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Snowbird: March 26, 2017 (Monster Lines in Cirque and on Baldy)

thetrailboss

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Date: March 26, 2016

Resort: Snowbird

Weather: Sunny and cold with highs in the low 30's

Conditions: Midwinter powder with some drifted areas; 380" for the season; 108" base

Report: After a nice Good Friday ski session with BenedictGomez and his wife at Alta, I was jonesin to ski Snowbird and looking forward to trying out some areas and lines that I had not skied and are not in play when bases are lower. The plan was to focus on the Cirque and Baldy since I normally ski Mineral Basin and Gad almost exclusively. It was the perfect day to explore and I felt like after five years out here I am finally getting my "western skis" under me and am comfortable exploring pretty much anything at Snowbird. Today was not about quantity of vert or runs, it was about quality and exploring some legendary stuff that sets Snowbird apart.

The first time I wondered over into the Cirque was in 2012, when I bumped into a guy from Pennsylvania who got talking to me and insisted I ski it with him. Down the traverse we went--the traverse is the worst part since it usually is a combination of rocks, ice, and bodies. Since then I have skied Middle, Lower, and the very last lines in Cirque. I had not skied Upper or Great Scott and I figured what the hell.

After a couple warm ups on a groomed top-to-bottom Primrose Path to warm up, I headed to the gate and down to the first entrance to Great Scott. Except for a few rocks at the very top poking through, it definitely looked doable and pleasant, but as I sat at the top, my body was just not into this line. So I skied to the next one:

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It looked primo. I saw a clear route that had good snow and dove in. About half-way down did I realize how steep it was and the adrenaline was rushing. Alas, it was not that long and after skiing through the throat of the rocks I came out into the Cirque Proper and looked back up at what I had done :eek:

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On the next Tram up I paused when I saw what I had ACTUALLY skied:

Great Scott 2016.jpg

It was a real rush and from the top was a clear line right down. From the Tram it was nothing short of impressive.

Since the Tram was pretty crowded, I decided to go right over to Baldy right away. For years I had watched skiers and riders make the hike along the ridgeline to the shoulder of Baldy. I wondered where they were going and thought that the stuff was simply too steep or required mandatory cliff jumps. After studying maps and hiking around in the summer, I located some lines that were indeed doable without death or serious injury ;) and all I needed was some more snow and an opportunity to explore.

The hike from Chamonix Bowl to the gravity traverse was a mere 10 minutes offering some great views.

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My target was an obvious major line right on the shoulder of Baldy:

Baldy 2016.jpg

I had skied the very lower part of this line a few years back thanks to a lower traverse that originated right below the Peruvian Express, but the upper part looked amazing. I had no problem locating it...probably 30 seconds into the gravity traverse:

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The line was primo--some stout uncut powder and chowder with a handful of lines. It was nice and long too--reminiscent of Stonecrusher at Alta and descended right down to the first hairpin turn of Chip's.

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Well worth the hike.

Since the Tram line was out onto the Plaza, I decided to head for the Cirque Traverse via Gadzoom and Little Cloud with my eyes set on a line in the Upper Cirque, just down from Great Scott. I had no problem finding a good line:

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Another great line with stout chowder. It not as steep as the first line of the morning but just as much fun:

Cirque.3.26.16.JPG

Part II coming soon...
 
Last edited:

thetrailboss

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With time running out for my session, I decided to head right back to the Baldy Traverse and to head out to the Memorial Buttress and the "Fields of Glory" or "Feel 'da Pain". This is where the Freeride Tour has their course:

Baldy2.JPG

Fields of Glory.JPG

In watching that event and looking at the mountain many times, I knew that the upper part was indeed a prize with a nice wide open line that hit two cliff bands. Both had good filled in lines down them today and I was ready to give it a go.

I rode up Peruvian, through the tunnel, back up MBX and took the ridge again for the short hike and gravity traverse out to the line. The view was stunning to say the least.

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Like the first line on Baldy it had stout powder and chowder that was a delight to ski. The line was amazing. At the first cliff band I took an easier escape on skier's left because I did not feel comfortable for the line through the cliff band. When I got down I saw that there were more rocks in it that visible from above.

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The second cliff band was very entertaining with a five-foot wide channel right down the middle that made for great turns:

DSCF9084.jpg

Looking back up from the bottom made me smile at what I had done:

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I did 9 runs and about 15,000 vertical but I was really thrilled with the fact that I had skied some of the most technical lines yet for me and with no issues. With the base depths getting deeper there is more to come!
 

snoseek

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This looks like kirkwood with actual good snow!

As far as the draw to the west for me its much more about the terrain that the snow. Finally a good year to start knocking out all those lines.

Sent from my LG-H345 using Tapatalk
 

jimk

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Great post. I and a small posse will be skiing Snowbird four days soon, probably 3/31, 4/1 and 3, and maybe 4/4 or 5. Send me a PM if you are up there then and wish to lower your standards :lol: to ski a few runs with tourists. My son has about 50 days there this winter and speaks of a lot of stuff you covered in this post. Thanks for sharing.
PS: important, we'll have apres-ski beers to share.:wink:
 

4aprice

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Lovin the pictures TB. I'll be sending both you and Jim K PM's to see if we can get together. Can't promise anything as its usually not up to me as to where we ski, but the boy wants to hit SB so we shall see (problem its not the wife's favorite) Was BG eating it up? Can't wait to get his reaction to Utah.

Alex

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thetrailboss

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I will post about the spin with BG. Last I heard he was having a great time. It is dumping here right now.
 

4aprice

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This looks like kirkwood with actual good snow!

As far as the draw to the west for me its much more about the terrain
that the snow. Finally a good year to start knocking out all those lines.

Sent from my LG-H345 using Tapatalk

Oh you are so right snoseek. I've been to Snowbird many times and have probably touched under 1/2 of it. As TB's pictures show there is just so much there. Drops over here, drops over there. Its impressive as hell, then I take out a map of Big Sky and my god I don't think you could touch all of that place in 5 seasons. A lot of exploring to be done.

Alex

Lake Hopatcong, NJ
 
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