scraping the snow down considerably and further defining a few small bump sequences. My legs were shot by quarter past one when I called it a day. Right Stuff gave me far more than expected with great variable terrain features and bumps.

Four days at the River in the past month for only $100. Money well spent for some quality man made snow skiing during a dearth of natural snow. That being said, I bid farewell to Sunday River until next October with most other major resorts coming online this week.