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Pow spray

And We’ll All Float On Okay…

Euphoric. Unreal.  Ridiculous. Life changing.  I’m almost doing our experience a disservice by trying to put this weekend into words.  The past three days at Jay have been the best skiing of my life.

It all started Thursday night when Rob and I left Boston and made record time to Jay Peak in search of the forecasted storm.  We awoke to disappointment–no snow. Yet.  We met up with a few of Rob’s friends, and hit the glades for a typical day at Jay.  It was tracked, but good snow.  It finally started snowing around noon and by mid afternoon it was puking huge flakes.  For our last run, four of us headed for Big Jay where we got some sweet fresh tracks.

As we pushed cars up the access road to get by, little did we know the weekend was just getting started.  The glades were starting to fill in as Rob and I ran to the Flyer for last chair.

That evening we made a rendezvous with the rest of our crew as they headed up in the storm.  The final tally was seven of us, including me, Marshal, Sweeney, Rob, Alex, Deb, and Denaro.  We woke up in a rush at the dark hour of 6 am, wide-eyed and pow-hungry.

After shuffling cars at the mountain we hopped on the lifts and scattered, everyone happily enduring 50 mph gusts on lift-rides for the blissful two feet of snow on the ground, and counting.  The wind actually helped fill in the tracks, so it was almost constantly fresh.  I skied The Orchard which was almost entirely untracked, and then we grouped up and headed for The Dip.

The Orchard, getting buried on Saturday.

The Orchard, getting buried on Saturday.

The snow just kept piling up, and we were just getting more amped as the day wore on.  Around three we made what was in hindsight a bit of a bonehead decision.  We gathered our packs and started hiking for Big Jay.  Before we left the resort, Marshal turned around and said he’d meet us back at the lodge.  Most of the group had skins, but Denaro and I were going to have to boot-pack.  After some deliberation we embarked on what became our Big Jay adventure.

The boot pack was tolerable, and we were making good progress, but began encountering issues when Sweeney’s skins fell off, and he started hiking instead.  As we approached Big Jay the drifts got deeper, and the snow was not letting up.  I was post-holing occasionally, and in a few spots we gave up and crawled to avoid breaking through.  We transitioned, determined the group order, and made a concentrated effort to stay together.  As we descended, the light began to fade, and most of our goggle lenses became too dark to use.  A few of us spent some time wallowing and righting ourselves in the chest deep drifts.  At one point I went to stop behind Sweeney, but my tips bounced  off an icy rock and I rolled into a ten foot deep tree well.  I was surprised I kept my cool, but it took a lot out of me as I swam up out of the snow and then Sweeney lent me his poles for support to hoist myself back onto stable snowpack.  Needless to say I plan to avoid any future encounters with trees, or tree wells.

I’m sure each of us managed a few good turns, but in the end it was too darn dark to pick up any speed.  We utilized Rob’s GPS to stay on target, and keep heading out towards the car.

By the time we reached the bottom and began traversing, we were skiing by moonlight.  We had a few headlamps with us, but the rest  of us were forced to keep an eye on the blurry dark shadow of the person ahead.  No one had any major mishaps, but at one point Sweeney made a turn and dissappeared into a stream bank in a cloud of snow.  Not much further on Deb got caught in a ditch, and then Denaro and Sweeney found some open water, which instantly froze to their skis and began gripping the snow like climbing skins.  Finally, we were out on the road, where we skied back to the car by 6:30.  It was buried so we whipped out an avy shovel and began digging and clearing it off.  As this was going on, a pickup rolled by and kindly offered to tow us out, and asked where we were headed.  We were mostly clear so we declined, but he proceeded to inform us that a tour bus had wedged itself on 242 from guardrail to guardrail only an hour or so beforehand, and they were bringing a wrecker and a tow truck up the pass to unstick it.  Needless to say, there was no going that way, which meant the ski boots were staying on for the foreseeable future.  The 6 of us piled into Rob’s car and navigated a route around.  Unfortunately the route included a road closed for winter, and the only other way would’ve taken us 2 hrs to get back.

What we needed was a snack break, so we pulled into the local grocery store in Montgomery.  All the back doors of the car were frozen shut, but we managed to grab the attention of two guys walking by to open up the trunk for us.  As we stumbled out I realized one of our saviors was an old high school teammate of mine! What are the odds?  We chatted briefly, but I’d gotten food on my mind and needed some asap.

With the goods acquired, we decided the only sensible thing to do is head back up the pass and wait for the bus to get towed.  We made it halfway before Rob’s car could no longer make forward progress.  Alex and Denaro tossed out ideas and saved the day: we started making rearward progress.  Rob turned the car around and backed uphill mostly blind. And it was STILL snowing.  At the top we found a few cars and emergency vehicles.  Sweeney and Alex decided they were going to go on ahead and ski/hike the road back down to Jay.  Just as we got all the gear back out of the frozen Thule, the bus was freed!  Back in the car, it was time to drive to the lodge.  We followed the snow plow, but even so, as we crested the pass, there was so much snow on the road it was flying over the windshield. Car faceshots!

Back at Stateside, we found Marshal, only 5 hours later, who we kindly left without keys or boots.  After a quick change we dug Alex’s car out and left Jay, over 14 hours since we’d arrived.  Jay was reporting 35″ on the ground as of 7 pm.

On Sunday, we were rewarded.  Even though I almost didn’t want to get out of bed, once we got to the mountain, we were lifted.  It was in the teens, Sunny, and there was 47″ inches of fresh pow on the ground.  My legs were burning on our first run, but then we hit the jackpot.  We started lapping the Dip, getting fresh tracks every run.  You could do no wrong.  We found some cliffs to huck, steep trees–everything was skiable.  We hiked back up the access road a few times, grins on our faces the whole way.  Several kind gentlemen let us pile into the bed of their trucks and drove us back.  It was unreal.  There were bottomless drifts, and everywhere you went you were floating on air.

Cue Sweeney’s camera work.

Rob post-huck

Rob, post-huck

Denaro catching air

Denaro catching air

Denaro

Me following suit

Me following suit

Deb dropping in

Deb dropping in

Marshal breaks a slab loose

Marshal breaks a slab loose

Alex catches air

Alex catches some air

Alex

I almost get lost in pow

I almost get lost in pow

...but break through

…but break through

Deb goes for it

Deb goes for it

Rob charges off the edge

Rob charges off the edge

Time to head back up

Time to head back up, with grins plastered to our faces. We were able to hitch a ride a few times from some kind people. Photo credit: Deb

Another lap

Another lap

Pow spray

Pow spray

Denaro aims to punch some branches

Alex

Alex

Marshal

Deb

There were also a few (minor) mishaps:

About to make friends with the snow drifts

About to make friends with the snow drifts

 

Swallowed by the POW

Swallowed by the POW

The rest of the day looked like a lot like this.  Eventually we were gassed. But we still couldn’t stop smiling.  I’ll never forget those turns.

Update: Sweeney posted his goPro footage of the weekend.

 

New Years Day on Mt Washington

Tuckerman Ravine. Left Gully is far left, the Chute is next to it on the right.

Decidedly fed up with the snow conditions in the East, Rob, Sweeney and I headed to Pinkham Notch on New Years Day to see if there was anything skiable in Tucks.  I’d spent the previous two days skiing, first at Cannon and then we’d been at Mad River Glen, where there was probably more moss and rocks than snow on some of the trails.

We did some beacon practice at MRG, since I’d never used one before.  It took a bit of getting used to, but I feel a lot more confident if I ever had to do a single burial search–though I still feel like I’m just starting to get the hang of it.

Instead of partying hard, we crashed early in North Conway to get a reasonable start.  We’d heard there may be some skiable lines, but with the variable weather, we weren’t sure what we’d find.  I’d recently acquired the necessary mountaineering, and avalanche safety gear, so either way, this would be a good chance get used to it.

Sweeney lent me an old pair of his climbing skins–that we never got to use.  The trail coverage was bad because of the recent rain.  Sweeney and Rob hiked up to Hojos in their AT boots.  Since I only have race boots (far more uncomfortable for hiking in), I put on my Brooks Trailrunners, and threw on MICROspikes over them, which proved to be a winning combination for the blue ice we encountered on the way up.

The bowl looked pretty gnarly, but Left Gully and the Chute were a bit filled in, so we made our way over.  Sweeney was behind the camera that day, so all photos are courtesy him.  His TR is here along with a goPro video of the expedition up through his first run.

Rob and I.

Some cool scenery.

Ice Axes out, on the ascent.

Rob and Sweeney, being more experience than me, stopped several times to evaluate the snow conditions.  They didn’t find anything very worrying so we continued up.

Me, contemplating my line.

Left Gulley was a little firm, though Rob said Sweeney and I softened it up a bit for him–after he kindly ‘let’ us go first.  Unfortunately, Sweeney only got photos of me standing on my edges, which I did a lot of the first run, due to the narrow trail we had to work with, and the ice crust on skiers left.

The Chute, our short second run.

Rob, laying it over on the Chute.

The Chute, although short, was MUCH better.  The steeps at the top had a bit of an ice crust, but the middle, where it narrows down by the rocks, was a blast.

Heading out of the bowl.

You may have noticed in the photos that my gear was strewn everywhere, and that I carried race poles up.  Bringing race poles was a mistake on my part–I’d left my 3 section trekking poles at home.  However, I didn’t really have a winter pack either, I was using my old, trusty North Face Borealis, which clocks in somewhere around 23 L, and certainly isn’t meant for tossing almost 40 lbs of gear on.  It did the job, but the pack looked and felt like it was about to burst–my skis were barely hanging on and there was nowhere to put things.  Luckily I’ve now resolved this problem.  Knowing the features my old pack lacked for winter use, I went and bought the REI Double Diamond pack, which so far looks pretty sweet.

We skied down through the bushes as far as we could, then we packed up and reconvened briefly at Hermit Lake.  Sweeney and Rob attempted to ski the Sherburne as far as possible.  I didn’t like the prospect of hiking any more in my ski boots, so I put my shoes back on and hiked down, ending up in Pinkham just behind them.

Overall it was a stellar day, and probably the best skiing to be had in the East on Sunday.

Certainly a memorable weekend.