Jon Lee Likes to Ski
That pretty much sums it up.
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Revelstoke
1000 miles from SLC to Revelstoke, 3 days of skiing, placing 19th in the qualifier, but only 13 made it through, so I headed back to SLC. Defeated, a little annoyed, but motivated to ski hard at Crested Butte next month.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
El numero cuatro
Snowbird today with Liz Sherry- Not a lot of snow, but tons of fun. Soft in spots, chalky in some, ice in spots, peppered with rocks here and there, but not damage! Skied the Bluehouse Precinct 181cm today, I love these things! Solid and stable at high speed, yet easy to maneuver at slow speeds and tight spots. Perfect.
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Yesss, #3 in the bag
Not so much of a big deal, but I got another day in! Went up to The Canyons and met up skiing legend, Sam Webb. Not much of the mountain was open, but the snow was pretty good, better than Deer Valley at least. I'll be skiing there a lot maybe, because of the Level 9 hookup. That is, until I somehow get a pass to Snowbird or Alta. Can't wait for that day ;)
Sorry, no pics today. But I will mention the orange bubble chairlift that warms your butt while you ride up. It seems a little over the top, but my toasty buns really appreciated it.
Highlight of the day was finding out that the Bluehouse Precinct 181cm is a perfect match for me. The sidecut works, the weight, width, everything just fell into place with this ski. I imagine it will be used everyday. Now we just need more snow. There's still lots of dirt and weeds showing.
Sorry, no pics today. But I will mention the orange bubble chairlift that warms your butt while you ride up. It seems a little over the top, but my toasty buns really appreciated it.
Highlight of the day was finding out that the Bluehouse Precinct 181cm is a perfect match for me. The sidecut works, the weight, width, everything just fell into place with this ski. I imagine it will be used everyday. Now we just need more snow. There's still lots of dirt and weeds showing.
Sunday, December 11, 2011
100 what?
So I had this ridiculous idea, that somehow got out before I was really committed, that I would ski 100 days this season. I say ridiculous because I've never skied 100 days before in a season, and right now the snowfall totals are quite marginal. This time last year was incredible, great snow, early start to the season, and motivation levels were at an all time high. This season, being the antithesis of last, has proved difficult in accomplishing the 100 day goal, or at least getting off to a good start. So far I've logged 2 days. Two days of groomed runs, firm snow, and trying to get accustomed to my new skis. In other words, this is quickly becoming next to impossible. I'm still going to try though.
With the mindset of, "If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?", I am forcing myself to log these 100 days. There are too many trolls and haters that would call me out too. Especially the guys that are saying they ski 200 days a year, have full time jobs, 5 kids, 3 wives, 2 dogs, and 1 leg.
So, here it is:
Day 1
12/8/2011 Deer Valley Resort
With the mindset of, "If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?", I am forcing myself to log these 100 days. There are too many trolls and haters that would call me out too. Especially the guys that are saying they ski 200 days a year, have full time jobs, 5 kids, 3 wives, 2 dogs, and 1 leg.
So, here it is:
Day 1
12/8/2011 Deer Valley Resort
Bluehouse Radius, no snow
Day 2
12/9/2011 Alta Ski Resort With Jason & Manny
Smog Lake City off in the distance
Oh, I guess I need to make an entry of my trip to Chile in August, so maybe that will happen someday. Hey, wait a minute... Does skiing in August count toward my 100 day thingy? I'll have to get a poll going on that one.
Monday, June 6, 2011
More Spring Powder
This season has turned out to be more than incredible. Snowbird's season to date snowfall (let's just call it their STD) is at 756". The average is normally around 500", so the snow conditions look pretty good up there, especially for June. One of the best things about skiing in the Wasatch is the surprise powder day in the late spring. I guess knowing that it happens every year shouldn't make it a surprise, but I'm always amazed at how good the snow can be this late in the season.
This season, a nice little storm with cold temps and some moisture made its way to the mountains here on Saturday and Sunday of Memorial Day weekend. About 15" fell between the two days, so monday was set up to be perfect. What better way to celebrate Memorial Day than to ski powder? Well, visiting my grandparents' graves would have been better, but I'm sure they were happy in heaven to see me ski. The only problem with days like this is the crowd of season passholders that always shows up too. There are 100 or so chargers that show, and 900 gapers that seem to make life on those days more challenging. All of the passholders plus a late opening (10am) and no tram equaled a massive line on Peruvian, all the way up to the cat from the bypass road. It was definitely worth it though. I got in about 6 runs before 1pm when I had to make my way back to work (yes, I had to work Memorial Day). This day got my spirits up, and motivated me to ski as much as I could before the end of the season, which will be July 4th weekend. Sweet.
This season, a nice little storm with cold temps and some moisture made its way to the mountains here on Saturday and Sunday of Memorial Day weekend. About 15" fell between the two days, so monday was set up to be perfect. What better way to celebrate Memorial Day than to ski powder? Well, visiting my grandparents' graves would have been better, but I'm sure they were happy in heaven to see me ski. The only problem with days like this is the crowd of season passholders that always shows up too. There are 100 or so chargers that show, and 900 gapers that seem to make life on those days more challenging. All of the passholders plus a late opening (10am) and no tram equaled a massive line on Peruvian, all the way up to the cat from the bypass road. It was definitely worth it though. I got in about 6 runs before 1pm when I had to make my way back to work (yes, I had to work Memorial Day). This day got my spirits up, and motivated me to ski as much as I could before the end of the season, which will be July 4th weekend. Sweet.
Welcome to GaperStock 2011! Bring your Rossignol S7's and Colombia jacket, and let's par-tay!
Sorry Sam, your head is in gapershot #2
"Alright, who's throwing snowballs? That's not funny. I say we find that guy and shove his face in the snow. He'll probably think its funny, so we should do it."
"Those are Deer Valley gloves, did you work there or just buy them?"
"Well, I used to work at Deer Valley when I lived in New York. I would fly out every weekend to work a day, then have a day to ski on my own, then I'd fly back to New York. It was great."
Sunday, May 8, 2011
White Dot Skis
Finally got a chance to get up to Snowbird again, unfortunately it wasn't powder though. However, it was the next best thing- Spring slush. The temp was close to 60 up there, turning the snow to corn in some spots, but deep, sticky mush everywhere else.
I had a few pairs of White Dot skis in my office to try out, so I grabbed a pair of Preacher hoping that they'd do the job. The other options were way to soft, or too wide, or a combination of both. The 179cm length of the Preacher was bothering me a little, trying to convince myself that I could still get enough stability out of them, but still not believing it. I went for 'em anyway. First run down Great Scott/Jaws area was fun, but a little sketchy. High speed on short, soft skis isn't my cup of tea, but a little slower on more predicable snow (groomers) was actually pretty good. I don't think a longer length of this ski would have been any better for the steeper, faster stuff though. The main thing this ski lacked was appropriate stiffness.
I was really excited to try out the White Dot skis, as their image they've built the skis around is big mountain charging. They seemed like a good match for me, based on their marketing efforts, and with Jeremy Nobis riding for them, I was about ready to commit to pushing their brand. Good thing I got a chance to ski them first. I had access to the Preacher, Redeemer, and One, all of which were surprisingly soft just flexing them in the office. They seem to be built well, and the Preacher did survive a 30mph dive off my roof rack, but unless you ski soft, fluffy powder everyday of skiing, these aren't exactly the best skis for the job. The Ragnarok XII might be the redeemer (hehe, pun intended) of their lineup, as long as Fred Syverson likes stiffer skis.
The best part of my ski day? The drive up and back down in my 1998 VW Jetta (thanks Jason), which now has 272,000 miles on it:
I had a few pairs of White Dot skis in my office to try out, so I grabbed a pair of Preacher hoping that they'd do the job. The other options were way to soft, or too wide, or a combination of both. The 179cm length of the Preacher was bothering me a little, trying to convince myself that I could still get enough stability out of them, but still not believing it. I went for 'em anyway. First run down Great Scott/Jaws area was fun, but a little sketchy. High speed on short, soft skis isn't my cup of tea, but a little slower on more predicable snow (groomers) was actually pretty good. I don't think a longer length of this ski would have been any better for the steeper, faster stuff though. The main thing this ski lacked was appropriate stiffness.
I was really excited to try out the White Dot skis, as their image they've built the skis around is big mountain charging. They seemed like a good match for me, based on their marketing efforts, and with Jeremy Nobis riding for them, I was about ready to commit to pushing their brand. Good thing I got a chance to ski them first. I had access to the Preacher, Redeemer, and One, all of which were surprisingly soft just flexing them in the office. They seem to be built well, and the Preacher did survive a 30mph dive off my roof rack, but unless you ski soft, fluffy powder everyday of skiing, these aren't exactly the best skis for the job. The Ragnarok XII might be the redeemer (hehe, pun intended) of their lineup, as long as Fred Syverson likes stiffer skis.
The best part of my ski day? The drive up and back down in my 1998 VW Jetta (thanks Jason), which now has 272,000 miles on it:
Sunday, May 1, 2011
April into May Skiing
While the entire state of Utah is complaining about this long winter we're having, a handful of real skiers are loving every minute of it. Concerns of flooding in the valley are being pushed back with each winter storm, because the snow just simply is not melting. Snowbird reached 700" over the weekend, which forced the cancellation of my adult league soccer game (4" of snow on the soccer field), but allowed for a great afternoon of powder skiing. The base depth is close to 200", which is over 16 feet, btw. I haven't skied this much in years, maybe ever. However, I still feel like I missed out on a lot of really good days. That being said, I had my best day of the season on Tuesday, April 26th:
At 5am, I got a text from the Unified PD, saying that LCC road was going to close at 6:30am for avalanche control. I looked at the snow totals, and it was something like 6", enough for me to ditch work for at least the morning. On the road by 5:30, I easily made the cutoff at the mouth of the canyon. I was a little worried that the UPD officer was going to ask me where I was headed, but he just waved me on (you're not supposed to just hang out up there without accommodations). The road was snowy, but a 2000 Dodge Durango, with close to 200k miles with balding tires, but 4 wheel drive engaged made the drive pretty easy. I camped out for a couple hours, until the interlodge was lifted, and b-lined to the tram plaza. Caught the first tram, then the 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, and by then, the road was finally open for the dudes that didn't make the 6:30 road closure. So I moved to Peruvian, which was pretty empty. Snow was good everywhere, and my Atomic Atlas' were perfect for the day. The snow was deeper than reported, about 12" pretty much everywhere, but was pretty dense, smeary, fast, and smooth. The 6 back to back tram rides I got in before the road opened, just crushed the cat skiing I had a couple weeks earlier. A couple pro skiers got some too- I saw Dean Cummings, Jonny and Angel Collinson up there. Its pretty awesome bumping shoulders with skiers like them.
About an hour and a half after the road closed, interlodge went back into effect, due to some avalanche activity along the road. So, camped out at Cliff Lodge, lounging on a plush leather sofa chair, surrounded by enormous and beautiful Persian rugs. I felt guilty walking on them with ski boots, but Dick Bass has a few hundred extra, so that thought quickly disappeared. What seemed like an eternity was finally ended with a hotel representative declaring that the resort was finally open. It was a mad, crazy dash to whatever cable strung device could get a skier to greater heights. In my case, I decided to bypass the maze of the tram, for a 45 second wait on Peruvian. Sure the accessibility is limited on Peruvian, but I'd take 5 runs on it over 1 tram any day.
Anyway, summary is that skiing is rad, even in April, and May of course too. Looking forward to see how late the season will run. Probably a good year to play in the mountains, touring some of the high peaks in the Wasatch that I've been dying to reach.
Man I like skiing. Just need to work my legs more in the gym between sessions so my days can be longer and more fun. Until next post...
At 5am, I got a text from the Unified PD, saying that LCC road was going to close at 6:30am for avalanche control. I looked at the snow totals, and it was something like 6", enough for me to ditch work for at least the morning. On the road by 5:30, I easily made the cutoff at the mouth of the canyon. I was a little worried that the UPD officer was going to ask me where I was headed, but he just waved me on (you're not supposed to just hang out up there without accommodations). The road was snowy, but a 2000 Dodge Durango, with close to 200k miles with balding tires, but 4 wheel drive engaged made the drive pretty easy. I camped out for a couple hours, until the interlodge was lifted, and b-lined to the tram plaza. Caught the first tram, then the 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, and by then, the road was finally open for the dudes that didn't make the 6:30 road closure. So I moved to Peruvian, which was pretty empty. Snow was good everywhere, and my Atomic Atlas' were perfect for the day. The snow was deeper than reported, about 12" pretty much everywhere, but was pretty dense, smeary, fast, and smooth. The 6 back to back tram rides I got in before the road opened, just crushed the cat skiing I had a couple weeks earlier. A couple pro skiers got some too- I saw Dean Cummings, Jonny and Angel Collinson up there. Its pretty awesome bumping shoulders with skiers like them.
About an hour and a half after the road closed, interlodge went back into effect, due to some avalanche activity along the road. So, camped out at Cliff Lodge, lounging on a plush leather sofa chair, surrounded by enormous and beautiful Persian rugs. I felt guilty walking on them with ski boots, but Dick Bass has a few hundred extra, so that thought quickly disappeared. What seemed like an eternity was finally ended with a hotel representative declaring that the resort was finally open. It was a mad, crazy dash to whatever cable strung device could get a skier to greater heights. In my case, I decided to bypass the maze of the tram, for a 45 second wait on Peruvian. Sure the accessibility is limited on Peruvian, but I'd take 5 runs on it over 1 tram any day.
Anyway, summary is that skiing is rad, even in April, and May of course too. Looking forward to see how late the season will run. Probably a good year to play in the mountains, touring some of the high peaks in the Wasatch that I've been dying to reach.
Man I like skiing. Just need to work my legs more in the gym between sessions so my days can be longer and more fun. Until next post...
This persian rug is about 3 stories tall, plus the red one above, another 3 or so stories tall.
Just the essentials- Mtn dew, kit kat, Burton bibs on a leather couch, and Raptor 120's on a Persian rug.
Not storming too hard, but a lot of bombs going off outside.
April 30th, morning surprise
There used to be cliffs in there, not so much anymore
Ahhhh. Glad to be skiing on April 30th.
14" new reported at the time of this pic, May 30th @ Snowbird
It took the ref an hour to figure out that there wasn't a chance that we could play soccer on this field. About 4" of fresh snow.
Not quite time to pull the cover off.
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