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Pitch is always hard to capture accurately with a photo, but I think this shot demonstrates the steepness of White Nitro Extension at Sugarloaf:I always liked the saying "a pictures worth a 1000 words"![]()

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Pitch is always hard to capture accurately with a photo, but I think this shot demonstrates the steepness of White Nitro Extension at Sugarloaf:I always liked the saying "a pictures worth a 1000 words"![]()
I always liked the saying "a pictures worth a 1000 words"![]()
![]()
Where the F is that? Is that a trail at killington?
Really..See, I thought that shot makes the run look flat.:???:Pitch is always hard to capture accurately with a photo, but I think this shot demonstrates the steepness of White Nitro Extension at Sugarloaf:
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That's Ovation at Killington, the lower headwall to be exact.
Really..See, I thought that shot makes the run look flat.:???:
See what I mean about trying to capture pitch in a photo? Concentrate on the tower at the summit and the sun. I don't know; maybe becuase I took the shot I can visualize the actual steepness...
I think that you will never catch the steepness of a slope if you shoot it from the bottom looking up. You need to get it from the side.
Or from a somewhat equivalent elevation some distance away looking straight at it. For example, this shot of Jiminy from the condos on the hill across the street make Jericho, Whitetail and Upper Whirlaway look pretty steep:
Yeah that shot show the steepness pretty good. I think the lift poles on that one help a lot. Plus the fact that it's taken from further away helps a lot.
getting close to the snow helps from the bottom upI think that you will never catch the steepness of a slope if you shoot it from the bottom looking up.
That's Ovation at Killington, the lower headwall to be exact.
getting close to the snow helps from the bottom up
but then again, sometimes a steep trail just looks steep from the bottom -- and that isn't even the steepest part of tram line
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I'd give my left nut to ski tramline with conditions like that.
Believe it or not, I'm reading this thread so I know what to stay away from.
What a wuss.
(At least I know my limitations -- and I'm not afraid to admit it!)