tirolerpeter":32ubp2xx said:Great pix! Enjoy it while it lasts. I remember how rare (and great) it was when I lived in the east and managed to catch a day with real powder. After an occasional day like that I was more motivated then ever to go live in a place that had dumps like that on a regular basis. Of course, I had to wait until I retired to accomplish that.
skimore":2aediwbr said:tirolerpeter":2aediwbr said:Great pix! Enjoy it while it lasts. I remember how rare (and great) it was when I lived in the east and managed to catch a day with real powder. After an occasional day like that I was more motivated then ever to go live in a place that had dumps like that on a regular basis. Of course, I had to wait until I retired to accomplish that.
not so rare....had 4 days this week like that and more than a dozen other days in NY and VT this year....just need to be flexible
jamesdeluxe":28e5p2o9 said:Every year, I manage to score a bunch of powder days, and I live in the Tri-State Area Devil's Triangle of which you speak, ski mostly in the Catskills, and have a full-time job in Manhattan.
The second half of last season, if you didn't score powder, you weren't trying.
It ain't the Wasatch, it ain't northern Vermont, and god knows we get some challenging conditions from time to time, but my own experiences contradict all that doom and gloom.
Lighten up twinkle-toes! What you and tirolpeter (since he's still a newbie) don't realize is that the days in Utah you really remember are in the spring, with perfect, butter-smooth corn. They are far more elusive than mid-winter powder days.Sharon":1xar4hm2 said:If we had powder every day, we'd end up being spoiled babies like Admin and the rest of the Utards :wink:
Is that why it rains when Sharon comes west? She brings that "eastern Karma" with her? We gotta get Homeland Security to put her on the "No Fly List"