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How Are You Driving With A Broken Leg? - MRG 12/22

davidhowland14

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Two years in a row skiing on Dec. 22, two powder days.

Left for MRG from Gilette Stadium after watching the Pats destroy the Cardinals :smile: in a very rough-weather game. After sitting in the stadium traffic for about an hour, we struck out for Vermont. 8 hours later we got there. Our drive was complicated by slush, solid ice, traffic, high winds, blowing snow, drifting snow, lack of plowing (thank god for 4wd), heavy, heavy snow, and the fact that there is only one gas station in all of Vermont which is open past midnight. So if you ever need gas at 1am in the middle of a snowstorm, you'd better hope you're not in Vermont. We hit the sack in the MRG parking lot at 2am with about a foot of absurdly light blower pow on the ground. And it was still puking.

The next morning (today), there was easily 2 feet of fresh. We skied all day and got 9 runs in. Each run took about 45 minutes to complete. About 20 minutes was lift line+lift ride, the other 25-30 minutes was skiing boot-to-knee deep windblown powder on every trail. The woods had deeper. I occasionally would hit waist-deep drifts, and more than once I was up to my chest while turning. Today was easily the most intense day of skiing I've ever had. I'm sure I provided a great show more than once for the lift audience when I imploded/yard-saled/front-flipped on a cliff. Or maybe when I tried to ski to the car and, while attempting to jump up onto a boardwalk to get to the lot, somersaulted over myself when my tips slammed into the boardwalk deck. On one drop my pole got grabbed by a snow-serpent and ripped out of my hands. I spent about 15 minutes digging around in waist deep powder for my pole. Total blast, though. Deep, deep pow, no crowds, cold temps. Beautiful day.

As far as MRG goes, I love it. The entire place has a much different character than any other ski area I've ever been to. It's all about the skiing there, not about the condos, hot tubs, etc. Everyone was friendly, and almost all the skiers appeared to know each other and every member of the patrol. It's just a wonderful vibe and a wonderful place with extremely challenging terrain.

Now, the part you're all actually gonna look at: the pictures. I'm no samthaman, but my what I have is below.

hucking in the woods
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somewhere in this sequence is a great shot. Unfortunately, neither one of these is it.
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'Tis the season to air over Xmas trees...
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the woods still had knee deep untracked at 2am. The wind was whipping and refreshing chute/liftline while blowing more and more snow into the trees...
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I guess I felt like I needed to point at the camera for emphasis...
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and then I felt like dancing...
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At about 2:15 we heard a BOOM and the Single stopped running for good. According to MRG, a bolt sheared and
mrg said:
There was a guide sheave failure in the drive terminal. A bolt stripped out of the cross arm which allowed the guide sheave to drop out of alignment causing the lift to shut down.
Patrol had to evac everyone off the lift. It must have been a long, cold wait up there.
normal_PC222544web.jpg


MRG sucks. Nobody go there.
 

Glenn

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Nice shots!

I've been evac'd from a lift once. It's a very interesting experience.
 

wa-loaf

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Nice report. I think you've picked up the torch from Austin.

I don't get the broken leg thing though?
 

drjeff

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I was reading the report waiting for the season ending injury. :lol:

Probably just a routine outcome from your typically major awf crash that we hear about quite often. My guess is that since it's just such a common thing that it goes without saying that an awf powderfest days with mandatory air photos will result in a broken body appendage ;)
 

davidhowland14

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Nice report. I think you've picked up the torch from Austin.

I don't get the broken leg thing though?

thanks! I think that's a compliment. The broken leg thing refers to the phone conversation I had with a friend where I convinced him I was driving home after breaking my leg skiing.

I wish I had more photos, but I really didn't want to stop and dig out the camera all that often.

more single chair shots:

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this tele guy could rip

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this one somehow missed the original batch

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drjeff

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thanks! I think that's a compliment. The broken leg thing refers to the phone conversation I had with a friend where I convinced him I was driving home after breaking my leg skiing.

I wish I had more photos, but I really didn't want to stop and dig out the camera all that often.

more single chair shots:

normal_PC222530editB_Wweb.jpg


normal_PC222540editweb.jpg


this tele guy could rip

normal_PC222524editcropweb.jpg


normal_PC222521editcropweb.jpg


this one somehow missed the original batch

normal_PC222422editcropweb.jpg

Great pics!! What kind of camera are you using these days??? Atleast on my monitor the pics almost have a 3-D like quality to them, especially the 2nd set of them you posted!
 

davidhowland14

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I think that could be an effect of the overexposed snow in the background making the correctly exposed skier "pop". (i had to pick snow or skier to be exposed. i picked skier)

I'm shooting with an Olympus E520, still using the two kit lens, which area actually pretty good. Hopefully i'll pick up some more glass on xmas, and maybe a tripod. The camera is killer though. the inbody image stabilization makes those shots, some taken in low light in the woods fully zoomed in, possible.
 

davidhowland14

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David wearing all black..wow..how long were you stranded on the lift..are you still up in the MRV??

not quite...my jacket was blue.

I didn't actually get stranded on the lift. I barely missed it, though. phew.

and I wish I was still up there. I drove home last night. 8 hours up, 5 hours back. 40mph average on teh way up, 75mph average on teh way home.
 

davidhowland14

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i skied my Scott Aztec Pros. they have pro in teh name, so they must be awesome, right? They worked great. Quick turning in the trees, decent float in the pow.

what settings were you taking these shots on (Fstop/iso/wb etc)

I was shooting burst mode JPEGs.The camera was in burst auto mode so I wouldn't have to figure out how I wanted to shoot each time and could concentrate on keeping my fingers warm and getting the shots on time. As such, I don't have exif data. This camera does a good job in auto mode, and I figured I could touch up anything else in Photoshop afterward.
 
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