Dickc
Active member
Then you had better stay away from the mighty Yawgoo!Yes Nashoba - the black trails there are evil!
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Then you had better stay away from the mighty Yawgoo!Yes Nashoba - the black trails there are evil!
Always worried about that place! hahah!Then you had better stay away from the mighty Yawgoo!
They are at the top of the ridge near the highest part, slightly left of patch of blue sky. Cant see them in first photo, too small and far away. I am told that before the stairs, you had to use a rope to let yourself into that entrance, with same tight ledge to get your skis back on.where are those carzy ass steps on that first picture of DD?
BTW, steepest stuff in Highland Bowl is actually the early lines before you hit the summit. If you have a chance, hike all the way up and stick to boundary skier's right of the bowl. Most just charge down the gut, as such the right edge while not as steep tends to hold untracked snow for quite a while.Fun thread. We need somebody from the Alps to weigh-in. Lots of crazy stuff there. I'm a resort skier so usually skiing on normal/tame terrain for the most part. A couple places that creeped me out a little bit were Highland Bowl (I drop in early, have never hiked all the way) and Delirium Dive. After skiing those and stopping to look back up you do get a feeling that this place could slide/avalanche on you.
This is the view of Delirium Dive from the Goats Eye trail pod at Sunshine. The part that I and most people ski is the white bowl below and just left of the patch of blue sky. My son skied the rockier part directly below the blue sky on one of his laps here.View attachment 51635
As has been said, the snow in these infrequently skied steeps is usually (at least in midwinter) very good, deep and not moguled. The hardest part for me at Delirium Dive was walking down a short icy set of stairs entering the easiest drop-in point. There was a very icy/rocky ledge at the bottom of the stairs that you had to use to put your skis on. If you lost control of a ski it could fall over the edge on either side and be much trouble to collect.
View attachment 51636
This is the view of the Goats Eye terrain from top of Delirium Dive. I was there in 2018 in late March and snow was great.
View attachment 51637
If I'm not mistaken, the hike to Delirium starts at the top of the chairlift shown in this view from their mid-mtn lodge (really nice place to stay).
View attachment 51639
Bonus shot of scenery at Sunshine:
View attachment 51638
Here's a trip report with more info/photos:
Northern Rockies/Alberta - Northern Rockies Roadtrip: Part 2, Revelstoke and Banff
[Part 1 can be found here.] At least three times during our March 2018 trip through the Northern Rockies we made 3- to 7-hr drives after putting in a day of skiing, including a memorable drive in a remote part of western Montana traveling from Jackson, WY, toward Canada. We exited I-90...www.skitalk.com
Low visibility at Snowbird can get you into trouble!With the low visibility when I was at Snowbird, I went honking into the traverse one time and very nearly launched into Great Scott.
Otherwise, the scariest peak is definitely Nashoba Valley.
One of my rides up Mineral Basin on a real low vis day, someone launched themselves off a curve on Lupine Loop onto a flat area below and was getting their leg splinted by ski patrol.Low visibility at Snowbird can get you into trouble!
We did the Aguille du Midi w/ a guide years ago on a 10 day Chamonix trip.I've skied the Alps for many years but never got into the crazy stuff..you need a guide for that. I did watch this at Chaminox and at the time..said no way!
At least here you can access crazy stuff on your own with a little fear of dying...the Alps..you better know what you are doing or have a guide. I just watch vids of it like ones of LaGrave to really see what its about..way out of my league..
The traverse out of the snow cave was the scariest part. A cable drooping down by your knee as you walked across the 20” wide 200’ long path was all that stood between you and a straight down 1500’ fall.Did
We did the Aguille du Midi w/ a guide years ago on a 10 day Chamonix trip.
Simply Amazing !!!
I got out there a while back, staying on a friend's couch but he ended up in Moab that week, so I really had very little to do other than ski. One day the weather was damp at best and the visibility was nearly non-existent; skiing the front side was okay, but going into Mineral Basin turned out not to be such a good idea. I ended up skiing very slowly so I could follow the corduroy and tried not to get vertigo. That was probably the worst visibility I've dealt with, and I've skied in some pretty thick fog.One of my rides up Mineral Basin on a real low vis day, someone launched themselves off a curve on Lupine Loop onto a flat area below and was getting their leg splinted by ski patrol.
I guess low vis can get you in trouble at almost any western resort when you get to the tree line. But yeah Snowbird has those narrow snaking catwalks all over the upper mountain and not much marking the edges.
Fun thread. We need somebody from the Alps to weigh-in. Lots of crazy stuff there. I'm a resort skier so usually skiing on normal/tame terrain for the most part. A couple places that creeped me out a little bit were Highland Bowl (I drop in early, have never hiked all the way) and Delirium Dive. After skiing those and stopping to look back up you do get a feeling that this place could slide/avalanche on you.
This is the view of Delirium Dive from the Goats Eye trail pod at Sunshine. The part that I and most people ski is the white bowl below and just left of the patch of blue sky. My son skied the rockier part directly below the blue sky on one of his laps here.View attachment 51635
As has been said, the snow in these infrequently skied steeps is usually (at least in midwinter) very good, deep and not moguled. The hardest part for me at Delirium Dive was walking down a short icy set of stairs entering the easiest drop-in point. There was a very icy/rocky ledge at the bottom of the stairs that you had to use to put your skis on. If you lost control of a ski it could fall over the edge on either side and be much trouble to collect.
View attachment 51636
This is the view of the Goats Eye terrain from top of Delirium Dive. I was there in 2018 in late March and snow was great.
View attachment 51637
If I'm not mistaken, the hike to Delirium starts at the top of the chairlift shown in this view from their mid-mtn lodge (really nice place to stay).
View attachment 51639
Bonus shot of scenery at Sunshine:
View attachment 51638
Here's a trip report with more info/photos:
Northern Rockies/Alberta - Northern Rockies Roadtrip: Part 2, Revelstoke and Banff
[Part 1 can be found here.] At least three times during our March 2018 trip through the Northern Rockies we made 3- to 7-hr drives after putting in a day of skiing, including a memorable drive in a remote part of western Montana traveling from Jackson, WY, toward Canada. We exited I-90...www.skitalk.com