Author Archives: Brian Sweeney

About Brian Sweeney

Computer programmer, blogger and home-brew software developer with a penchant for back-country adventures, old metal, black coffee and micro-brew.

Dynafiddle

The mountain demands respect, and once in a while it decides to give you a gentle reminder.

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Rippin’ some high angle GS turns in The Chute. Life is great…

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Any place but here…

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It was a long ride down…

What went wrong?  Hard to say.  Did I have a close enough look at my bindings to see if there was any snow in the toe piece before I started down?  Maybe not.  Should I have been charging as if I were on Dukes in the resort?  Probably not.  It’s a big mountain with real consequences and I think I got off easy…this time.  I think a solid goal for next season is going to be the avoidance of any ‘next times’.

New England Comeback

After enough false starts to test the faith of even the most die-hard New England snowsports enthusiasts, the Old Man finally pulled through and laid down enough of the white gold to make a second foray into the higher summits of the White Mountains.  Rob and I first skied Lincoln’s Throat two years ago and have been waiting ever since for the conditions to warrant a return trip.  The week of the 6th brought a respectable dosage of snow to the Whites on east winds strong enough to load up the west slopes, and thankfully wound down and warmed up in time for the snow pack to solidify for the weekend.  After singing the praises of ‘The Throat’ to every virtually every backcountry skier I know, I rallied with Kelly and Shane for a 6 AM Boston departure and drove north in search of bluebird, big mountain lines.  We were on the skin track by 9:30.

We found the slide to be bony in a few crux spots, but filled in enough for good skiing for most of the pitch, and the entire runout.  During the approach, we observed isolated sections of pinwheels on the sunny aspects.  We ruled out the variation to climber’s left of the main line since it was situated similarly.  As we got higher on the mountain we kept out eyes open for signs of wind loading on the lee edges of the slide.  May areas simply didn’t have enough snow to slide.  Towards the top of the run, where the snowpack was deeper we encountered a few very small slabby regions and steered clear of them.

With perfect visibility, mild temps, no wind, and confidence in the snow we clicked in and commenced slaying…

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A Cog-side Jaunt

With the grandest of plans in the makings for Sunday, Kelly, Shane, Ben and I decided to take a leisurely stroll up the Cog in search of soft snow outside of avalanche terrain on Saturday.  We surmised that the light East winds and recent snowfall would have loaded up the Cog pleasantly, so we went to investigate.  What we found was a decent amount of skier and snowshoer traffic, a bit less snow than we’d hoped for, and a bit more fog than would have been ideal for route finding above treeline…

All nitpicking aside, it turned out to be a decent tour.  After an 11 o’clock start, we pushed past treeline around 1PM.  We ate and drank, and considered our options: climb into the fog in search of snowfields or just ski the Cog.  With poor visibility and a late start, we opted to just enjoy the Cog rather than shamble around the summit cone in search of the elusive pow.  After a brief schralp through some wind affected crusts above treeline, we cruised a tracked, but soft Cog and enjoyed just about every minute of it!

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Gear prep…

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Gear failure…

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Ready for action!

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Low vis.

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The good part…

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Little Jay

This past weekend Mother Nature continued to bless us with a moderate “refresher” snowfall.  After lapping it up in the Jay inbounds, Kelly and I decided to mosey over to Little Jay in search of some untracked.  With the internet yielding a surprising lack of trip reports concerning our objective, we really were just winging it.  From asking around, we determined that we should park at the Big Jay parking lot, cross the street and follow a pretty obvious skin track up the mountain.  Armed with this scant intel, we set off in search of pow.

The skin track was well traveled and easy going the entire way up.  It brought us within about 50 vertical feet of the summit before dense foliage and steep, deep powder halted us.  We took in the view for a bit before descending.

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After a good look at the map and our surroundings, we realized that the only real way to screw up is to head too far toward skiers right, or W-SW off of the summit.  Such a course would dump you in the wrong drainage, a bit of a hike from the parking area and through who knows what sort of bushwhack.

We decided to trend a bit toward skiers right for a short distance and then push back toward the left of East, toward the two streams which would certainly deliver us back to the parking area.  In general I think this was the right idea, but we ended up too far into the stream bed which peters out into a bit of a mellow bushwhack.  In hindsight the best skiing would probably have been to skier’s right or West of the the stream bed.  The slopes in this region were tracked but plenty soft and getting free refills throughout the weekend.

Kelly gettin' deep!

Kelly, gettin’ deep!