riverc0il
New member
Reporting in for day 50 of the season today for a new one season high. Not bad for a Monday through Friday 8a-5p working stiff. Last two years living in Vermont should have been way higher but I was skunked for two months last year (49) with wisdom teeth extraction and an in grown toe nail and the year before with my broken elbow (33).
Pulled into the PNVC at 8:05am to land a parking spot right at the GoS trail head. Sah-weet. The lot never maxed out on this blue bird Sunday (another glorious day on the rock pile, my third blue bird on Big George in the past month) so I guess it is safe to say that when the Sherbie goes, so go the crowds. Including a large group of eight skiers, I think I might have seen a total of twenty or so skiers and one canine on the trail or in the gullies.
Gulf of Slides ski trail is fairly muddy down low and up high with most dry conditions in the middle sections of the trail. Snow started shortly below the big turn at the Tux cut thru trail. Given the amount of post holing, skins for the last half mile would not have been a terrible idea. I switched from hiking boots to ski boots for the snowy section as I only had low ankle hikers and was wearing shorts with gators.
Decision time at the avi debris area and I went for that gully. But when I reached the base of the gully, I discovered absolutely no boot ladder. Wow, who says you can't find an isolated section of Mount Washington to enjoy by yourself these days? Shesh!! I had not the stamina to kick in a ladder (why did I play tennis yesterday?) so skied back down to the ski trail and proceeded to the main gully. The 2nd gully was skiable but had a considerable navigational hurdle with a chock half way down.
Main Gully had a respectable boot ladder and still very much filled in. Very little coverage creap compared to two weeks ago but the sides are collapsing inward. Run out is still wide open, thanks to high snows and what I must guess have been some good runs this winter.
First run was da bomb! Perfect corn snow top to bottom. Ripped it up with a major smile on my face. Slight cravass developing at the mid-point. Essentially, two skiable "lines" down the main gully with a pair of options on either side. Really opened the turns up below the cravass on the second half, sweet corn!
Back up for a second run and ran into awf170 while enjoying lunch. We chatted for a bit then took a run. Snow was mashed potato for the second run with some minor wet snow sloughing. Early bird got the worm today and if I had been smarter, I would have set the alarm for 5am instead of 6am and gotten two perfect corn runs. I settled for 1 perfect corn and 1 very nice run despite the snow being baked already. I was tired and the snow was past prime, so called it a day after two runs.
Managed to snap my one of my touring poles on the down hike :roll: Got a little annoyed at the toe pinch in the Garmonts. Really killing me on the down hike. In frustration, took a swing at a rock and snapped it. Oops! Wrapped that pole around a few dozens trees and bent it six ways to Sunday. Go figure a little rock would finally snap the brittle area. Morale of the story? I need new boots that don't hurt my toes (and are stiffer for better performance on the down!).
Should have some pics later tonight. Insane amount of snow up there. Snow coverage looks better today than pictures from myApril 22, 2006 report.
Pulled into the PNVC at 8:05am to land a parking spot right at the GoS trail head. Sah-weet. The lot never maxed out on this blue bird Sunday (another glorious day on the rock pile, my third blue bird on Big George in the past month) so I guess it is safe to say that when the Sherbie goes, so go the crowds. Including a large group of eight skiers, I think I might have seen a total of twenty or so skiers and one canine on the trail or in the gullies.
Gulf of Slides ski trail is fairly muddy down low and up high with most dry conditions in the middle sections of the trail. Snow started shortly below the big turn at the Tux cut thru trail. Given the amount of post holing, skins for the last half mile would not have been a terrible idea. I switched from hiking boots to ski boots for the snowy section as I only had low ankle hikers and was wearing shorts with gators.
Decision time at the avi debris area and I went for that gully. But when I reached the base of the gully, I discovered absolutely no boot ladder. Wow, who says you can't find an isolated section of Mount Washington to enjoy by yourself these days? Shesh!! I had not the stamina to kick in a ladder (why did I play tennis yesterday?) so skied back down to the ski trail and proceeded to the main gully. The 2nd gully was skiable but had a considerable navigational hurdle with a chock half way down.
Main Gully had a respectable boot ladder and still very much filled in. Very little coverage creap compared to two weeks ago but the sides are collapsing inward. Run out is still wide open, thanks to high snows and what I must guess have been some good runs this winter.
First run was da bomb! Perfect corn snow top to bottom. Ripped it up with a major smile on my face. Slight cravass developing at the mid-point. Essentially, two skiable "lines" down the main gully with a pair of options on either side. Really opened the turns up below the cravass on the second half, sweet corn!
Back up for a second run and ran into awf170 while enjoying lunch. We chatted for a bit then took a run. Snow was mashed potato for the second run with some minor wet snow sloughing. Early bird got the worm today and if I had been smarter, I would have set the alarm for 5am instead of 6am and gotten two perfect corn runs. I settled for 1 perfect corn and 1 very nice run despite the snow being baked already. I was tired and the snow was past prime, so called it a day after two runs.
Managed to snap my one of my touring poles on the down hike :roll: Got a little annoyed at the toe pinch in the Garmonts. Really killing me on the down hike. In frustration, took a swing at a rock and snapped it. Oops! Wrapped that pole around a few dozens trees and bent it six ways to Sunday. Go figure a little rock would finally snap the brittle area. Morale of the story? I need new boots that don't hurt my toes (and are stiffer for better performance on the down!).
Should have some pics later tonight. Insane amount of snow up there. Snow coverage looks better today than pictures from myApril 22, 2006 report.