What I've found if you take about 10-minute walk to the top and drop in to the NW side, there are plenty pockets of fresh tracks to be had... but yeah, it does get cut up faster than you can say zip-a-dee-doo-dah.
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What? Interloper's SL?
Thanks to the Summit webcam, I realized there was no point heading up to bachelor this afternoon. I'm going to try to sneak up tomorrow morning to ride some crispy groomers. If you see a kook on an alpine snowboard, ask for change.
^^^I’ll be there in AM. Look for the handsome guy in post 820. No idea of outerwear tomorrow, likely riding wrenegade 88s.
True, but the fun:effort ratio isn’t there for me by the time you beat thru the chunder to find the pockets, then loop around the mountain and MAYBE NWX is actually working.
But as we’ve previously agreed, I’m spoiled…
Attachment 489594
pow tips ftw
^^ What Bachelor lacks in puckered drops and steeps and bro bra I shat my pants cliffs and don’t fall and you die traverses, it has that natural flowy terrain and long ass glades and nicely spaced trees that is ton of fun… and I can generate as much speed as I can handle off that summit terrain. Flat my ass, yeah my ass is flat but I’ll say that is a perfect pitch.
What, interloper's SL?
TBS’s comment was a little tiny-bit misplaced and but sex is never dirty, whatever tickles your fancy I say. Besides I’m getting tarred of all these political correctness and censorship that goes with it. And thank you but I’m bringing my own SL to strap on my feet next time.
Shot of my screen while editing
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Daaaannng... that look so flowy surfing the mountaing.
Good talking to you fellows. I'm gonna log off. I think vicotin and whiskey to kill my pain is affecting me a little.....
And deadly.
Vibes to the family.
https://ktvz.com/news/deschutes-coun...uch-tragedies/
Quote:
Shortly before 2 p.m. Tuesday, Mt. Bachelor Ski Patrol received a report of an unresponsive male resort guest in the far West Bowls area off Northwest Express, resort Director of Marketing and Communications Lauren Burke said.
Always a sad situation
From that article
That’s a behavioral clue right thereQuote:
Tuesday's death was the fifth tree-well death at Mt. Bachelor in six years and the sixth in the last 22 years.
Be careful out there.
Thanks for all advice and hospitality. Flew PDX Saturday night. Hoodoo Sunday, Bachelor Monday, Hood meadows Tuesday. After what i experienced at Bachelor Monday, I'm sure Tuesday was the tits
awful about the tree well. I am old these days and i just enjoy my turns and that snow was insane monday it was killing me that i was solo. to that point im too old to take risks especially when every run off cloud was knee deep. but being solo i missed out on what was already an amazing day to be being best day of life. knee deep. and light
March 1, 2019, I lost my buddy to the same fate in the same place. His son and I were skiing ahead of him down sparks lake run… The conventional wisdom says ski with a buddy and keep him in sight at all times but in reality you are lost in the moment. If you are 100 feet downhill in deep pow days, can you climb up in time? I did not go back to Bachelor for about 2 years after that incident, but I still ski solo all the time in places that I shouldn't. Life is so fleeting but I'm certain we all take calcuated risks all the time. Whenever the tragic strikes, we stop to reflect but then you go on about your old ways. c'est la vie!
Fatality in Eastern Oregon (Anthony Lakes area/"sidecountry") yesterday... 😓
Avalanche Fatality on Gunsight Mountain in the Elkhorn Mountians on 3/6/24
"At approximately 4:37pm on Wednesday, March 6th, Union County dispatch received a 911 call of an avalanche accident occurring on the north side of Gunsight Mountain (8342') in the Elkhorn Mountains near Anthony Lakes. This incident involved two backcountry skiers. One of the skiers triggered an avalanche near the top of the peak while descending the steep and prominent north-facing couloir and was carried approximately 800 vertical feet. The victim inflated an airbag pack and was not buried, but sustained life-threatening injuries. The victim's partner had skied the slope first, set up position in a safe zone, and was not impacted by the avalanche. The partner initiated a rescue and called 911 for assistance. Baker County and Union County SAR teams responded. Unfortunately, the victim succumbed to his injuries at the avalanche site.
A full investigation and report will be forthcoming in the coming days. Our backcountry community is small and we understand the tremendous grief many are experiencing. Our thoughts and prayers go out to all affected."
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Sounds like they did everything right. Real sad. Thanks isisis. I'll be skiing almr soon.
Always wondered what they called that chute.
So first skier made it down no problem and second one triggered the slide.
Proving again that a slope is not necessarily safe just because someone already skied it.
But yeah, no idea what they might have done differently. It sucks
Vibes to family and friends. The backcountry community there is small and tight.
Be careful out there
Re: second skier. Statistically speaking the first skier triggers an unstable slope most of the time but not all of the time. Wallowa Avalanche Center hasn’t done an investigation yet but they mentioned that a persistent slab problem (due to buried surface hoar) may still exist in some terrain. Generally speaking, persistent slab problems are inherently more difficult to manage because they don’t always offer up telltale “signs of instability,” they can be stubborn to trigger except for from specific areas and yet once they fail they can propagate across the entire slide path and in some cases in adjacent slide paths of connected terrain (in other words remote triggers in benign terrain can also cause overhead slopes to fail). I have my own experience with this type of problem being involved in a fatal accident about 10 years ago. We don’t know that this Gunsight accident was a persistent slab that failed, thick windslabs can also be stubborn to trigger in my experience (that was the other problem type mentioned in the avalanche forecast; also a thick windslab on top of old persistent slab was exactly the setup that suckered me and my partners onto a dangerous slope that killed my friend).
I bring this up because there’s been a movement for years to shift avalanche training to problem-specific management/avoidance and placing less emphasis on the North American Danger Rating … but the rating very much still exists and gets too much attention / occupies too much working brain space in my opinion. Again we don’t know if any of these things were a factor in this accident. I’m just taking this as an opportunity to note that focusing on managing for the key problem types, and managing uncertainty vs consequences have been the biggest changes I made to how I ski in the backcountry following my group’s accident in 2013.
Thoughts to the friends and family.
One of the people involved was one of my best friends and the other was a very good friend. They're professionals in every sense of the word and have spent their lives working in the mountains in every capacity. I read the information that's out there for the public and I have heard the first hand account of the entire day and the event that occurred from those involved. As an avalanche professional (not that it matters), if I were there, I would have made the same decision, and I would have skied it with them.
I just saw last night he was former MHM patrol. I’m sorry for the loss of your friend noparking
Peace to his family, partner & friends
I am so sorry to hear of your loss Noparking. Thoughts are with you, your friend, and the families of those effected.
Thanks everyone for the kind words.
Mtb was massive fun today. Wind buffed out a lot of options up high and viz was perfect.
MHM having a bit of a bad day today
No kidding... I hope they get power back and resolve whatever maintenance issues with SSX by tomorrow. I expect nothing less than knee deep powduh and countury club skiing.
Bachelor got off to a slow start with PMX and Red on windhold, Which meant my hopes of first chair on Red were dashed. Quick shuttle to Sunrise and over to Cloud and that 1" of fresh overnight. Decided to head back over to West Village and got some nice turns coming down Olympia. Quick break and Red popped as I came out of the lodge.
https://i.ibb.co/727rFjn/Red-310.jpg
Ended up getting first tracks down Red and after 2 runs on Red, PMX popped. Got a few runs around Coffee and Tippy Toe, then shared a chair with a Bachelor maintenance crew member and heard her radio crackling of OBX getting primed to go. So, took a quick break in Pine lodge and upon exiting, the sign had just been flipped, and it was on once again. No lift lines to speak of over on the West side. Many times rode solo or with just one other fellow enthusiast. Snow was coming down and on the heavier side of things. But made for great carving and high speed turns.
Well played. Spring conditions arriving this week.