Jay Peak, VT 12/12/2004

Admin

Administrator
Staff member
I hope that someone got a good look at the license plate of the truck that apparently ran over me! At least, I feel today like that must've happened. The stairs sure hurt this morning.

It wasn't until I reached Hinesburg on Saturday night that the rain endured the whole way from Ludlow finally turned to snow. I arrived at my hotel in Burlington around 5 pm or so, when big, fluffy flakes started cranking from the sky, boding well for good skiing in the morning. Yesterday at Jay was a whole lotta fun. The snow report was fairly accurate -- although the storm was somewhat of a bust, about 6 inches of heavy, wet snow accumulated before being topped by a glaze from a freezing mist. Another inch or two of snow accumulated on top of that, sometimes creating a recipe for disaster.

I pulled out the fatties (173-cm Völkl Explosivs, 120-95-112) to deal with the crust, and it worked like a charm. The crust was too thin to generally support me, but even as my foot punched through, the shovels by and large stayed above the crust. This turned the nasty stuff into something that was for the most part pleasantly skiable. I have no doubt that Jay has the most natural snow on the ground of any Vermont ski area right now, and that recent combination of snow/rain/snow/rain (ad infinitum) has created a bomber base. Everything is locked down solid, and the glades are for the most part eminently skiable as long as you don't mind blasting through some exposed puckerbush here and there. All lifts except the Tram and the Bonaventure Quad were running yesterday, allowing access to the entire mountain save for the top couple of hundred vertical feet accessed by the Tram. Really, then, that meant that all trails except for Vermonter, the top stretch of the Northway catwalk, and (of course) the Face Chutes could be reached by lift yesterday. Guns were blazing on Upper Goat Run and the stretch of Northway connecting the Mixing Bowl and the top of the Green Mountain Flyer chair, which lived up to its "Green Mountain Freezer" nickname yesterday as a biting wind blew the 19-degree air back down the liftline. We didn't even venture down Goat Run as the snow gun blasts combined with cloud cover/fog and natural snow falling to reduce visibility to merely a couple of feet, literally. One could not tell where the fog ended and the snow surface began -- even parts of Northway were skiing by braille.

We had quite the posse yesterday, including friends Rich and Ben, who was there as a Karhu rep for the tele fest at Jay this weekend. Gawd, it's beautiful to watch Ben dance down the mountain making perfect telemark turns. That's not to say tht Liftlines user Gincognito is any slouch, either! That boy can make beautifully graceful, yet aggressive telemark turns through the trees! Nice to spend a few runs with you, sir!

My first run of the day was spent accompanying Liftlines user NHPH down Poma Line and upper Ullr's Dream to Beaver Pond Glade, where I made my worst mistake in judgment of the day. Just as I was coming to a stop in front of the glade's entrance, I momentarily lost my balance to one side and started to fall. Now, I know all about the phantom foot syndrome and how easily that results in a torn ACL, but I foolishly nonetheless attempted to stand back up. I felt the tail of the ski engage the snow in the classic phantom foot scenario, right at the same time that I felt a "pop" :shock: and immediate pain in my left knee. Visions of a totalled season filled my head as I sat on the snow, wincing and holding my knee. After a few moments, though, it didn't feel too bad and I dove into Beaver Pond with NHPH anyway. Throughout the day, if I got into the back seat momentarily my knee would instantly remind me of my stupid move earlier on Ullr's, and today it doesn't feel terribly stable. I think that I just gave it a minor strain -- very lucky, indeed!

Soon we had hooked up with my buddies Rich and Peter and ventured all over the mountain. The crust on Canyonland was a bit thicker than elsewhere, and I bailed out to Milk Run just before the end of the glade. Lower Milk Run was a bone-jarring experience, as the tracks from Saturday had refrozen into place by Sunday, topped by the inch or two of new snow. What looked lovely admittedly wasn't, but it wasn't that bad, either.

Runs of the day were JFK, Beaver Pond Glade, Powerline above the Taxi, and the Timbuktu glade, as all sported steep natural snowcover whose crust had already been broken by earlier skiers. Beaver Pond wasn't as skied down as the others, yet it seemed to have less of the annoying crust for some reason. It seemed odd to be able to ski Powerline during this year's early season, as it normally takes a lot of snow to cover all of the junk in there. Pete took the lead, and Ben blasted down Powerline's sharp double fall line making tele turns that forced me to shake my head in disbelief. Gincognito and a friend of his stayed right behind Ben, forcing Rich and Yours Truly to stay to the back of the pack.

We popped out of the Timbuktu glade onto Derrick Hot Shot unexpectedly right in front of friends Scott and Susan. I hadn't known they were at Jay yesterday, and I capped the day by taking a couple of runs with them until my legs screamed "Uncle!" 16,850 vertical feet after starting the day. The tricky crust forced muscles to constantly compensate by making tiny corrections, and the day was exhausting as a result. I left the parking lot around 3:30 pm, feeling totally satisfied.

It was wonderful to make my first turns with not one, but two Liftlines users. NHPH and Gincognito, thanks for the company, and I look forward to another opportunity in the very near future!

(Sorry, no pix as I stupidly put my camera into my overnight bag instead of my day pack. Not that you would've seen much thanks to yesterday's weather, anyway!)
 
Marc,

It was great skiing with you, Andy and Rich! Next time we're here hopefully it will have a bit more coverage!

PS - Rich is a slow poke!

PS
 
Marc, Pete, Rich, Gincognito (And the others we skied with) -

It was great to take a few runs with you. Much more satisfying than my earlier solo runs of the day.

Gin - Were you the guy on the Deso's, or the guy that mounted up his alpine Monsters with teles? You two were both making really nice turns!

For those of you that missed it, the Freezer's liftline had incredible snow on it - a combination of manmade and natural powder all the way down to the flats. My last run on Sunday was definitely the best run of the weekend!


(Look at at that, now I'm registered on another ski forum.)
 
vtRat":1981atky said:
Gin - Were you the guy on the Deso's, or the guy that mounted up his alpine Monsters with teles? You two were both making really nice turns!

I was the one with the Monsters (will ski those until they snap in two). And you were...(my memory is shoddy)?

Thanks for the kind words and I concur with your sentiment about being registering on another ski forum (I believe this make 4 for me).
 
gincognito":1g79xfig said:
I was the one with the Monsters (will ski those until they snap in two). And you were...(my memory is shoddy)?

I'm the guy from the Karhu tent (Ben).

Hope those skis don't snap too soon on ya - they looked like they were eating up the crust on Powerline quite nicely.
 
I went up early Saturday morning and experienced very similar conditions. The only difference was it was warmer (positive?) and it was snowing>raining>snowing>raining>wait no its snowing>crap it's raining again! Would somebody please decide what the *$^&%% the weather is suppposed to be doing!! :x :x :x
Altogether I had a fun day, logging 12 runs by 1:00. By that time the legs were burning from battling the fresh crust (not much fresh snow on top of it on Saturday) and by that time the rain was soaking through so I called it a day. Had a couple of beers and made it home while it was still light.
Next Saturday it's either Burke (opening day) or Jay again (wind dependent). With the cold weather and snow this week Burke and Jay should both be over 75% of trails open with a great base established.
 
Double ouch! I feel like someone beat me with a bat!
The trip started out with me trying to wreck my car before even getting out of NH. Freakin black ice.Not to mention I might have been going a bit too fast for the road conditions :oops:
What a pleasure to ski with such a strong group on Sunday! When we skied Powerline I think we had 9 or 10 bodies funnel into that trail. But even with such a large number of skiers on a narrow trail with many obstacles, we all gave each other plenty of room and I got to see some really strong riders do thier stuff.
Marc gave me a heart attack when he tried to muscle out of a backward twisting fall and tweaked his knee at the start of our first run. But he stood up, gave it a quick rub and skied right into Beaver Pond Glade like a champ!
Conditions were good and I would say Jay is ready for skiers of all abilities. They have a really good base and will be prime with a couple feet. The woods have decent cover except for some brush which is easily avoided. Canyonland was the exception with more crust but we skied that early and I would suspect it was better in the afternoon, after some traffic.
I think my favorite run of the day was Powerline. The conditions were good, but being able to ski with such a talented(and large) group of skiers was what did it for me.
Extra special thanks to Marc, Peter and Rich who I shared the majoriy of my chair rides with, you guys are class acts and I hope to hook up again soon(MRG?).
((*
*))NHPH
 
gincognito":ukd6kddo said:
...and I concur with your sentiment about being registering on another ski forum (I believe this make 4 for me).
amateurs! i am registered on 8 skiing forums, not counting hiking... :) takes me about 1-2 hours to clear out all the new threads daily. obsessive perhaps.

nice report!
 
Here's a couple of pics from Saturday. It definitely wasn't a top picture taking day as I tried to keep the camera out of the rain as much as possible.
 

Attachments

  • low clouds.JPG
    low clouds.JPG
    25.3 KB · Views: 4,076
  • Bonny Chair.JPG
    Bonny Chair.JPG
    29.5 KB · Views: 4,080
Back
Top