#252651 - Wed Jan 09 2008 09:20 PM
Re: aussies recognized
[Re: quattro]
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SJ'er with 1000+ posts
Registered: Mon Nov 13 2006
Posts: 1022
Loc: Yamagata
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quattro, you have got to work on that grammar, mate. That was painful.
As far as avi-gear is concerned for the inbounds stuff, I wouldn't sweat any groomers/courses virtually anywhere. (I'm a a certified Level 3 Avi cert from American Avalanche Institute.)
Off piste, however, in or out of bounds is completely different. I've ridden slides in-bounds. My work on Patrol taught me more about starting slides than anything. I can't even count (or estimate) how many slides I've started.
All of the recent inbounds slides making the news recently are offpiste, on big terrain. Even after the bombs and ski-cutting, there are always lingering slabs that could take out anyone and push them into a tree.
If you are willing to carry a shovel and a beacon, even if you are taking care of kids on greens, then I applaud you. If only that were standard... however, my training took years and heeps of cash. I don't expect the avaerage recreational skier to be willing to front that to go play in the snow.
either way, all snow slides. it's physics. (let me rephrase that- all snow IS SLIDING... right now.) Think silly putty. stretch it slowly, or break it by pulling it apart too quickly.
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#252657 - Wed Jan 09 2008 09:39 PM
Re: aussies recognized
[Re: samurai]
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SJ'er with 3000+ posts
Registered: Tue Oct 26 2004
Posts: 3542
Loc: 東京 (Tokyo)
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To tell you the truth, regardless of avie danger, I always carry my back pack with me. The balance on a snowboard is so much different without it, so like quatro, I have it on all the time with my shovel and some more staff in.
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#252676 - Wed Jan 09 2008 10:26 PM
Re: aussies recognized
[Re: Mamabear]
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SJ'er with 1000+ posts
Registered: Mon Nov 13 2006
Posts: 1022
Loc: Yamagata
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FWIW mamabear, I think you're in the clear aside from "Huge" dumps.
being a nOOb with kids, I imagine you are far from getting hit. It's great that you're paying attention though. And- that is where the "Huge" dump factor comes in. Huge dumps have buried resort base areas. But even those resorts are at the bottom of huge faces.
Enjoy the winter, mamabear. Your kids are lucky to have you taking the precautions while introducing them to the glory of snow. These trees in japan are keeping you much safer than may be assumed.
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Don't wait up mom, I'm off to kill summer.
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#252687 - Wed Jan 09 2008 11:10 PM
Re: aussies recognized
[Re: samurai]
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SJ'er with 25+ posts
Registered: Sat Dec 02 2006
Posts: 41
Loc: Nagano City
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Just a quick comment about the inbound slides. They DO happen but it would be more likely at a resort that has some steeps (not too many in Japan). Is 38 degrees the correct angle?
Also quatro mentioned a slide at Squaw Valley in Tahoe. Well, I used to ride at a nearby resort (Sierra at Tahoe). I checked the reports. They reported 93 inches in the last 7 days - that's over 200cm! Squaw's report was similar. Those are pretty unusual circumstances.
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#257534 - Tue Feb 05 2008 09:23 AM
Re: aussies recognized
[Re: Snowhaus]
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SJ'er with 500+ posts
Registered: Fri Nov 09 2001
Posts: 574
Loc: Takamatsu
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Yes I've heard the same story. A distinct possibility, but impossible to verify and as stated it's not going to bring back anyone. Tragic all round.
About slides in-bounds. Was discussed on here a coupla years back when it happened BIG time at Mizuho in Shimane.
The whole of Big Morning intermediate(?) course (wide, long and max @ 20deg) cracked a metre deep at the top and slid 100's of metres. No extreme conditions. Incredibly lucky it wasn't a Sunday as everyone in Japan would have never forgotten the name if it was.
So the simple answer is any shit can happen anytime and don't get too smug about what you think you know.
But preparation is certainly the way to go. Got my earthquake survival pack by the door.
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#257571 - Tue Feb 05 2008 11:33 AM
Re: aussies recognized
[Re: snobee]
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SJ'er with 3000+ posts
Registered: Tue Oct 26 2004
Posts: 3542
Loc: 東京 (Tokyo)
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If Simons group did start the avalanche as rumoured, then why no one in Simons group didn't get caught?
And anyway, regardless of who started the avalanche, when you guide a group of people you have to make sure that you are not exposing them to danger not only when they are skiing down a slope but also when you are traversing an area with avalanche terrain hanging above you.
Edited by tsondaboy (Tue Feb 05 2008 11:37 AM)
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#257676 - Tue Feb 05 2008 09:42 PM
Re: aussies recognized
[Re: Captain Stag]
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SJ'er with 100+ posts
Registered: Sun Nov 18 2001
Posts: 118
Loc: Aomori
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That they can have the nerve to try and blame this tragedy on anyone but themselves is shameful. I liked the guides, they were good guys and fun to hang out with and watch ski movies with but someone needs to get prosecuted to send some sort of message to the "guide" industry It's not the guides who are assigning blame elsewhere. For that matter, the locals aren't really laying blame elsewhere per se. It's more that they question anyones wisdom in going out there that day. I'll be honest and say that I fall into that camp myself. I remember that day very well because with the amount of fresh snow we had I had planned on taking the day off and going up to the mountain. When I looked at the weather forecast early that morning though, it was obvious that there was a very big and windy low pressure system that was going to sit over the Hakkoda range that day. The Hakkoda ropeway closes when wind speeds reach 25 metres per second (or about 90km per hour). I knew that this was going to happen by no later than mid-morning, so decided to just go to work instead. At the time, I was working in the same building as the prefectural police headquarters, so when the police were notified it didn't take long to hear that there was something wrong up at Hakkoda. I was worried that people I knew might be up there so I was trying to find out as much as I could without getting in anyones way. That's when reports started coming through that foreigners were involved. I was also checking the Hakkoda ropeway website to see if they had any information. By this stage the wind speed was registering at 37m/second (about 133 km/hr). What happened was a tragedy, but to this day I believe that every guide on the mountain that day bears responsibility for it. If they had taken a glance at the weather charts that day it would have been bleeding obvious that the weather was going to close in on them all, and badly. The alternative, that they didn't bother to look at, or didn't know how to read a weather map, pretty much by definition means they should have no right to guide anyone anywhere. Skiing in poor visibility is part and parcel of skiing at Hakkoda. No one denies this, and anyone who has spent any amount of time on the mountain just learns to deal with it (or, indeed, revel in it). But it's one thing to know the terrain well, take responsibility for yourself and make judgement calls about what you as an individual are going to do. It's another thing when other people put their trust in you because they believe that you will make the right decisions for them and keep them out of harms way; when clients have limited knowledge of the terrain and/or experience in the prevailing conditions. I firmly believe that hubris, and an understandable (but misguided) desire to satisfy customers who had booked out tours weeks in advance (on the part of all of the guides there that day) were what caused that accident. I've kept my mouth shut about this for the past year because I couldn't see the point of pointing fingers. But now every weekend I see skiers and boarders who are blissful in their ignorance piling out of the ropeway to follow their guide, like ducklings following their mother. I want to beg them to learn how to look after themselves rather than trusting that their guide has the know-how and judgement to keep them all safe. I also believe that people should be willing to stand by the words that they write, even in an anonymous forum. If anyone wants to call me on it, feel free. I'm the gaijin girl telemarker in the orange jacket and grey helmet sitting with the old folk around the stove at the bottom of the ropeway.
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