Lost Trail Powder Mountain, MT, 07FEB04

Jay Silveira

New member
There was no huge storm forecast for last weekend, but the Bitterroots were under a winter weather advisory for 3-5 inches of snow with locally up to 8 inches on Friday night. I wasn’t all that excited about the weekend’s skiing after a pretty dry week (I certainly would have gone out at least one day) but the winter weather advisory raised my hopes for a powder day. The early report from Lost Trail on Saturday morning was 2 inches and still snowing. Down in the valley it was just cloudy, but I looked up into the mountains and it certainly looked like something was coming down. <BR> <BR>E took the first shift of skiing, and reported back over the radio that the few inches of new snow were nice, although it was well packed underneath. I used my time in the lodge with Ty to check up on prices for a group ski trip I was organizing in March, as well as look into the helmets available for sale in the ski shop. Lost Trail has received ski helmets (hundreds it seems) from St. Patrick’s hospital in Missoula for $10 apiece, and they are selling them off to their patrons at cost. They don’t seem to be brand name helmets, but they look adequate for protection, and the price can’t be beat. I’ve recently been sizing up different models of helmets at the local store in anticipation of getting one, and found that Giro’s helmets fit my head great. I eventually want to get a Giro Fuse (the venting is great) but at less than one tenth the price, the St. Patrick’s model will definitely do for now. E and I agreed that the size S (small) fit great, so we bought three in black, with one of them for Tyler to grow into some day. So, after a few years of having a bunch of the official SkiVT-L stickers, I’ve finally got a place to put one! <BR> <BR>We’d bought our helmets during the mom/dad ski/babysitting transition, so when I went out for my turn on the slopes, I naturally took the chance to try out my new headgear. Everyone talks about how warm and comfortable helmets are, and although this seemed to be true for the most part, my temples froze while I cruised my way over to chair 4. On the sides of my head, there was nothing between the top of my goggles and the bottom of the helmet. My ears were nice and warm, since they were covered by flaps from the helmet, but there is still an area that needs attention. I may have to wear a thin hat or something to take care of this problem. <BR> <BR>All my runs for the day were basically off the Hollywood Bowl face, where I did some exploring, both for fun, and in preparation for my friends that will be coming out in a couple of weeks. I found the snow on the skier’s right side of Hollywood Bowl to be in great shape, and I worked on hitting some of the natural kickers in the area. In one instance, I hit two jumps back to back, although the landing off the first one caused me to take a different trajectory off the second one. This turned a planned 5 footer into a 15 footer. After landing in a flat spot, I double ejected and dove head first into the snow. It was almost a repeat of a situation I encountered last week, although I think my helmet helped to keep me a bit less snowy. <BR> <BR>After each run in Hollywood Bowl, I cut hard left and explored the Hollywood Trees. The snow was still fantastic in there, with very few tracks. I wasn’t sinking deep like last weekend, but it was still bottomless. There were lines in there just begging to be nailed. I had to be careful in a few areas where the snowpack has not covered all the rocks yet, but I would say that in general the area is ready to be skied. I think the settling of the snow has helped since last weekend to make some of the rocks less accessible. I decided I would venture into the area of the Hollywood Chutes and see how the coverage looked. As long as I stayed away from the rocky spines (and stayed in the chutes in between) I didn’t encounter a single rock. Below the rocky chute areas, the big snowfield was in awesome shape. I couldn’t help but lay out some huge arcs in the powder. I waited for about 10 minutes while I scoped out the general lay of the land, tried to commit it to memory, and waited for the sun to come out for photos. I didn’t see a soul the whole time. I hope everything stays in good shape for when the guys come out to visit. Greg and Dave have yet to ski chair 4, and I plan to give everyone a good tour with my newfound knowledge. <BR> <BR>For some reason, Chair 3 was closed when I decided to take my last run, so I took the Oreo route back to the main base. I hit some of the trees off the south side of the Bear Claw Ridge, and found that the snow was in excellent shape there as well. We haven’t had any major precipitation yet this week, but we may get a bit for next weekend. It doesn’t look to be a major system, but hopefully enough to freshen things up. The base is currently at 90 inches (on the main mountain), so aside from a few scoured areas that are slow to fill in on Saddle Mountain, things are looking good. <BR> <BR>I got a few scenery pictures as usual, they can be found at: <BR> <BR><A HREF="http://www.JandEproductions.com/2004/07FEB04.html" TARGET="_top">http://www.JandEproductions.com/2004/07FEB04.html</A> <BR> <BR>J.Spin
 
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