Snow in Japan? - March 2007
“Surely not, don’t you mean the artificial ski slope they built”?
One of the fun things I have found since my trip to
Where to go?
|
Typical |
Choosing where to go was a nightmare and I kept Uncle Google up late many nights trying to figure it out. There are there hundreds of ski fields and resorts, many of them are nothing more than a single chair up a small hill, most don’t have a website or if they do, it’s in Japanese. On top of this it is often impossible to figure out what ski fields are geographically close together.
I eventually found the Snow Japan website and its associated forums which are devoted to trying to help with this problem. The forums I found the most useful and with the help of some of the forums denizens I decided to go to a ski area in
Nice in Niseko!
The snow in
Between January and March this is the prevailing wind… Basically it snows all the time. Perfect!
Ski Beaver rips up a fresh line. |
A vid of some mellow powder in the middle of the Niseko Resort |
For the die hard Steep n Deep skiers
|
Japanese English is soooo much fun. This sign has nothing to do with food or bad pop… |
Unfortunately for me, I’d done it again, I’d picked a less than ideal season.
I should put this in perspective though. Because of the ticketing prices I was buying daily passes, so when the snow wasn’t exciting I stayed home. In spite of this I still got 50 days in, 45 of which were powder days. It’s all relative, compared with last year
|
The |
A side effect of having less snow meant that I did a lot more exploring off piste. In Niseko this is relatively safe, it’s not that steep so the risk of avalanches is usually low. Niseko Snow Patrol, like their Canadian counterparts, limit access to off piste areas when it is dangerous. Unfortunately, their decision processes aren’t as good, potentially exposing their punters to unexpected risk. This is one of the amazing contradictions that is
I figured I’d better get some avalanche training. I’d got quite used to Niseko so when the snow stopped for a bunch of days I decided it was time to explore the “real” mountains of Hakuba, where they had real back country. To do this I had to go back through
It is a massive festival, so much so that the only bed I could find was in the scungy HI/YHA in the centre of town – at least the location was good! The Snow Festival wasn’t immune from the unseasonable weather either. On the opening day many of the smaller sculptures had started to melt. The festival requires thousands of man hours to put together so it must have been heart breaking for the artists to see their creations dying before the festival even opened.
Happy in Hakuba?
|
|
Everyone knows that
I eventually settled on one plane, two trains and a bus. Easy. Except I got hopelessly lost in
My luggage on the other hand couldn’t have had it easier. In one of the contradictions I love about
Hakuba certainly had real mountains. The main range tops out at around 3000m so it is plenty high. In the Hakuba area there are two main arms of ranges that radiate out from a central peak giving huge scope for great slopes and scary big lines. Because of this Hakuba boasts a number of easily accessed resorts. Here I discovered another of Japans idiosyncrasies – with all these fantastic slopes to choose from the Japanese had chosen – none. All the pistes were on ridge tops or on gentle slopes with most of the interesting stuff roped off. When the resorts were “designed” the overriding design criteria wasn’t what would be fun, but the management of avalanche risk – that is by avoiding the risk altogether. It made for some fairly dull pistes. This situation had a great upside though, hardly anyone skied the really awesome stuff. The back country was steep, deep and oh yeah, it slid regularly. Not for the faint hearted or the unprepared. Unprepared I certainly was, but fortunately not unaware.
|
The picture doesn’t do this avalanche justice. |
The season here was even worse – they hadn’t had snow in ages and all the snow was hard and fast. Much like a good
So my plan was to get myself trained up and to hit the back country. Once again things didn’t quite go to plan. The next course was a month away and the changeable weather ensured that there often was significant avalanche danger. I got myself some BC gear and managed a few trips, but the lack of snow ensured that the snow conditions were difficult to ski.
One trip was through an avalanche prone area, although anything that could slide had slid and the weather over the previous few days had promoted stability – or so the experts told me. It was damn scary. The entry into the valley was nice, but the further we got down the more avalanche debris we saw – the biggest avalanche must have been 1000m long and had snow boulders the size of cars. The Finns I was with were unfazed by all the carnage and apparent danger. I guess it was all old hat to them – I just hoped they knew what they were doing. What I didn’t know is they had done their home work and Nick the lodge expert had recommended the route and briefed them on what it would be like.
I eventually found an avalanche course that was starting soon. Even better it was back up in
|
Kurodaki is the home of the best snow I’ve ever seen. |
Awesome in
The avalanche course was based out of the inland city of
The course itself was both exciting and sobering. Exciting because it would help me get access to a whole new skiing experience. Sobering because there are very real dangers, not just from avalanches.
As part of the course I got to use touring bindings and skins – these amazing pieces of equipment completely change access to the backcountry. Without them (or snowshoes) you are often struggling through thigh deep snow and moving very slowly. With skis and skins you stay on top of the snow and can easily walk up quite steep slopes. It was a complete eye opener. I think my next season in the snow is going to involve a lot more backcountry touring.
|
Hiking back up the back side of Kamui |
The course took in the back side of the Kamui Links Resort and also the lift less Furanodaki mountain. The snow was really great
It is a funny thing, the snow industry is coming a full circle with increasing numbers of people subscribing to the “Earn Your Turns” theory ie you need to hike somewhere to find the really nice skiing. While you don’t get that many turns in, those you get are great and you don’t have to put up with hardpack powder or queues… Our grandparents would be stunned!
The course was only two days, but seemed much longer – we all learnt so much, but now knew how little we really knew.
After the course was finished it was time to put it all into practice. The course had catered mainly to the snow mad
And that was it. What a great way to finish the season.
6 comments:
Pretty nice post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say that I have really enjoyed browsing your blog posts. In any case I’ll be subscribing to your feed and I hope you write again soon!
If you could e-mail me with a few suggestions on just how you made your blog look this excellent, I would be grateful.
You didn't leave an email address... So I have replied here.
I did the layout in MS Word then I saved it to 'Filtered HTML'. I then opened that file in notepad and copied the html into the 'Edit HTML' tab when making a new post. I think I then had to change the image url's to point to the photos I had uploaded.
My cousin recommended this blog and she was totally right keep up the fantastic work!
Thank you - I think it is time I did another ski season :)
I actually did do another season in Japan, but badly sprained my ankle in the second week which put me out for the rest of the season - so no blog post for 2008. 2009 was just a few days in Switzerland and 2010 was a NZ summer for a change :)
The King of Dealer
Book 카지노 a book deal with one of the best and most trusted names in finance. that is why its unique and innovative approach to the 1. The King of Poker (Paperback) by Snya Y.
Post a Comment