Chamonix 1/24/23 to 1/29/23

Sorry for going missing. Pretty ignorant of me considering the valuable input I've received from some on here in the past. By way of weak excuse my phone died while I was in Chamonix so I was using my daughters phone sparingly. There were a few dramas at home and then once home I've been scrambling to catch up with business and personal stuff.

Anyway.........I didn't do the Vallee Blanche. After the day in Annecy I was still very sore (and weak) in the legs. And to be honest I was lacking in confidence after the day at Courmayeur with the guides. I must defend the guides though. They did ask before doing the long steep run through those tight trees if we were up for something more challenging. I responded that I was fine if they thought I was up to it after seeing my ability earlier in the day. In hindsight they made the wrong call and at a couple of points (when they roped the British fellow up) they were a bit stressed themselves. They obviously knew once we were committed that the terrain was too much for most of the group. They commented a few times that the snow conditions were "not as good as we expected".
I had an incident with a buried tree root that left me very uncomfortably contorted with the front of one ski under the root and me falling back in toward the hill. The knee that was twisted quiet severely is still a bit tender today. There is no question I will remember that day in Courmayeur (in good ways too) for the rest of my life. The chutes with no trees had good snow and would have been steeper than anything I've skied before.

So I had a day cruising around Le Tour with a couple of fellows from the UK and the next checking out Grand Montets. Conditions were firm. Too firm for me anyway. I tried to venture off the pistes a few times but being worse for wear from a few days earlier I quickly retreated to the groomers. We headed to Milan a day early and did some tourist stuff.

I'm now looking forward to our time in Oregon in mid to late April. I hope I can get some confidence back there.

We all had a fantastic time on the trip to Europe. I am incredibly proud of how well the newbies went. They are both planning trips to the snow in our winter. Looking back the best snow days were those where myself and the family were skiing the low angle fresh snow between the pistes. Given that we'll head to Japan next January/February where hopefully those conditions are plentiful.
 
I’m booked with the Companie Des Guides tomorrow. I asked to do the Vallee Blanche. They asked my level and I described myself as intermediate. They recommended that I not do it as the arete is very sketchy and crampons would be needed. (I have zero experience with crampons). They also said snow cover was still thin in places - something about crevasses. So they’ll take me somewhere else tomorrow. I’ve got to be at the office at 8.30am with a Mont Blanc unlimited pass and they take the group in their van to the most suitable area (which could be Courmayeur). I hope the day is as good as today.

Obviously they did not have this screen on JimK’s group - the guy who fell 50x on glacier.

Snooker could easily handle it given simple longevity of skiing.

I guess people freeze on Arete, and create chaos (groups behind, current group) so that’s the screen - heights!

You can just push/bully/wait for someone to ski or fall down the Vallee Blanche. Everyone else can take photos.

Again, you will never do anything difficult with a guided group - due to self screening.

A group will take 4-6 hours to get down. My 2006 descent was in that bucket.

My brother and I did steeper line in 2018, ate lunch and were done in 2.5-3 hours. Guide asked if we wanted another run, but we were driving/leaving
To Zermatt.

Courmayeur: 3 Glacier runs including Valley Blanche variant. About 7+ hours with lunch and bus ride back from Chamonix to Italy.
 
Obviously they did not have this screen on JimK’s group - the guy who fell 50x on glacier.

Snooker could easily handle it given simple longevity of skiing.

I guess people freeze on Arete, and create chaos (groups behind, current group) so that’s the screen - heights!

You can just push/bully/wait for someone to ski or fall down the Vallee Blanche. Everyone else can take photos.

Again, you will never do anything difficult with a guided group - due to self screening.

A group will take 4-6 hours to get down. My 2006 descent was in that bucket.

My brother and I did steeper line in 2018, ate lunch and were done in 2.5-3 hours. Guide asked if we wanted another run, but we were driving/leaving
To Zermatt.

Courmayeur: 3 Glacier runs including Valley Blanche variant. About 7+ hours with lunch and bus ride back from Chamonix to Italy.
I intend to be there in the first days of April to have the VB experience. Barring some very unusual weather between now and then of course.
 
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