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Thread: Wasatch 23/24 Stoke Thread: Red Snake Coverage coming at you live from tgapp's fartba

  1. #626
    Join Date
    Dec 2022
    Posts
    372
    Got another shady opening today. It was pretty great, worth walking back 3 times.

    Love the rolling openings. All things considered we are doing great, hope everyone else is having as good of a season as me.

    I was talking to a couple patrollers at the end of the traverse. I was trying to better understand the gate opening policy as well as the boundaries. The first one was like talking to a lawyer, then the other one (with a much more relaxed vibe) realized I was asking genuine questions about touring around the edges of the resort, not rope ducking. He was much more forthcoming explaining high altar. But I have a question that still isn't answered re the white pine gate. My assumption is that one could easily drop a cornice/trigger a slide above gad 2 terrain, so opening the gate is subject to patrol being ok with the conditions along that ridgeline. Am I wrong?



    Sent from my CPH2417 using Tapatalk

  2. #627
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
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    Quote Originally Posted by crankplank View Post
    My assumption is that one could easily drop a cornice/trigger a slide above gad 2 terrain, so opening the gate is subject to patrol being ok with the conditions along that ridgeline. Am I wrong?

    Sent from my CPH2417 using Tapatalk
    I would guess it plays a part in the decision to open/close. It's been a few years now, but I was up there once and some dipshits were trying to stomp the cornice into Gad2. I told them they were fucking idiots and they were gonna get the gate closed. Guess what, it was closed the next lap.

  3. #628
    Join Date
    Jun 2017
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    58
    Quote Originally Posted by tgapp View Post
    I had a primary dislocation of my left shoulder while skiing the Deseret twin couloirs, and that was an unbearable amount of pain. Getting that back in my shoulder (which happened about 9 hours post dislocation) was like a light switch where the pain magically flipped off. The fact that you got that reset so quickly is unbelievably lucky.
    Holy shit! 9 hours! And skiing/hiking out! You a tough mofo. That was misery beyond comprehension.

  4. #629
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    Apr 2005
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    A LSD Steakhouse somewhere in the Wasatch
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    Quote Originally Posted by tgapp View Post
    what you want is the Ogden Nordic ski trail, the Cutler trailhead

    it's still a little bony - we need another storm - but that's got both touring and Nordic skiing at the same trailhead

    there is no Nordic to speak of at Basin

    pm me if you need more beta

    girlfriends first ski lesson today

    Sent from my Pixel 8 Pro using Tapatalk
    if she had the same stoked smile at the end of the day
    = winning
    the bird and skiing with friends didnt suck yesterday
    missed my sfotex grom crew
    ran into a troller we share summer piscatorial pursuits with and the birds newest working god candidate

    cutlers good shit cool terrain and always a good vibe there


    "When the child was a child it waited patiently for the first snow and it still does"- Van "The Man" Morrison
    "I find I have already had my reward, in the doing of the thing" - Buzz Holmstrom
    "THIS IS WHAT WE DO"-AML -ski on in eternal peace
    "I have posted in here but haven't read it carefully with my trusty PoliAsshat antenna on."-DipshitDanno

  5. #630
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    May 2011
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    Salt Lake Chitty, UT
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    Quote Originally Posted by headrush View Post
    Holy shit! 9 hours! And skiing/hiking out! You a tough mofo. That was misery beyond comprehension.
    Genuine question here, why did you not try to reset / traction in the field?
    You took too much man, too much, too much

  6. #631
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    Mar 2017
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    Quote Originally Posted by D-Roc View Post
    Genuine question here, why did you not try to reset / traction in the field?
    Genuine question: why do you think we didn't?

    It's pretty easy to be an armchair quarterback when reading an accident report you weren't party to. Lord knows I've done the same thing plenty of times (including with your own avalanche partial burial), and for good reason - it helps separate us (the well prepared, the smart ones, the ones who will do everything right) from those losers who get their asses kicked because they weren't prepared enough or they didn't do the right things.

    Took about 45 minutes to an hour to get out of the slide path. Every step was head-spinning, blackout -inducing pain where my vision would narrow and I would fight to stay conscious. Vomitted a few times. Spent the next hour and a half trying to reset, two wilderness first responders and an NP. We tried two different reset protocols (one that the NP knew and the one taught by NOLS that one of the WFRs knew) and could not get it back in - my shoulder was too seized up. Took all the pain meds I safely could (oxycodone, hydrocodone, and tramadol and a ton of weed, while rationing others for a potential overnight stay), and even then I was still experiencing breakthru pain. By the time I made it to our tent I was hypothermic and in mild shock. Drank a liter of hot tea, got in a sleeping bag and did my best to disassociate, but was still barely hanging on.


    At the UofU ER they had to give me three rounds of intravenous fentanyl to get my shoulder reset. On the last and final round they told me if it didn't work then I would need to be sedated and admitted overnight for supervision. That was enough motivation for me to bite into a belt and let them do whatever it took to get my shoulder back in.


    ----

    I've talked about this before in the TRGz but before that accident I thought I was prepared and I always thumbed my nose at folks who couldn't self-rescue or who didn't take backcountry preparedness seriously. I thought that I had done everything right, I had pain meds and a trauma kit and we even had a tent and a stove and all sorts of shit. We were both WFRs for crying out loud, and even after all of our preparations, we still needed to get our asses rescued. Humbling, to say the least - brutally humbling. Shit's not serious until it is, and when it gets serious, it gets real serious real quick.

    ----

    TFW spent some time teaching me a new way to reset a shoulder that they teach the trollers at Snowbird, and I sure hope I never have to use it....but I'm glad to know it.

    ---

    Sorry for the rambling post. Hope that's helpful. I think that folks who haven't dealt with a serious accident (either in the capacity of victim or responder) can treat emergency preparedness as a checklist; once all the boxes have check marks, you're good to send it! Anyone who gets fucked up, it's obviously because they didn't check all the boxes.

    Sent from my Pixel 8 Pro using Tapatalk

  7. #632
    Join Date
    Dec 2014
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    37
    Ship landing at spruces now. Vibes if needed.

  8. #633
    Join Date
    May 2011
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    Salt Lake Chitty, UT
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    Quote Originally Posted by tgapp View Post
    Genuine question: why do you think we didn't?

    It's pretty easy to be an armchair quarterback when reading an accident report you weren't party to. Lord knows I've done the same thing plenty of times (including with your own avalanche partial burial), and for good reason - it helps separate us (the well prepared, the smart ones, the ones who will do everything right) from those losers who get their asses kicked because they weren't prepared enough or they didn't do the right things.

    Took about 45 minutes to an hour to get out of the slide path. Every step was head-spinning, blackout -inducing pain where my vision would narrow and I would fight to stay conscious. Vomitted a few times. Spent the next hour and a half trying to reset, two wilderness first responders and an NP. We tried two different reset protocols (one that the NP knew and the one taught by NOLS that one of the WFRs knew) and could not get it back in - my shoulder was too seized up. Took all the pain meds I safely could (oxycodone, hydrocodone, and tramadol and a ton of weed, while rationing others for a potential overnight stay), and even then I was still experiencing breakthru pain. By the time I made it to our tent I was hypothermic and in mild shock. Drank a liter of hot tea, got in a sleeping bag and did my best to disassociate, but was still barely hanging on.


    At the UofU ER they had to give me three rounds of intravenous fentanyl to get my shoulder reset. On the last and final round they told me if it didn't work then I would need to be sedated and admitted overnight for supervision. That was enough motivation for me to bite into a belt and let them do whatever it took to get my shoulder back in.


    ----

    I've talked about this before in the TRGz but before that accident I thought I was prepared and I always thumbed my nose at folks who couldn't self-rescue or who didn't take backcountry preparedness seriously. I thought that I had done everything right, I had pain meds and a trauma kit and we even had a tent and a stove and all sorts of shit. We were both WFRs for crying out loud, and even after all of our preparations, we still needed to get our asses rescued. Humbling, to say the least - brutally humbling. Shit's not serious until it is, and when it gets serious, it gets real serious real quick.

    ----

    TFW spent some time teaching me a new way to reset a shoulder that they teach the trollers at Snowbird, and I sure hope I never have to use it....but I'm glad to know it.

    ---

    Sorry for the rambling post. Hope that's helpful. I think that folks who haven't dealt with a serious accident (either in the capacity of victim or responder) can treat emergency preparedness as a checklist; once all the boxes have check marks, you're good to send it! Anyone who gets fucked up, it's obviously because they didn't check all the boxes.

    Sent from my Pixel 8 Pro using Tapatalk
    Hell I'm one to talk
    You took too much man, too much, too much

  9. #634
    Join Date
    Mar 2017
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    Quote Originally Posted by D-Roc View Post
    Hell I'm one to talk
    Sorry that came across wrong I didn't mean to be a dick to ya man

    Definitely learned a lot and I hope to be humble (and lucky) enough to learn a lot more


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  10. #635
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    Nov 2006
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    Quote Originally Posted by tBatt View Post
    Anyone wanna come pull cat 6 cable with me? Hiring a full time year round position.

    https://www.alta.com/telecommunications-technician
    Pm sent


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  11. #636
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    May 2011
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    Salt Lake Chitty, UT
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    Quote Originally Posted by tgapp View Post
    Sorry that came across wrong I didn't mean to be a dick to ya man

    Definitely learned a lot and I hope to be humble (and lucky) enough to learn a lot more


    Sent from my Pixel 8 Pro using Tapatalk
    Never taken that way, thanks for sharing
    You took too much man, too much, too much

  12. #637
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    Aug 2016
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    412
    Quote Originally Posted by Djongo Unchained View Post
    Man, I gotta get back to the Wasatch asap.
    Speaking the truth! Hope you can make it soon

  13. #638
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    94
    tgapp - that's a hell of a story - thanks for sharing. I know, notwithstanding all the stuff I do to be "prepared," I'm relying a lot on just being lucky and things not going wrong. Pretty risky stuff really.

  14. #639
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
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    1,266
    Quote Originally Posted by alias_rice View Post
    Things are getting firm at Alta, but the kids found some soft turns eventually. The forecast is looking a little grim though.






    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    I'm still dreaming of a white Christmas. Forecast is showing less than preferred but it's something to get this air moved out.
    I demoed the TECH TALK JONG! pro model this spring and their performance was unparalleled which is good because I ski in a wedge most of the time - bendtheski, 2011

  15. #640
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
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    cottonwood heights
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    1,755
    vibes Tgapp...hope you heal up 100%

    I been lucky and hauled myself off the hill each time, nothin worse than grade 2 ligament type stuff...

    the shoulder sounds painful ! I did a separation years back at killington...15 ft jump turned into a 100 ft header when the skis grabbed on landing and ejected me like a cannon, way higher than the treetops next to the trail. Used my arm to reduce the impact to my neck.

    Anyways, hope u feel better soon!

  16. #641
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    Mar 2017
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    SLC, Utah
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    Quote Originally Posted by baron View Post
    vibes Tgapp...hope you heal up 100%

    I been lucky and hauled myself off the hill each time, nothin worse than grade 2 ligament type stuff...

    the shoulder sounds painful ! I did a separation years back at killington...15 ft jump turned into a 100 ft header when the skis grabbed on landing and ejected me like a cannon, way higher than the treetops next to the trail. Used my arm to reduce the impact to my neck.

    Anyways, hope u feel better soon!
    Oh sorry I was responding to headrush's shoulder injury story from Solly this week, that happened a few years back.

    Got my shoulder repaired and rehabbed and I'm in great shape. Well, I'm in terrible shape but through no fault of my shoulder.

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  17. #642
    Join Date
    Aug 2014
    Location
    the LCC
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    1,265
    Quote Originally Posted by crankplank View Post
    Got another shady opening today. It was pretty great, worth walking back 3 times.

    Love the rolling openings. All things considered we are doing great, hope everyone else is having as good of a season as me.

    I was talking to a couple patrollers at the end of the traverse. I was trying to better understand the gate opening policy as well as the boundaries. The first one was like talking to a lawyer, then the other one (with a much more relaxed vibe) realized I was asking genuine questions about touring around the edges of the resort, not rope ducking. He was much more forthcoming explaining high altar. But I have a question that still isn't answered re the white pine gate. My assumption is that one could easily drop a cornice/trigger a slide above gad 2 terrain, so opening the gate is subject to patrol being ok with the conditions along that ridgeline. Am I wrong?



    Sent from my CPH2417 using Tapatalk
    Yeah, we're doing better than the east, with Irene putting the snowpack in folk's basements...

    About ski area boundaries on FS land: A ski area cannot close the boundary; you may legally duck a rope if it is on the boundary.
    What ski areas can do is control access to the ski area boundary; you cannot duck a closed rope within the ski area.
    The boundaries in Mineral are unmarked, vague, and at least when I worked there, we had sign lines past our permit area.
    Don't know where the permit area is now that Mary Ellen is in the mix...
    When I was opening access to the GVWP ridge, we would thoroughly test slopes within the boundary and open access.
    Problem there being that legally after a certain year we weren't allowed to warn about specific places like the Birthday Chutes.
    The Birthday's are an anomaly in WP; they are textbook N facing slide paths and have all of upper WP as a fetch with our prevailing winds.
    So I didn't open access when I thought the Birthday's looked pregnant and were in killing form.
    When folks hit the ridge and see them, they are so drawn to them.
    Can't believe no one has died there, yet.
    Matter of time...
    Time spent skiing cannot be deducted from one's life.

  18. #643
    Join Date
    Aug 2014
    Location
    the LCC
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    A ski area is not allowed to test for let alone mitigate avalanches in their FS side country...
    Kind of a bummer, no?
    Time spent skiing cannot be deducted from one's life.

  19. #644
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Alta
    Posts
    3,348
    Alta used to shoot patsy with an avalauncher. It’s been a few years since they’ve done that. Any idea if they were allowed to do that via the special use permit? Or if that permission was revoked? I was under the impression they stopped doing it as they felt it encouraged people to ski patsy under suspect conditions, since they would see bomb holes in the gut.

  20. #645
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    Aug 2014
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    the LCC
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    I believe Patsy is part of Alta's permit area, no?
    Problem with Patsy is unless there's a road closure folks are everywhere.
    Best not to shoot anymore and just use some closure underneath for a while when warranted.
    Time spent skiing cannot be deducted from one's life.

  21. #646
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
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    PNW -> MSO
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    8,278
    Quote Originally Posted by tgapp View Post
    Genuine question: why do you think we didn't?

    It's pretty easy to be an armchair quarterback when reading an accident report you weren't party to. Lord knows I've done the same thing plenty of times (including with your own avalanche partial burial), and for good reason - it helps separate us (the well prepared, the smart ones, the ones who will do everything right) from those losers who get their asses kicked because they weren't prepared enough or they didn't do the right things.

    Took about 45 minutes to an hour to get out of the slide path. Every step was head-spinning, blackout -inducing pain where my vision would narrow and I would fight to stay conscious. Vomitted a few times. Spent the next hour and a half trying to reset, two wilderness first responders and an NP. We tried two different reset protocols (one that the NP knew and the one taught by NOLS that one of the WFRs knew) and could not get it back in - my shoulder was too seized up. Took all the pain meds I safely could (oxycodone, hydrocodone, and tramadol and a ton of weed, while rationing others for a potential overnight stay), and even then I was still experiencing breakthru pain. By the time I made it to our tent I was hypothermic and in mild shock. Drank a liter of hot tea, got in a sleeping bag and did my best to disassociate, but was still barely hanging on.


    At the UofU ER they had to give me three rounds of intravenous fentanyl to get my shoulder reset. On the last and final round they told me if it didn't work then I would need to be sedated and admitted overnight for supervision. That was enough motivation for me to bite into a belt and let them do whatever it took to get my shoulder back in.


    ----

    I've talked about this before in the TRGz but before that accident I thought I was prepared and I always thumbed my nose at folks who couldn't self-rescue or who didn't take backcountry preparedness seriously. I thought that I had done everything right, I had pain meds and a trauma kit and we even had a tent and a stove and all sorts of shit. We were both WFRs for crying out loud, and even after all of our preparations, we still needed to get our asses rescued. Humbling, to say the least - brutally humbling. Shit's not serious until it is, and when it gets serious, it gets real serious real quick.

    ----

    TFW spent some time teaching me a new way to reset a shoulder that they teach the trollers at Snowbird, and I sure hope I never have to use it....but I'm glad to know it.

    ---

    Sorry for the rambling post. Hope that's helpful. I think that folks who haven't dealt with a serious accident (either in the capacity of victim or responder) can treat emergency preparedness as a checklist; once all the boxes have check marks, you're good to send it! Anyone who gets fucked up, it's obviously because they didn't check all the boxes.

    Sent from my Pixel 8 Pro using Tapatalk
    Great post tgapp
    Quote Originally Posted by 2FUNKY View Post
    Pm sent


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    !

  22. #647
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Alta
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    3,348
    Quote Originally Posted by telefreewasatch View Post
    I believe Patsy is part of Alta's permit area, no?
    Problem with Patsy is unless there's a road closure folks are everywhere.
    Best not to shoot anymore and just use some closure underneath for a while when warranted.
    I don’t believe that it is. As it’s come up in land swap discussions over the last few years. But I could be mistaken and it’s part of the permit but there’s the possibility of trading private land to the FS to make it private.

  23. #648
    Join Date
    Nov 2017
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    Down on Electric Avenue
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    Quote Originally Posted by Djongo Unchained View Post

    Man, I gotta get back to the Wasatch asap.
    Quote Originally Posted by schindlerpiste View Post

    If need be, you can crash here for a few days whenever.
    Quote Originally Posted by telefreewasatch View Post

    You know where I live...
    Quote Originally Posted by Shaaarrrp View Post

    Speaking the truth! Hope you can make it soon
    Thanks for the gracious offers my friends. I hope to turn with the mags of the Wasatch soon.
    Truly one of the greatest collections of ski bums in a localized community. From the FOG's with all the knowledges to the nkotb's looking for a life. Git sum.

  24. #649
    Join Date
    Apr 2021
    Posts
    3,480
    Quote Originally Posted by telefreewasatch View Post
    So I didn't open access when I thought the Birthday's looked pregnant and were in killing form.

    When I skied Snowbird, 2006 to maybe 2015?, those gates during some of those years (not all) were closed for months straight (or I just missed gate openings and was a gaper). Pissed me off as not every day was high danger, ha. Other years they were open more often, but never right after a storm which totally makes sense. Whenever they opened - finally - it seemed like a very cautious wait but very reasonable.

    Seemed like a policy change at some point (i wasn't keeping track when) to move to rarely open them most of the season and just wait for springtime?

  25. #650
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
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    Behind the Zion Curtain
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    5,209
    I’d reckon December of 08 was a time of policy changes.

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