Day 60:
Yesterday was so good, Bob Dangerous and I just had to do it again today! And besides, it let me hit my 60-day target for the lift-served season. With yesterday, that's 20 consecutive calendar months of skiing.
For those who may have missed it, despite the fact that Snowbird "closed" to skiing and snowboarding on May 29 they're allowing folks to ride the summer sightseeing Trams with gear as long as they sign a liability waiver. It's $10 a ride, or $45 for the entire summer season. The Tram runs every 30 minutes, on the hour and the half hour from 11 am until 8 pm, although skis are allowed only until 4 pm.
Unlike yesterday, we managed to make the 11 am Tram. And unlike yesterday, the June sun was blazing through cloudless skies. It's 91 here in the Valley as I write this, and it was already into the mid-70s at the base of Snowbird by 11 am.
For our first run we opted for Nirvana, and to get there via the Mid-Cirque traverse only required us to step across two bare spots no more than 6 feet long each. No big deal, especially for June at a closed ski area. :roll: Nirvana itself...was. Corn perfection, with only small sun cups and reasonably firm snow despite the high temperatures. Nirvana just goes on, and on, and on for an extended vertical drop right down to the top of Big Emma. There we had to sidestep across the plowed road and onto Big Emma, skiing down to Bass Highway. Here we had to click out and only walk the west-facing portion of Bass Highway between Big Emma and Wilbere Ridge, from which point you could ski all the way back to the Tram.
Arriving in time for the noon Tram trip, we learned that Snowbird president Bob Bonar had been hiking in Peruvian Gulch, witnessed folks skiing Great Scott, and telephoned staff to reverse their decision to open the Gulch and once again declare everything in Peruvian Gulch off-limits. So now, you either ski into Gad Valley or hike across the Peruvian Ridge to access the summit of Baldy. We opted for the latter.
Once again, the remaining snow yielded a rather painless hike up Baldy. We paused for a while to admire the views and marvel at the flowering Alpine tundra. Before long, however, we clicked back in and headed to the top of Main Chute just as some iron woman was reaching the top by hiking up from Alta with her dog.
Bob dove in first, kicking off a river of heavy slush that kept running...and running...and running. I dropped in a few hundred verts myself and kicked off a similar river, then topped to take a short video of the curious phemonenon even though we saw the same thing happen last June.
We finished up on Harold's again, where three young women were glissading, and headed down Schuss Gully right back to the parking lot at Goldminer's Daughter as we did yesterday, 3,000 vertical feet below the summit of Baldy.
By now it was 1:30 and we were done. We stopped at Wendy's for a quick lunch and marveled at the view of Salt Lake Twin Peaks and Lone Peak from the parking lot. In between, the top of Snowbird's Hidden Peak was visible, as was the Tram's Tower 4.
"Heluva place for a fast food joint," Bob remarked. "If there was a place back East with a view like this, it would be filled with $10 million homes."
I'm at home typing this with sunburnt arms.
Yesterday was so good, Bob Dangerous and I just had to do it again today! And besides, it let me hit my 60-day target for the lift-served season. With yesterday, that's 20 consecutive calendar months of skiing.
For those who may have missed it, despite the fact that Snowbird "closed" to skiing and snowboarding on May 29 they're allowing folks to ride the summer sightseeing Trams with gear as long as they sign a liability waiver. It's $10 a ride, or $45 for the entire summer season. The Tram runs every 30 minutes, on the hour and the half hour from 11 am until 8 pm, although skis are allowed only until 4 pm.
Unlike yesterday, we managed to make the 11 am Tram. And unlike yesterday, the June sun was blazing through cloudless skies. It's 91 here in the Valley as I write this, and it was already into the mid-70s at the base of Snowbird by 11 am.
For our first run we opted for Nirvana, and to get there via the Mid-Cirque traverse only required us to step across two bare spots no more than 6 feet long each. No big deal, especially for June at a closed ski area. :roll: Nirvana itself...was. Corn perfection, with only small sun cups and reasonably firm snow despite the high temperatures. Nirvana just goes on, and on, and on for an extended vertical drop right down to the top of Big Emma. There we had to sidestep across the plowed road and onto Big Emma, skiing down to Bass Highway. Here we had to click out and only walk the west-facing portion of Bass Highway between Big Emma and Wilbere Ridge, from which point you could ski all the way back to the Tram.
Arriving in time for the noon Tram trip, we learned that Snowbird president Bob Bonar had been hiking in Peruvian Gulch, witnessed folks skiing Great Scott, and telephoned staff to reverse their decision to open the Gulch and once again declare everything in Peruvian Gulch off-limits. So now, you either ski into Gad Valley or hike across the Peruvian Ridge to access the summit of Baldy. We opted for the latter.
Once again, the remaining snow yielded a rather painless hike up Baldy. We paused for a while to admire the views and marvel at the flowering Alpine tundra. Before long, however, we clicked back in and headed to the top of Main Chute just as some iron woman was reaching the top by hiking up from Alta with her dog.
Bob dove in first, kicking off a river of heavy slush that kept running...and running...and running. I dropped in a few hundred verts myself and kicked off a similar river, then topped to take a short video of the curious phemonenon even though we saw the same thing happen last June.
We finished up on Harold's again, where three young women were glissading, and headed down Schuss Gully right back to the parking lot at Goldminer's Daughter as we did yesterday, 3,000 vertical feet below the summit of Baldy.
By now it was 1:30 and we were done. We stopped at Wendy's for a quick lunch and marveled at the view of Salt Lake Twin Peaks and Lone Peak from the parking lot. In between, the top of Snowbird's Hidden Peak was visible, as was the Tram's Tower 4.
"Heluva place for a fast food joint," Bob remarked. "If there was a place back East with a view like this, it would be filled with $10 million homes."
I'm at home typing this with sunburnt arms.
Attachments
-
18 snowbird peruvian gulch 060604.jpg58.6 KB · Views: 2,255
-
17 alta baldy 060604.jpg58.5 KB · Views: 2,250
-
16 alta west rustler 060604.jpg54.8 KB · Views: 2,254
-
15 alta lower mt 060604.jpg57.6 KB · Views: 2,243
-
14 alta bob skiing main chute 060604.jpg55.5 KB · Views: 2,243
-
13 baldy summit view east 060604.jpg26.4 KB · Views: 2,258
-
12 alta timpy from baldy 060604.jpg58.2 KB · Views: 2,252
-
11 alta sugarloaf castle from baldy 060604.jpg56.6 KB · Views: 2,253
-
10 alta baldy tundra flowers 060604.jpg58.6 KB · Views: 2,251
-
09 alta baldy tundra flowers 060604.jpg57.4 KB · Views: 2,250
-
08 alta LCC from baldy 060604.jpg58.8 KB · Views: 2,242
-
07 snowbird chamonix IV 060604.jpg55 KB · Views: 2,251
-
06 bob hiking baldy 060604.jpg58.5 KB · Views: 2,257
-
05 snowbird admin nirvana 060604.jpg53.8 KB · Views: 2,253
-
04 snowbird admin nirvana 060604.jpg57.5 KB · Views: 2,261
-
03 snowbird peruvian cirque 060604.jpg57.7 KB · Views: 2,249
-
02 snowbird peruvian gulch 060604.jpg56 KB · Views: 2,259
-
01 snowbird daltons 060604.jpg58.5 KB · Views: 2,252