abc
Well-known member
This is part of my ski bumming season grand tour of the western US and Canada. (http://forums.alpinezone.com/showth...ski-bumming-season-2017-Part-II-North-America)
I'm putting the pure skiing parts for each states in their own threads. So people who are just interested in reading about the skiing in one particular location don't have to wade through all the other posts. This hopefully should also keep any one thread from growing too unyielding in length.
Day 1 & 2 (1/26-27) Keystone
The snow had stopped dumping 2 days ago. Now the big chill got a death grip of the region. It was in the teens and with a lot of wind. My local host suggest we go to Keystone this day because it's the most sheltered from the wind.
I haven't been to Keystone for ages. In truth, I've only been to Keystone once before. Wasn't impressed, and never gone back. But I knew my host knew the area best. So I just followed.
It hadn't snowed for a couple days now. But there's so much snow, and it's been relatively cold so the snow was well preserved. After a quick warm up run on Mozart the wide blue groomer, my friend took me straight to the Outback. Though on our way there, we had a slight detour on North Peak. On the chair, we could see the bumps on North Peak were delicious (full of soft dry powder in the trough)! So we dropped in at Gernonemo and had a blast!
Back up on North Peak, I almost wanted to re-do the bump run again. But my friend didn't even give me a chance to say anything and we went straight to Outback. I soon found out why. There were more of the same delicious powder filled bumps. But more, there were also easy tree runs that, although not entirely fresh track, were deep &soft! We surfed those many times and enjoyed ourselves enormously.
It was so good I went there again the next day. (coupled with the fact it was again in the teens with lots of wind again, so Keystone beats 'BreckenFridge' or A-basin which were the alternatives)
It entirely changed my impression of Keystone. With the knowledge of a local guide, we found tons of good snow to play with in a mountain that's just "meh" on my previous visit. (the groomers of Keystone do typically got scratchy after only a few hours post opening. So my previous "bad" impression was not baseless. It's just there ARE good play spots in Keystone if one knows where to go! And it being almost entirely below treeline, it's a good place to go on a stormy or windy days)
Sorry no pictures. Way too cold to bother pulling the phone out for picture.
I'm putting the pure skiing parts for each states in their own threads. So people who are just interested in reading about the skiing in one particular location don't have to wade through all the other posts. This hopefully should also keep any one thread from growing too unyielding in length.
Day 1 & 2 (1/26-27) Keystone
The snow had stopped dumping 2 days ago. Now the big chill got a death grip of the region. It was in the teens and with a lot of wind. My local host suggest we go to Keystone this day because it's the most sheltered from the wind.
I haven't been to Keystone for ages. In truth, I've only been to Keystone once before. Wasn't impressed, and never gone back. But I knew my host knew the area best. So I just followed.
It hadn't snowed for a couple days now. But there's so much snow, and it's been relatively cold so the snow was well preserved. After a quick warm up run on Mozart the wide blue groomer, my friend took me straight to the Outback. Though on our way there, we had a slight detour on North Peak. On the chair, we could see the bumps on North Peak were delicious (full of soft dry powder in the trough)! So we dropped in at Gernonemo and had a blast!
Back up on North Peak, I almost wanted to re-do the bump run again. But my friend didn't even give me a chance to say anything and we went straight to Outback. I soon found out why. There were more of the same delicious powder filled bumps. But more, there were also easy tree runs that, although not entirely fresh track, were deep &soft! We surfed those many times and enjoyed ourselves enormously.
It was so good I went there again the next day. (coupled with the fact it was again in the teens with lots of wind again, so Keystone beats 'BreckenFridge' or A-basin which were the alternatives)
It entirely changed my impression of Keystone. With the knowledge of a local guide, we found tons of good snow to play with in a mountain that's just "meh" on my previous visit. (the groomers of Keystone do typically got scratchy after only a few hours post opening. So my previous "bad" impression was not baseless. It's just there ARE good play spots in Keystone if one knows where to go! And it being almost entirely below treeline, it's a good place to go on a stormy or windy days)
Sorry no pictures. Way too cold to bother pulling the phone out for picture.
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