Saturday, January 24, 2009

Day 16- Beginner Skinner 1.10.09

The name is accurate because those who chose it consider themselves so. The name is their creation. It rhymes! Why wouldn't I use it? Despite the amalgamation of veterans and newbies and wannabees this was still a good stomp into, for me, new terrain. Drew was the only one who had these shots in his past and now lead this group of eight, the largest group skied in by anyone there that day. We started as far up the road up Lamb's canyon as the plow cleared, and started the trek to some beautiful steep shots that can be seen for a few seconds by drivers on I-80 westbound through Parley's canyon if they are paying attention. I had seen them because someone tld me about them a while ago, so I eye them out when the moments present themselves.

Today we wouldn't appear as more than a small line of ants, definitely not discernable at that distance to the truckers and commuters on their way to SLC. We can occasionally hear this world rushing on down below. My life is at the fringe, and the scenario now with my friends and me peaceful in the trees, and down below people big and small are racing to get ahead of each other to often elusive destinations. It is easy to be present in the backcountry. There isn't much else to do. Finished skiing? Time to put on skins and hike back up for another shot. To the top? Time to take the skins off and suit up for the down hill. Pay attention to the weather, it is changing moment to moment changing the snow, to which you must also pay attention. The panorama of nature interacting with itself is dynamic.

I watch Scotty and Monica from the back of the group. The seem to pull each other up the hill, helping each other and not willing to give up when the other is still going. It was Scotties first tour ever, and Monica's second. As I watch them struggle upward I have time and energy to put together more pieces of the mosaic of this particular experience. They thank me again for taking them out, and again apologize for being so slow. I assure them that I am enjoying the pace and the company, and I am. I didn't like the name of the tour because it sounds a little elitist. Truth be told, I love the pace and it was so cool to see these folks that only hear stories about the backcountry are kicking butt on what I wouldn't have considered and beginner tour. It was full on and the group dynamic was great. I couldn't imagine a better time!

From the summit we were treated to a view of the central Wasatch in winter from the North, the first time for me. Immediately my mind starts to put all the peaks in order by working down all the ridges between the canyons. Kurt and Drew and I discuss secret shots that are visible and rarely skied. Scotty smokes a cigarette to stop the burning. There are only a few clouds. We can see for miles. We see the Powderbirds who see us and fly on by on their way to Bountiful.

We all take fine lines in light and fluffy powder.

We skin back to the top and do it again. Big arcing turns creating rooster-tail curtains that glow with the light of the sun shining through them, that fall to the ground like broken glass then recreated fifty feet down the slope.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Day 15- Cutting Cornices


The avalanche danger was high on day 15 of backcountry high life, but Nate and I wanted to get out and poke around a bit, to see what was going on with all the wind we had. I've been interested again this year in learning the snowpack, watching it change. It reminds me of Spock in the Star Trek movie where he died the one before and the was reborn and went from being a baby to a man in the space of a short time. In November we had no snowpack, by June this one will be gone like all the others before it. In that short space in between changes are taking place, and though it looks like just a bunch of snow to some people, the more time you are willing to invest in becoming personal with the snow pack, the more there is to learn about it about. It continues to facinate. While many are concerned about the state of the economy, paying the mortgage or getting a promotion, I'm more interested in whether the steep northies are going to be skiable with the next storm.

We skinned up Flagstaff, across the street from Alta. The whole way up we could see the hordes tearing up the slopes. At first there seemed to be fresh snow, since most of the tracks from yesterday had filled in with the wind and the bit of fresh snow. An hour later it was gone, lapped up by the pole-tapping, elbow-throwing crowds. The holy ground on which we are skinning may soon fall victim to lift skiing. Alta has plans to expand, and put a lift up the same track we are now skiing, opening up the heart of the Wasatch to crowds from New York and Texas, and closing down a thoroughfare for backcountry skiers. This lift would be a travesty were it to come into being.

From Flagstaff we ski across Emma's Ridge, still able to see Alta now with the added view down the other side of the ridge into the Days Fork drainage. Cornices have formed on the ridge from the wind event last night. Nate has a thin section of rope about sixty fett long with small knots tied into it. We both take an end and throw the rope down over the edge of the cornice and begin to saw it off. We pick the cornices over steep slopes so that when we eventually saw through enough of the cornice for it to fall, it drops onto the slope and should release a slide if the conditions are right. We cut through a few of them and only a few small pockets release. We want to see something release all the way to the weak layer on the ground. Just like kids rolling rocks off of cliffs, we want to see some destructive power when these 1500 pound blocks of snow trundle down the side of the mountain. In the end we settled for a shallow slab releasing and running full course to the bottom of the slope. We make monkey sounds in the excitement.

In the video Nate and I are cut most of the way through a cornice before the video starts. The result is a few shallow pockets of snow releasing.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

12-14 The Yurt

It's getting late. It has been dark for hours and the number of High Lifes is dwindling, a scenario too saddening to track. There is tension in the air as Danny focuses. Mark comes in with a pot of snow and puts it on the stove to melt. His footsteps send vibrations all the way to the top of the teetering jenga tower, and Danny pulls his hand away, eyes large, hoping the vibraions don't topple blocks on his turn again. They don't.

In the morning we will be riding the southies we checked out the day before. It has been cold and the snow is still in good shape. With all the avalanche danger we are a little on edge, but there are enough covered south-facing beauties below 10,000 ft. to send the endorphins to my brain.

The yurt is a special experience, combining the beauty of the movement of riding snow, with communal living in tight quarters with good people to create an experience that will not be adaquately explained here. With eight people living in a ten foot radius area for multiple days, sharing the cooking, cleaning, eating, skinning and riding, where the joys are well understood within the group and difficult to relay to any outsider, the itricacies of all these relationships, the small things, the nuances, they become a future of good memories.



Thanks to Danny, Glenda, Drew, Tara, Nate, Mark and Romero!