Mammoth, 4/2-4/2010, pics added

Tony Crocker

Administrator
Staff member
I had been led to expect good conditions by recent reports, and I was not disappointed. It's completely winter still, as it was overcast and very windy after the 20 inch storm 2-3 days before. Lots of race activity this weekend, this the only pic from Friday:
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On Friday 4/2 Adam and I first headed out Dragon's Tail after his experience the day before. It was still mostly powder but stiffened up some by the wind, not worth a long repeat trek out there. So we spent the rest of the morning on the top. The wind was strong, but no more so than on some other lifts, notably Gold Rush. Visibility was occasionally impaired by blowing snow, but we also reaped its benefits. There were large sections of wind sifted snow that are some of Mammoth's finest skiing. There tended to be more of it on skier's left of chair 23, but the best was under the Drop Outs. We did 3 of those, plus one each on Climax, Wipe Out, Paranoid 2 and 3.

We made the error of stopping for lunch at noon. We got one run after lunch on 23 before it closed for wind and visibility. Over to 12 and down to 14, also closed. We crossed the mountain to chair 22, based upon a favorable report from one of Adam's friends, only to find it just closed also. So we called it a day at 2PM with snow now added to the wind and fog, after 21,400 of very high quality skiing. Like admin, I sometimes come home from trips far afield to greater appreciation of ski quality on home turf. Friday was also my first test of the Head Jimis on Mammoth's upper terrain and they are quite suitable for that as expected.

Friday afternoon and evening it snowed 6 inches, but with very high winds. After the previous day I had high expectations for Saturday, but the snow was more windpacked and not quite as much soft blow-in as on Friday, despite the smooth early view of the top before it opened.
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Since the top had an hour delay opening, we hit the opening of chair 5 for a couple runs.
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We then moved to chair 22 for the Avy chutes. Best snow was on skier's left of Avy 2 as Adam rips it up here.
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We saw the top opening and so headed for chair 23, taking a pass on the gondola which had lines out the building. We hit Drop Out, Wipe Out and P2, then went in for an early lunch to beat the weekend crowd.
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Snow was very soft in the upper steep sections. Below the rocks some sections were now wind stripped, but you could traverse a short distance to get smoother or softer snow.

Saturday weather was supposed to be sunny and fairly warm, but the weather forecasters were wide of the mark. The clear skies were thin overcast by 10AM, cloudier by the hour after that. Wind was moderate though less than Friday but temps were somewhat colder. At noon we headed up the gondola, and were informed when we came out of the top building that it would be closing. So we went to check out Hangman's. Adam dropped in just as the weather descended. I watched him ski to the throat very conservatively and decided to play it safe and ski by braille on Cornice instead.

We did a couple runs on 3, which had good snow but not good visibility, and decided to go lower. We did 3 runs on 22: Viva trees, Grizzly and an encore on Avy 2. At 2:30 it started snowing hard graupel, so once again we called it a day. 26,300 total.

Adam skied his Gotamas Friday and his new ON3P Billy Goats Saturday. He said the conditions were borderline in terms of which ski would be better. My Head Jimis would fall between those 2 skis in powder orientation. The Billy Goats have tip and tail rocker similar to the Armada JJ or Rossi S7.

Sunday the snow was more packed out than Friday/Saturday, probably due as much as anything to Saturday being very busy. But it was a little colder, so no hint of spring yet, and a storm of 2 feet or so was expected later in the day. It was overcast and got gradually darker as the morning wore on, not an abrupt deterioration like the previous 2 days, though we skied only to 12:30. So we got out early on regular skis, Gotamas and Recons, warmup on face of 3, then Cornice (another Hangman's for Adam), Climax and Dave's, which still had some good wind sift. Over to 23 for Drop Out, Wipe Out, Monument and P2. We went back up the gondola to check out Huevos Grande. It's now accessible from the top, but still more intimidating than in the biggest snow years:
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However, once below the DFU zone the snow was smooth and still soft. We took one more one out Dave's and Ricochet, making 21,000 total before our early departure. It was just starting to snow when we left town at 1PM.
 
Sounds somewhat like I expected, except for the 6 in of fresh Friday night. Did this ski like powder in spots, or really just soften everything up? Also, do the Jimis have both tip and tail rocker? I've never skied on anything with tail rocker and am wondering if it would be an advantage or disadvantage for wind-buff and chopped-up powder conditions.
 
The snow was overall softer on Friday than Saturday. The storm had a lot of wind, mostly packed the new 6 inches and blew off some of the wind sift we were skiing Friday. By no means all of it: you could still look around and link the soft sections, but on Friday the wind sift was more widespread. None of this is relevant to the upcoming week. With 2 feet new coming it will depend upon the character of the new storm. It was getting colder every day; there is certainly potential for some light powder Monday/Tuesday if the wind is cooperative.

The Head Jimis have a modest amount of tip and tail rocker. The ON3P Billy Goats have much more. If there is any soft/unconsolidated snow the Jimis work very well. The tip rocker makes it much less likely to hook a tip in thick or variable snow. The tail rocker helps to smear turns in powder. So if the snow is deep they will handle steep constricted terrain comfortably. Adam noted that the other variable in design of these skis is how wide the tail is. If the tail is close to waist width (like the Pontoon) it tends to sink some in powder, thus keeping the tip up even more. These are the most specialized powder skis. If the tail is closer to tip width it can carve better on packed snow and will have more versatility in resort conditions.

From what I read tip rocker is going to a feature of many new skis due to the wide range of conditions that it makes easier. Tail rocker is a more powder specific feature.
 
That's kind of what I thought. I know tail rocker certainly has its advantages in powder, but my nearly flat tail Praxis are so amazing that I'm not sure tail rocker would add much more outside of the tight trees. The stated specs on the Praxis are wrong, but I'd say they're about 120mm underfoot with a 130mm tail. What's I'd be more concerned about it the tracked out powder that you find on the top. I guess I'd have to demo skis with tail rocker to really know, but you can't really smear turns in tracked out powder, so I'm not sure how the tail rocker would handle.


It's too bad you couldn't stay for Monday and Tuesday. They look like some of the best days of the season. There's already 10 inches and the snowfall rate is still increasing on the current 2.5" an hour.
 
nice TR tony. Snow is/was awesome today, but had to cut the day short do to a plow driver hitting my car in my complex's parking lot. Looks like we are on the way for a awesome spring!
 
Friday was a really good day despite the crazy winds.
I was up with my son JR. Nice to have the day off with very few others on the mountain.

Warmup was Gravy Chute then straight to the top via the gondi.

Hangers was the second run of the day.
The wind was ripping over the top of the entrance at about 50mph. The ground blizzard completely obscured the drop-in. I stood there in the wind trying to see where I was dropping. JR was a few feet lower to my left and he shouted up: "You're about to take a ten-foot free fall!!!" I prudently dropped down to where he was and we were able to ski (not drop) into the bowl. One you got below the lip, it was all fine, you could see again. Absolutely perfect wind-buffed styrofoam. Wind-buff has it's own charm. The apron below the choke was wide open and untouched.

Huevos was the next run. Same deal. Wind and snow killing the visibility, but I chanced it and found a straight-line rune through the rocks.

Then it was on to the Avy's. The best run over there was Avy 2 1/2. More styrofoam. Perfect carving snow for big, fast, long turns. Like the previous poster, the left side of Avy 2 had collected some great snow. Next was Avy 1 1/2 which was not as good as the others, choppy snow and more rocks. Then it was shoulder the boards and hike to Avy 3. Really fine, some nice long, high-speed turns.

After the laps on Lincoln, back to Chair 23. The skyline traverse to the 'Noids was painful. The wind was really picking up and the blowing snow could have stripped paint. We dropped Paranoid #4 and then Phillipes. Good coverage. The lower apron and White Bark were superb.

Lunch was fish tacos at the Yodler and we pretty much bagged it after that. The wind was closing down lifts all over the place.
Glad we got it while the gettin' was good!

Here's some video: [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiNkDCWVeP8[/youtube]
 
sunday was very good on lincoln with avi 1 and 2 being the winners. left side wind blown like tony said and right side crusty. monday was a whole new ball game with 2-3 feet of dense-ish snow and still dumping, all day. so naturally the call was 22 again and it was deeep but tiring. today was a little bit of the same but the top opened and 22 filled back in after closing. highlights of today would have to be fresh tracks on grizzly and a great P4 run plus some powder around noon in dragons tail. by far the deepest day for me this year.
 
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