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BMM wrote a great article with some exciting news for mogul enthusiasts:
http://news.alpinezone.com/37398/
Thoughts?
http://news.alpinezone.com/37398/
Thoughts?
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But you don't ski Mt. Ellen.....
I'm sorry, but how is this any different from what they are already doing?????
:blink: This is not about me... :roll:
Who peed in your corn flakes this morning, Debbie Downer....?
Even if it isn't any different, it's enough to make me want to check out Mt. Ellen.
I want to start to learn how to ski bumps this year. I am now likely to take an excursion to Mt. Ellen as part of this adventure.
Knowing that I'll be able to find 'training wheels' bumps is important to me. It can (and almost certainly has) make me choose SB over the many other VT areas that I want to visit. I'll probably only get to VT once or twice this winter, but at least one of those trips will be to Mt. Ellen.
Without this press release, I wouldn't have known what I was likely to find there. I've only been skiing a short time (this will be season # 3 for me, and season # 1 was really just a month at the end of the season, so it's really season # 2).
At the end of last year I was skiing bumped up terrain in the spring but I had no idea what I was doing. It'll be nice to go somewhere where I can work to get it right on lower angle runs before tackling the steeper stuff that is all over the NE with bumps on it.
Maybe in the end, maybe people like me are who this press release is aimed at. People who want to start skiing bumps, but don't want to start on a steep black or double black.
-w
Will there be seeded bumps??
As of right now, the only seeding plan would involve setting marking flags and skiing in lines. Cat bumps are never great on a large scale, from a financial standpoint, and a skiing standpoint.
I've got all of the resources necessary to set marking flags on low pitch terrain to set up a couple lines. It's just a waste of money, IMO, to take a cat out for 16 hours to "build" moguls on one trail. Kind of defeats the purpose of natural terrain.
But don't worry, there will be nice, even, flowing bumps on learning terrain.
You need to offer lower angle terrain that is not so intimidating, otherwise people will not feel comfortable learning to ski bumps. Not just survive bumps, but actually ski them well.
As of right now, the only seeding plan would involve setting marking flags and skiing in lines. Cat bumps are never great on a large scale, from a financial standpoint, and a skiing standpoint.
I've got all of the resources necessary to set marking flags on low pitch terrain to set up a couple lines. It's just a waste of money, IMO, to take a cat out for 16 hours to "build" moguls on one trail. Kind of defeats the purpose of natural terrain.
But don't worry, there will be nice, even, flowing bumps on learning terrain.
I've never once seen successful flagged lines.....but, they probably didn't have a nut like you willing to ski them over and over and over and over as needed. They always seem to just turn into a luge track of very far apart bumps
If they really want to get people to Mt Ellen they should scrap the shuttle buses and run the Slidebrook Express midweek.
If they really want to get people to Mt Ellen they should scrap the shuttle buses and run the Slidebrook Express midweek.