Riding Footage From The 2008/2009 Season

Posted by on Sunday, February 21, 2010

I keep leaving it later and later, but, I have at least stuck to my principle of editing the footage from one season before snowboarding the season after. I'm talking about the video I took last year in Morzine. Over the last week and a half I've been streaming it all, and then did a quick edit yesterday. It had to be done given that I'm going away next Saturday...

To be honest, maybe the reason that I've left it so long is that I'm not that keen on what I shot. I don't think it's bad or anything like that, and I do enjoy watching it, it's more that I had hoped to progress on some of the things that I did in Fernie, the year before; the snowboarding in Morzine/Avoriaz took a slightly different direction.

That said, there are elements to this video/riding that really interest me. I had a lot of fun riding The Stash in Avoriaz, which is where most of this is filmed. I'd like to return to some of those features and some of the things I was trying. For example, there's a bonk (sic) around 01:14 in, that was close to being good. I just needed to 180 out. It's definitely given me a lot to look forward to.

As for the things that were missing, apart from amazing powder shots :), I guess I just didn't go big.

I'm still using Movie Maker, which although isn't fantastic, I'd have to say it's doing the job for me. The rather awesome song is "Our Life Is Not a Movie or Maybe" by Okkervil River from their album The Stage Names. Here it is..

Labels: , , ,

Link | Replies (2)

Having "The Fear"

Posted by on Wednesday, November 25, 2009

So have any of you ever had "the fear"? You know, when you want to try something but the fear of failure sets in and you bottle it? I'm assuming some of you have, so maybe you can relate to this... I should also mention that I've been meaning to post this since last January, but haven't really gotten around to it.

Last season when we were in Morzine/Avoriaz, I was quite looking forward to hitting the kickers in Avoriaz's Chapelle Park. In my opinion, the kicker line there isn't big, not at all, but to me the kickers represent a useful size. For example, you will see decent riders spinning smooth 5s of them. If you can spin a smooth 5 that looks good, the kicker is useful. It's the type of size that I'd like to be able to nail 1s and 3s (and maybe 5s) on - and I'd be happy if I didn't/couldn't hit anything bigger.

So, the first day we went to the park, I decided I'd try what I considered to be a safety trick, a backside 180. In my head the kicker looked a little whippy, so I thought a smooth, back 1 would keep me on my toes and stop me getting caught out by any whippy'ness. Make sense?

I put in an extra speed check, hit the knuckle and slammed. Not a disaster, but I hurt my knee a little and smashed my goggles. One of those bails where you hit the knuckle and bounce half of the way down the landing. I decided I needed to put one down before leaving, so borrowed a mate's goggles, went back to the top and decided a straight air would suffice...

This time I had a little too much speed, or at least it felt that way as I was getting to the kicker. Unfortunately, this caused me to lean back (classic mistake), the weight went onto my back heel, and yes, combined with a little bit of whippy'ness, that sent me un-intentionally upside-down.

I won't say it didn't hurt, but to be fair, it wasn't that bad. The biggest damage was to my confidence. I've hit kickers bigger than this in the past, with relative ease. I've sessioned similar or slightly smaller kickers, and been comfortable enough to progress to trying different tricks, variations on tricks. I came away from the second attempt thinking I sucked at snowboarding...

Everyone asked me: "why'd you try a barrel roll, what's wrong with a straight air?" To which I replied, "that was supposed to be a straight air!" Not good. How did I mess it up so badly?

Before I go any further, I'll show you what happened :) Yes, lucky for those reading this, a friend video'd the attempt. It's pretty funny, but, by adding some visuals to the words above, you can see how basic the mistake was, how dramatic the effect was, and hopefully why it knocked my confidence so much:

And so the fear set in. I really wanted to work with this kicker line. It's totally within my capability, but I bottled it. I didn't hit it again.

There were a few things that got in the way: we had some powder days (not complaining), I was enjoying riding in the Stash (not complaining) and I had the wsg review to deal with, which meant I needed to go to all the areas of the Portes Du Soleil (not complaining, but I'll write about that soon). But the truth is, I bottled it, and made excuses to myself to not go back and try again.

I've had a couple of episodes in the past that have made me think "ooh, I messed that up and it hurt", or, "that was kinda scary". But nothing has stopped me in my tracks like this. Interesting. Normally when I come back from a snowboarding trip I'm thinking "gotta go bigger next time". Now I'm thinking "can I manage to maintain where I was at before?"

Any of you ever had the fear?

Labels: ,

Link | Replies (12)

Day 13 - Last Day

Posted by on Friday, January 30, 2009

Another sunny day, blue skies. All of this good visibility makes a nice change from some of the heavy snow and white-outs we had in the first week, but after being spoiled with fresh snow, it feels like this place could do with a top up. Ice is starting to creep in.

Actually, it's the occasional areas of ice that have highlighted a possible difference attributed to one of the two, standout design features of my new board - the Lib Tech T.Rice. My board has Lib Tech's Magne-Traction edges and Banana Technology base. To be honest, I haven't really noticed a difference.

Until now.

Of course it's difficult to provide an accurate comparison given that I've been riding this board on all conditions for around two weeks, and I don't have a regular board to strap onto and ride the same conditions. That said, the lib tech does seem to have better edge control on icy conditions as compared with conventional side-cut boards. That's interesting...

So, the day started with Ciara and I heading up to Avoriaz to leave a copy of the world snowboard guide with Jean Noel and the Tourist Office. We then went to check out the Arare Park; Avoriaz's largest park. On the way there, we stopped to take a look at the half pipe too.

Man, where does the time go? Two weeks here and I haven't taken a single run through the half-pipe!

So the Arare park isn't quite finished, but there's still a lot there, and what is there is pretty good, and pretty big. We got plenty of photos for potential use with the online guide...

After that we spent most of the day in the stash. It's pretty addictive. Lots of hits, lots of fun, and something that Ciara and I have been happy to lap again and again, just the two of us. And being serviced by a fast, 6 man chair helps too. There's a pretty long, natural log right at the entrance to Main Street, and on our last run through I just about hit the end. It's round and knobbly, so not particularly easy. I was stoked. Also, Ciara got a couple of indy grabs, the first I've seen her do. Sweet.

Those final runs through the stash, and the rather excellent home run from Avoriaz down to Prodains, Crot, made for an excellent end to our trip. I just wish we didn't have to go home. More snowboarding would be good, and I need to sort myself out hitting kickers.

The whole group was assembled at the bottom, ten of us, drinking beers in what has become our regular, La Kinkerne. The hospitality there is exceptional. We sat around talking about what we'd done that day, and over the two weeks in general. Those ice cold beers go down so well. What a great trip...

Labels:

Link | Replies (3)

Day 12 - Main Street

Posted by on Thursday, January 29, 2009

After our meeting yesterday with Jean Noel, the directive today was to session the stash - Main Street.

So much fun. It's a bit of a shame that it's taken until day 12 for us to try these lines, but better late than never. We took 4 or 5 runs through, and Ciara worked some of the hits on Prolays. I had the video camera with me.

It was a good morning, I did some things that I was pleased with. I haven't gone bigger on this trip, in fact the truth might actually be the opposite, but I have progressed in other areas. I was pleased.

After a late lunch we found the Stash was a little busy in the afternoon, but it was already quite late, so we went to the Avoriaz Chapelle park instead. Ever since I hit the blue kickers there last week, they've been playing on my mind. Not good. I didn't hit them today either. I'd like to say that I'll come back tomorrow and hit that line, but to be honest, I don't think so. It's in my head now, and I'd rather not let it bother me, especially when I'm having fun shredding other parts of the mountain.

It was a great day, over too quickly, I'll address the kicker issue when I get home...


(click to enlarge)

Labels:

Link | Replies (0)

Day 11, Jean Noel From The Stash

Posted by on Wednesday, January 28, 2009

This morning we headed over to Crosets to ride some fast runs with the group. Sunny, early morning groomers means quiet, fast runs. Awesome. I love it when you you're going at a speed that makes you think, if I stack it now it's gonna really hurt.

I'm not totally sure where the boundary between Champery and Les Crosets is on the slopes, but we made our way towards Champery to get a good look at the infamous Swiss Wall. I guess 99% of the times it's a really steep, mogul field, and big moguls at that. The rest of the time, following a lot of snow, it might be an awesome powder run; well that's what I hear, I've never seen it like that...

I had no desire to join the 100 skiers or so and ride the moguls - not just to say I've done it. Instead we headed down a really long run, the Grand Paradis, towards a small base station (car park), sitting a little higher than the town of Champery. A note for snowboarders who find themselves in this area: don't get suckered in by the length of this red, or the top section for that matter, which you can see from the lift, and to be fair, is really nice.

The rest of it sucks. You're walking. Guaranteed. And probably more than once. Apart from the top section, which, surprise, surprise is quiet, the rest of the run is a long, flat, boring trail. And there's nothing to see at the bottom either.

Cue lunch. Yummy.

Ciara and I split from the group for the afternoon. We had two agendas: Ciara wanted to show me some of the stuff she learned on her freestyle lesson, and at 3.00pm, we had a meeting with the top guy from the Avoriaz Park Team, Jean Noel.

I watched Ciara in the park for an hour or so, but I don't think she was totally feeling it. Still, I know she's improving a lot at the moment, her freestyle basics are more solid than they've ever been.

This was the first day that I haven't put any sun cream on. First thing this morning it looked like it was going to be overcast, so I skipped the cream. Mistake. It turned out to be the hottest day so far and I could feel my face tickling. A slight goggle tan ensued...

We met Jean at 3.00pm, at the top of the stash. He took us for a couple of runs through the stash, different routes each time, explaining things along the way. That, plus to the two chair rides back to the top and we'd learned a load of interesting information. It was definitely a good idea to have this meeting.

Having spent some time prior to this meeting shredding through the stash, I was surprised to find that we'd never been through Main Street. You see, there are numerous paths through the stash, which as well as providing good variation, also allows them to grade the different runs. I'd gravitated to the area that I could see from the lift; I like the hits that I could see, and the line under the lift had some nice sections of pow.


(click to enlarge)

Main Street is awesome. Loads of natural rails and boxes, jibs, hits and hips. There are no actual kickers; there isn't really enough space or control, given that the stash is laid out as a run. And it's laid out well. It's all about providing a good lines, and it works.

The only downside is that it's placement next to regular runs can attract skiers. That's not a dig at skiers as a group. What I mean is that you get skiers passing by, thinking it looks interesting, so they ski through as they would on any other run. It's just unwanted traffic. I don't mind waiting for someone else to hit a box or a jib, but who wants to wait in a freestyle-specific area for a convoy of 6 skiers to snake their way past?

Mini rant over.

Jean Noel was excellent and I thank him for his time.

Drinks at La Kinkerne is becoming a regular deal. After taking the bus from Prodains to Morzine, we popped into Mel's Cafe, a must visit. Ciara and I spent the last of our Euros, almost to the cent. The purchase was: one cheese burger, one double cheese burger, curly fries and two large beers. It was totally worth it, the burgers here are awesome!

I guess my budget wasn't too far out given that there're only two days left. Getting a close to one euro for your pound sucks, but not enough to pass up a beer and a burger after a day on the hill.

Labels:

Link | Replies (2)

Day 10, Les Gets Park

Posted by on Tuesday, January 27, 2009

I set off early this morning with Emma, heading for the Les Gets park. Ciara was missing in action, 6 pints last night proved too much for cathing the first bus... and the whole morning as it turned out :)

Not knowing the bus route, we decided to use the slopes to take us from Morzine to Les Gets. Once you get up into Morzine, it's one more lift, and then a single run all the way down into Les Gets base/town. A short walk across town and then up the other side of Les Gets, towards the park.

In all, it took us around an hour to get to the top of the park, from the base of Morzine, but it could be done quicker.

I enjoyed the Les Gets park. The beginner kicker line was good: three, well shaped kickers. The landings are a little short, but I'd say the shaping of the transitions kinda makes up for it. What I liked was that the park was laid out in a line; so you could hit the three kickers and then a rail, box and jib. Six hits is pretty good for a small'ish park. There was another rail or two, a hip, and a bigger kicker, although that was closed for the majority of the day.

The park is serviced by two chairlifts, one slightly longer than the other. We used the slightly longer one, Les Planeys, is it meant we could hit the final jib in the park, which I quite liked. I think it was something like 12-13 minutes to make a lap. That's not particularly quick, but a chiar does make a nice change.

I was working the nose grab - a grab that continues to allude me - and the frontside 3. Then melon this is starting to come more easily, even if the hit is smaller.

There's a handy restaurant at the top of the park, English owned I guess, and we ate there. It wasn't a full afternoon, but we did take a few more laps before heading back to Morzine, using the slopes again, rather than the bus. All in all, a good day.

Labels:

Link | Replies (0)

Day 9, Wsg Exploration

Posted by on Monday, January 26, 2009


Ciara and Emma had booked themselves a full day lesson with Our Camp, so I decided to take the opportunity to borrow the car and go for a drive: my mission to visit the smaller towns in the Portes Du Soleil and snowboard from Chatel to La Chapelle d'Abondance. I wanted to check out the Smooth Park too.

My route was laid out for me - thanks to the us getting stranded incident on Day 6. The plan was to make the best of the conditions on hand, take a lot of photos, get a feel for the layout, try some of the quieter slopes and make it back before dark.

All in all it went pretty well. I covered a lot of ground. After taking some pictures of the smooth park (the light wasn't great), I dropped my bag with the liftie and took a few laps. I snowboarded from Chatel to Torgon and then down to La Chapelle d'Abondance, getting a good view of Lake Geneva on the way.

It's hard to know for sure based on one day only, but the slopes over that way seemed very quiet. I saw some really nice runs, and non-crowded off-piste potential too. I'm not gonna say more now because I need to write the review up in full when I get home...

On the way back I drove through Morzine and on towards Prodains, to meet up with Ciara, Emma and my dad - he'd done the camp day too. I met Gilly Seagrave from Our Camp, their coach for day. She seemed really nice, and by all accounts, the coaching was excellent. Awesome!

Right now I'm taking my first, real opportunity to connect to the Internet. Wow, 9 days in, I really miss having a connection in our accommodation. We're staying out for something to eat. Gilly reckons that the park in Les Gets is pretty good and I think the others have been there today too - so that's the plan for tomorrow...

Labels: ,

Link | Replies (0)

Day 9, Quick Update

Posted by on Monday, January 26, 2009

Finding an Internet connection has not been easy. There are a couple of places in Morzine where you pay to connect, but they close around 7pm, so it's not easy to get there before closing.

Right now, I'm on a free wi-fi connection, in a bar/restaurant. Unfortunately it's in Prodains, which is a drive from our chalet, so I need the car, and the motivation, to come out on an evening...

So I've been writing up some daily posts, off-line, in the chalet, to post later. I might not get another chance to post the rest of them - if not, I'll post them when I get home. I'll also check up on comments, as right now I don't have much time online.

Labels:

Link | Replies (3)

Day 8, Not What We'd Hoped...

Posted by on Sunday, January 25, 2009

We woke up to a bluebird this morning, but unfortunately there was no where near as much snow as was forecast.

Yesterday was supposed to see 50cm fall during the course of day and night, followed by clear skies today. The clear sky materialised, but the snow didn't. It seems that the bulk of the snow fell on Friday evening and Saturday morning, so it was all used up yesterday. Without much falling last night, there was pretty much zero fresh today...

Still, the pistes had been topped up nicely and the grooming was tight. You gotta love fresh groomers.

We spent the morning lapping blues and reds; chilling, jibbing, having fun and filming a few things. Mike and Kay have come out to join us for the second week, so this was their first day.

We met up with them just before lunch for a run. When we got to the bottom Mike realised he'd lost his pass! No way. His pocket had split allowing the white, plastic pass to slip out. 6 of us went back to the top and re-traced our run, but I think we all knew it was a hopeless effort.

I think he took it pretty well :) They just went down and got another one. We discussed options for trying to claim a replacement, but with no receipt and a cash payment it just didn't seem likely. I hope they can claim on their insurance.

The afternoon was chilled too. This is the first time that Julie's snowboarded so I didn't see her too much in the first week. Having the full group together was pretty cool - it's good to see a beginner nailing their turns, picking up some speed and progressing.

We made our way down to Prodains, again, for some apres beers. One turned into two, and then four or five. We got the late bus back, had some late beers, and now I'm pretty merry...

Labels:

Link | Replies (0)

Day 7, Fresh Lines

Posted by on Saturday, January 24, 2009

Snow was falling yesterday, both during the day and the evning, so we woke this morning to find some nice, fresh snow. It was actually still snowing in Morzine by the chalet, with a small covering on the road.

Eagre to make first lift, we were lucky, as we only just caught the bus. However, we soon found that the Super Morzine lift, a few minutes down the road from our chalet, was closed. That meant we needed to take the cable car at Prodains - so we took a second bus from Morzine to Prodains. No problems. Still fairly early on the hill.

The visibility was ok; not bad, but not good, so we stuck to the trees under the Prolays lift. There's a run that cuts through the trees, which had some nice pockets of fresh available at the sides. Then, there's the stash and all the non-groomed areas in the trees themselves. Good stuff. We took 4 or 5 laps.

We then took the Chaux Fleurie up from Lindarets base. As you look across to the right as the chair goes up, there's a big, open area of off-piste, gentle to start but then getting pretty steep.


An afternoon photo of this area; it was less tracked when we took it.

We weren't the first by a long way. But when we got to the top, we ducked under the rope, still hoping for some good lines. We weren't dissapointed. First off, the sun came out just as we started. Clear skies and fresh snow. We then found that the top 2/3 of the run had plenty of fresh areas to make your own tracks. It was awesome.

Ciara really opened up here, going much faster than normal. It was great to see her really nail some powder turns. She was stoked, so we hit it up for a second lap.

The next descent wasn't quite as good. More tracks, and the snow seemed to get a little heavier, quickly, under the full sun. Still, nice turns when we found good spots.

At this point there was only 3 in our group, Ciara, Ross and myself. The others were a little hungover, plus they'd attempted to use the car to get to Prodains and got into all kinds of trouble. As we sat down for lunch they were only just arriving. Missing the fresh, not smart!

The afternoon was less noteworthy. Fresh snow became tracked and the slopes became choppy. I spent some time this evening looking for somewhere to connect to the Internet in Morzine, but the two places I found both closed at 7. Sucky.

Ciara and I stayed in the town and ate out. We're past half way now. Another good day of shredding on the hill.

Labels:

Link | Replies (0)

Day 6, Wsg Meeting

Posted by on Friday, January 23, 2009

We'd arranged to meet the representative from the Portes Du Soleil today, for lunch. The plan was to head over to Chatel using the slopes, have something to eat while discussing the wsg review, and then head back afterwards to meet up with the group.

When we woke we found it was raining down in Morzine. Never a good sign - but rain in the valley can mean snow up on the top - so I wasn't too bothered...

And that turned out to be the case. Once we got to the top of Avoriaz, it was snowing, and there was a healthy dose of some fresh piling up in places. We only had time to make one run down towards Lindarets before going further - but it was a good one. Ciara and I had left the chalet alone and I was starting to think that the others were missing out; the visibility wasn't great, but there are plenty of trees in that area that help to keep things clear, and that's where the stash is!

You can take a bus from Pre La Joux to Chatel. It goes through Linga before reaching Chatel, and in total takes between 10 and 15 minutes. That option makes reaching Chatel from Avoriaz a small deal. However, we'd decided to use the lifts to get as far a Linga, and take the bus from there. Probably not the best choice given the weather.

Once away from the trees is was a complete white-out. We took a long red from the top of Tete du Linga down to the base, which was probably really nice, but to be honest, it was hard to see anything. Once we were around half way down, the snow gave way to rain, heavy rain, and we were subsequently drenched!

It's worth pointing out that on the lift up to the top, des combes, I thought I'd spotted a good deal of cliffs and rocks that looked good for dropping...

We arrived in Chatel, wet, and later than we'd planned. With the weather and one or two stops, the journey over there probably took twice as long. We had lunch with Cosima, from the Portes Du Soleil press office, and chatted about the reivew. All went well.

As the weather was bad we decided to head straight back. Unfortunately we were caught out. After taking the bus back to Pre La Joux, we used the first of two lifts to take us back towards Avoriaz, only to find the second lift was closed due to high winds. This was around 3 o-clock, and it was closed for the day. Not good. Stuck at the bottom of Pre La Joux, we were faced with the prospect of a long taxi ride home. Ouch.

Lesson: don't stray too far on bad weather days.

Luckily for us, we had a car in the group, and they were willing to come collect us. The journey, 45 - 50 minutes, takes you along a fairly high pass running between Montriond and Abondance (roughly) - which I decided might come in hand later for parts of the reivew.

Ciara and I did our bit for the whole skier-snowboarder divide, and offered two skiers a ride back in the car, to save them getting a taxi. It meant one of us had to sit in the boot, so there was a small sacrifice involved. I'd like to say it was me that downgraded seats, but after a quick discussion, I gave in to Ciara's logic that she's the smallest, so it was easier for her to fit...

It turned out that the rest of the group were put off by the rain and took the whole day off. I still think they missed out. Avoriaz that morning had good snow. Oh well. The played Kings instead; by time we got back, they were all pretty wasted!

Labels: ,

Link | Replies (0)

Day 5, Exploration

Posted by on Thursday, January 22, 2009

Ciara and I decided to make our way over to Les Crosets today, with a plan to either go on towards Champery or Champoussin.

I continue to be impressed with Avoriaz and Les Crosets, which is very close by, proved to offer good snowboarding too: fast steep runs, good lifts, accessible off-piste and a well shaped park. A second blue-bird day, we were able to take some decent photos - I had the D60 with me - some of the views were incredible. On a side note, the backpack is working out well; I can fit my camcorder (plus handle) and slr in there, and there's still plenty of room for extras...

After looking around some, we decided to make our way to Champoussin: we'd check out what was on offer, have lunch and then head back.


Lunch was good...

Getting to Champoussin: not impressed.

Accessing Champoussin from Les Crosets is horrible. If you're on a snowboard, you're walking, guaranteed. And there's a good deal. Annoying. At at the end of all the walking, we ended up at a steep t-bar. They're just not comfortable for snowboarders.


I reckon you're walking along here... and around the corner too.

I won't say too much about Champoussin here - I'll be writing that up later - but the brief story is that it's quiet, there are loads of poorly connected drag lifts, and the route back to Les Crosets is almost as bad as the way there. We won't be going back.


Quiet slopes... there's still fresh around.

Before returning to Avoriaz we decided to descend on one of the off-piste runs we'd spotted earlier in the day. By mid afternoon the snow was a little heavy, but it was still fun. We were fairly tired from all of the trecking around and ready to get back.

We had some nice long runs to take us all the way back to Prodains, where we met up with the others in the bar for some well deserved beers. I've really enjoyed taking the camera up on the hill, especially as I'll be using the photos for the review. When I get back to an Internet connection (I'm writing these posts off-line, storing them up) I'll upload some of the pictures I've taken.

I'm still nursing a sore ankle. The plan for tomorrow is to head for Chatel. I'm meeting a representative from the Portes Du Soleil for lunch, and then there's the Super Chatel slopes to check up, including the Smooth Park...


Champoussin village.

Labels:

Link | Replies (0)

Day 4, Almost A Powder Day

Posted by on Wednesday, January 21, 2009

I was hoping for a powder day today - but it wasn't quite there. There was a small amount of fresh, but the tracks from the day before were still all there. That said, we had some awesome runs...

We started the day heading up to Avoriaz and then down into Pre La Joux. Ciara and I took a good look around the base station and the valley, making notes for the wsg review.

We headed up one side of the valley, and as we rose higher on the chairlift we discovered some accessible off-piste, still fairly fresh. A small traverse and we were ready to drop in.

Yeah there were some tracks there, but it was deep, soft and steep, with a few trees to make things interesting. We took 3 laps of this area before lunch; some of the turns were golden. To top it off, it was clear skies all the way and the sun was out. Awesome.

The lap was split into two parts. The first section dropped back onto a run, and then from there, we dropped off the run, off-piste, down towards the lift. The bottom wasn't as good as the top, but still worth shredding, with smooth turns and pockets of nice, deep snow.

We explored the area further after lunch, with one of the aims being to check out the happy park... We found that it was yet to be built, so after riding around for a while, we headed back to Avoriaz to check out the park there.

I thought the kickers looked quite whippy, although on reflection, they're not that whippy. It wasn't a good first session. My first hit, a bs 180, came up short, landing on the knuckle, crunching my ankle some, knee too, and bouncing down the landing. I followed that attempt up with much more speed, got the take off wrong and things went belly up, literally. More on that later.

Not a great ending to the day. I'd messed my goggles up nicely and my right leg was pretty tender. Still, the morning had been great, and I'm sure I can do something useful on those kickers...

Labels:

Link | Replies (1)

Day 3, Frustration And Jubilation

Posted by on Tuesday, January 20, 2009

We're pretty low, down in the town of Morzine. We woke to 4 or 5" of fresh snow on the ground. That meant there was going to be a good deal more up on the hill. Not completely clear, but far from a whiteout. Very excited.

We made the decision to go to Morzine rather than Avoriaz, which was a little risky given that we don't know the area at all. I don't like not knowing where to go on powder day, it's too easy to miss out on the good stuff.

However, I've been wanting to explore Morzine and Les Gets and we'd read about some areas that are good after a snow fall.

It kinda sucked. Actually it sucked. I was really frustrated.

Being new to the area, I was relying on the map, and it didn't line up too well with reality. The base station was reporting that the area we were interested in, Chamossiere, was open. After taking the first gondola up we had to wait 20 minutes for the next lift to open. Then the first run we needed to take at the top of that, was closed. We took a run down to a different chair and waited.

It opened and we headed down into the next valley - a valley with 3 possbile chairs to take you out. The lift we wanted, taking us up further towards Chamossiere, was closed. We took a different chair up and cut the almost-first lines down under the chair: short, but steep and deep. It was a little disjointed as the decent was broken up by a regular run snaking down under the chair, but good non the less.

When we got to the bottom, we found the area crowded, and with only one of the three chairs running, there was a big queue. The only fresh that we knew of was now tracked out. We didn't know where to go and the chairs we needed were closed. A good snowfall, fresh snow, and we were stuck. We took an early lunch and waited for things to open - I was frustrated and spent the time hoping we'd find something good and not end up missing out completely.

We didn't really find anything good the rest of the day. Following the piste map, we went from lift to lift, run to run, trying to get to places we thought would be good. We started with Chamossiere and that was closed. Next, we tried Nyon, and that was closed too. Incidently, this information wasn't available at the base station. By the time we got over to the Les Gets area, everything was tracked, and the visibility had gone bad.

We'd done a lot of runs, but nothing great. The collective opinion of the Morzine slopes wasn't high. Maybe that's a premature assesment, but right now I consider Avoriaz and beyond to be better. It's more interesting, there's more to do, more hits. Exploring was fun - but it was just that - exploring.

But then came the jublilation. Just as we were stopping, it started snowing. And it was snowing down in the town; pretty heavy. We stayed out for some beers and then found a restaurant. It was still snowing when we headed home. Suddenly, the 20 minute walk home, a fresh evening with soft snow falling, wasn't too bad. Very different to the first night, when we were cold and it was raining.

Spirits were high, it looks like we're getting a second bite of the cherry, another powder day. I hope it snows through the night. Maybe we were too hard on Morzine, but tomorrow we'll be heading to Avoriaz...

Labels:

Link | Replies (0)

Day 2, Powder, Snow, Rain, Snow...

Posted by on Monday, January 19, 2009

Our first day ended with snow falling on the hill. We were all pretty excited by the prospect of what was to come...

Emma, Ciara and I got the first lift up to Avoriaz and headed down towards the Prolays lift. The first run was great. The mountain was still quiet, we were ducking on and off the piste, hitting nice stretches of fresh. Playing in the soft stuff, kicking up snow. Good lines. Good times.

We met up with reinforcements after the first run, and started with a few laps around the Stash. The Stash in Avoriaz is pretty, damn impressive. As well as the natural park objects, the Stash is set amongst the trees, under the chairlift, and there are good pockets of powder on hand - after a snow fall.

As well as taking as much of the fresh as possible, and there were some good lines, if not a little short, we tried hitting a few of the obstacles. There's a good pic-nic bench setup with a steep, drop-away landing. I went pretty big off of that, from 50-50. There's good stuff there... some of it is pretty gnarly.

Following a few laps of the Stash, we tried one of the Snow Cross runs in Avoriaz. The Portes Du Soleil has a number of non-groomed, freeride runs; one such starts close to the top of the Prolays lift, and we spotted it while lapping through the Stash. My first run down was awesome. Fresh, fast, long and good turns. There was a good deal of faith involved, as the visibility wasn't great and there were a few dips, bumps and creeks that needed avoiding.

The second half of the run was more tracked, but we traversed to uncover a good strech that was steep and untouched. More great turns, all accessed by lift and on an official run. That's pretty good.

After our first run through, I spotted an area that was entirely fresh. I was picking out the route to get there as we went up on the lift, and the access was sketchy. I repeated the first half of the run and then left the trail and headed toward a bank of small cliffs/rocks. It was a short but steep face that I traversed on the heel edge, picking my way between branches and rocks, and pushing away small slides of snow as I went - nothing really. At the bottom of the bank the snow stretched out on a clear, fairly narrow, steep slope between small shrubs and trees.

Once I was half way down there was no grip left on the branches/rocks - so I just accepted it, pointed down and hit the slope with speed, then layed down some fast turns in the fresh, hoping not to hit a depression in the flat light. It was a great run - I'm glad I decided to pick my way down through the rocks...

Just before lunch, the light snow turned to soft rain. At the very top it was actually still snow, but a little bit further down, it was rain. The snow was heavy, wet and sticky, which wasn't great.

We spent the afternoon exploring a little. It was a mixed bag of horrible wind, wet snow, choppy snow, some good runs and evil chairlift rides. We ended the day completely soaked through. It's the wettest I've ever been when snowboarding. By time we got down into town, the light rain up top was regular rain. We weren't encouraged. Getting back to the chalet for a hot shower was a priority - after a few beers, of course.

...And then later on that evening, the rain turned to snow...

Labels:

Link | Replies (0)

Day 1, PS:

Posted by on Sunday, January 18, 2009

I love my new boad. The T.Rice is sick!

Labels:

Link | Replies (0)

Day 1, A Good Start

Posted by on Sunday, January 18, 2009

We didn't get into resort until around 11pm last night. A few beers, something to eat and time to unpack.

Sleeping wasn't easy. It was like Christmas eve when you're ten years old. I woke at 6 and couldn't get back to sleep. If I'd had an Internet connection, I could have logged on to play at my favorite online casino until my buddies woke up.

We were up for first lift this morning :) On the way up you could see that it hasn't snowed for a while... But the forecast is telling us snow is on the way.

Still, the first runs were good, and the base is good too. By mid morning our group was fully assembled... Much fun spending the first day shredding together; warming up and trying a few tricks.

It started snowing before lunch. Fairly heavy plus a strong wind. Chairlifts were brutal. As the afternoon went on, we were encouraged by the snow that was falling, but the wind was getting even stronger and it became a full on blizzard/whiteout.

We ended up coming down an hour early. That's hard for me to take, especially on the first day. But to be honest it was the right move. We couldn't see up there and the snow was biting on the face. Plus, the home run was awesome!

We're in the pub now. I'm posting from James' iPhone; hopefully I'll find out how to post some pictures from this.

When's it going to stop snowing? Will we get a bluebird? Great first day! I need to get off this phone and join the group, with the beers. Peace.

Labels:

Link | Replies (4)

All Set: Morzine And The Portes Du Soleil

Posted by on Saturday, January 17, 2009

I'm all set to leave for Morzine today. I'm writing this at around 11am; we don't fly until 17.45 this afternoon. Half of the group are already there. They set off by road yesterday evening, drove through the night and arrived in resort about half and hour ago. They should be on the hill by lunch time. I want to be there!

It's been a busy week. I made the camcorder handle last weekend and shopped around for a new digital slr. I've had my birthday, a last minute trip to the physio, snowboarding dvds to watch and it finished with a full body massage last night after work - thanks Ciara!

I've been preparing for the wsg review too. I think I mentioned that I recevied some copies of the guide to hand out while I'm there, and a couple of t-shirts too. I'm loving the t-shirts!

I managed to secure a new battery for the camcorder, following the death of my old one. I did still have the original battery, but that only provides somewhere between an hour and an hour-and-a-half. That's not always enough. The new one, around 30% bigger, arrived on Thursday. Nice one.

It wasn't until last night when I packed all of my gear that I realised just how big my new Dakine bag is. For a long time on this blog I've been waxing lyrical about the benefits of having a board bag + some kind of roller, rather than a single, almighty board bag. The reason being that it distributes the weight, allowing you to check more stuff in at the airport. It's more flexible too.

Be careful what you wish for.

I've struggled to fill my new luggage setup (a photo should follow). I started off, as always, aiming to travel light. I ended up thinking of stuff to add in, to fill the bag out some more... It's all good now though.

So that's it. I've caught up on the posts I wanted to make this week, I'm packed, and there's some good snow forecast to fall this weekend and into next week. We don't have Internet access in our chalet (lame), so the posts, if any, will be light over the next couple of weeks. I'd like to put up a picture or two using Ciara's iPhone while I'm out there, but no promises.

Roll on this afternoon. Get me on the plane. Get me shredding!

Labels: ,

Link | Replies (3)

Still hungry for more? Check out the archives.