It’s New Year! Try to do something today and tomorrow that you’d like to be doing all year long. Isn’t that the Old Wives’ Tale? Here’s Hubris, trying to snowshoe. He wishes you the best New Year you can ever have!
Posts Tagged washington
Jeff Outdoors –
Fischer S Bound
The man abuses outdoor gear, so you don’t have to
I was born and raised in Tennessee. Our idea of having fun in the snow was bending up an old highway construction sign and using it as a sled. Most southerners haven’t skied, because there’s no place to ski south of the Mason-Dixon line (except at Dollywood on plastic snow). Occasionally, a fellow southerner goes on vacation and finds himself on a pair of skis. You have seen them out there. They are the guys wearing jeans, hunting coats, work gloves, and a ball caps with sports teams logos on them. If you look carefully, you’ll see that they have switched their Skoal cans to their left hip pockets because they have bruised their right hips from falling on their Skoal cans several times.
About 22 years ago, I started cross-country skiing in the mountains of West Virginia. I had all the wrong gear. Eventually, I ended up on the Olympic Pennensula in Washington State where they haven’t heard of groomed trails, and a guy at Olympic Mountain Sports set me straight. I needed beefy boots and metal edged double camber skis with a waxless base (due to the varying conditions the Olympics have). This meant Fischer E-99 Crown (Inbound or Outbound Crown beginning in 2004), or Karhu Lookout skis. Fischer and Karhu have been making the best all around waxless base metal edged skis since the 70’s. There are other companies out there, but you can’t go wrong with these two. Karhu has kept with a more aggressive kickplate (scales stick up slightly above the surface of the base) for better grip, but creates more drag. Fischer tends to use a less aggressive pattern (scales do not stick up past the base), which helps with smooth speed, but reduces the angle of slope you’re able to “kick” up.
Several years ago, companies started putting more width and shape to their double camber skis. I shunned the change at first, then bought a pair of Fischer S Bound skis. The shape is not outrageous for kick ‘n glide skis, but they still don’t fit in groomer tracks. My old E-99s fit in groomer tracks beautifully. They also don’t climb as well as the Karhu Lookout (my favorite for getting in a long workout with sizable hills). The real strength of the S Bound shows up when you spot an untracked 25 degree slope. In most snow conditions the S Bound will carve a tele turn, if you have a stiff enough boot to hold the edge. In powder, the skis will drive down just like any double camber would do, but the wider shovel and shape allows you to turn in all but the steep airy powder.
There is no doubt that I’ve left my favorite logging road trails with bigger grins after buying the S Bounds. There is nothing like getting a great workout, then carving turns down a virgin slope on the same pair of skis. I still ski my old E-99s or bum my friends Lookouts when the snow conditions are horrible or when I’m skiing with a bunch of skinny skiers and I need to keep up. The S Bounds are for the days when I need my spirit to fly free and I’m not in a hurry.
Pros
- Allows for turns in many conditions
- Easier for new backcountry kick’n glide crowd
- Build quality that you would expect from Fischer
Cons
- Kick plate is not as aggressive as it needs to be
- Won’t fit in groomed tracks
- Not as fast as skinny waxless skis
Bottom Line
If you want to cover a lot of hilly ground, stick with the narrow skis and aggressive kick plate. If you want to get nab some turns and you’re not skiing groomed cross-country trails, they’re more fun than a barrel of drunken monkeys.
Jeff Outdoors –
The man abuses outdoor gear, so you don’t have to
K2 Anti Piste Telemark Skis
I finally got out on my Anti Piste in some Utah powder last month. It took me a while to get used to the bottomless powder (it’s been a while), but after a couple of runs, I was on top and grinning like a fool. I’ve skied them several times these last two weeks here in Washington, and I can say that they perform well in powder and carve well on groomers and untracked snow. The rocker was not much of an adjustment. If you’ve been scared of getting rockered skis, don’t be. I prefer my shorter, skinnier World Piste for narrow chutes, crud, chewed up piste, and hard pack. By the way, I ski these with T2 boots and G3 Targa bindings – no sweat.
Pros
– Powder!
– Rocker makes it possible to carve easily on groomers and untracked snow despite the extra length.
– These skis are perfect for your first pair of rockered powder tele skis.
Cons
– You buy these skis longer than an unrockered ski. There’s more ski there than you’re used to.
– The rocker tip catches snow unexpectedly when you’re skiing chewed up snow and makes it feel like you’re skiing a huge ski… which, you are!
Bottom Line
Great ski. Nice flex. It’s a powder ski that can groove the groomers when needed. I recommend it. Don’t be fooled by the over-do-it crowd, T2’s are plenty of boot for skiing double blacks on these skis.
Jeff Outdoors –
Trail Users
Here in Washington, the “tweens” are over. The mountains have snow and every yahoo with a pair of skis, snowshoes, or snowmobile is digging through closets and garages. It doesn’t matter which group you belong to, you’re going to run into the other group. To avoid conflict on the trail, there are just a few simple rules of the road to follow.
Stay out of closed areas. Nothing will get a 70 year old woman mad enough to kick you off your Ski Doo faster than taking your snow mobile onto a non-motorized road.
Don’t walk on the ski track. Cross country skiers put a lot of energy (and sometimes money) into the ski track. If there isn’t a snowshoe track already in place – MAKE A NEW ONE – which doesn’t cross the ski track.
If you’re riding your sled on a multiuse trail, ride down the middle so that the ski tracks on the side aren’t destroyed, and use common sense courtesy by slowing down when you pass snowshoers and skiers. The noise of the two strokes and the smoke can ruin any non-motorized users day, so if you show a little respect, you’ll get loads in return.
If you are a non-motorized user and a snowmobile passes you, hold up the number of fingers that correspond to the number of skiers or snowshoers in your group BEHIND you. This lets the motorized user know how many more people to watch out for so that they’re not surprised. It also increases the positive communication between these contentious groups (unless you use the wrong finger for “one”).
Happy skiing, sledding, snowshoeing, and playing in the snow! And remember, GET OUTSIDE!