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Fastskiguy

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Posts posted by Fastskiguy

  1. Gotta vote pow. But it makes me wonder....what if you only had deep powder to ride, would it get boring after 10 years? 20 years? 30 years? As deep pow is a supreme delicacy for some of us (like maybe a day every year or two!), gotta vote for pow.

  2. I went with "More Than Somewhat".... Being from the Midwest, it's critical that I get up to carving speed ASAP, IMO... It allows me to be efficient... It's no fun if you need to waste the top 1/4 of a run straightlinging to get enough speed... Also, I have some situations at my home hill that require me to have a few hundred yards of run-out if I want to get to another part of the hill and I have to change lifts...

    Yeah, what he said. Gotta just love a fast running board.

  3. Last year, I couldn't find a pair of clean ski socks so I threw a pair of wool dress socks in the bag. Thin, dress socks. They worked just as well as $30 ski socks. I was in the sock aisle recently and noticed a lot of dress socks made of bamboo fibres. Claimed to be anti-bacterial and have more wicking properties than wool or cotton. At $15 for a pack of three, I'm going to give them a try this season.

    Now that is a good idea, I'm sure I have some of those laying around here somewhere.... They're wool, fitted, and thin. And can be cheap (or expensive). Cool.

  4. just for fun play with this site http://zipskinny.com/index.php?zip=01902

    I have it set to lynn, MA, Lynn is a ****hole but not all that bad compared to here

    Oh man, thanks for that link, now I can plan for the site of my business, the first franchise which will expand and eventually take over the world! <que evil laugh>

    Seriously, you are right but it's still a place where a common man can be successful. At least we have the possibility of moving up the socioeconomic ladder.

  5. Yea got the skiis on backcountry.com at some riduculas closeout for $79 . I see you are from Wisconsin. Grew up in Marshfield , went to UW-Madison and skied all the southern Wi ski areas and UP areas. My brother lives in Monroe now (works for swiss colony) and I was just back for opening day in Green Bay with my inlaws who live there.

    Well spending all but a couple of days riding in southern Wisconsin is the problem, if I was able to get into the back country a lot then I could justify getting some trick gear. But cobbling together something with my ski boards, that is gonna be fine for a day or two per year I think. I'm looking forward to it :)

  6. They were k2 clickers with a hinged at setup but i drilled off the clickers and put on some old raceplates. I have a set of old f2 intec stepins coming to make it even faster in and out.

    Jim

    Ah, OK, a homemade thing, I might be able to do that! And I think I can handle the board on my back *and* I have some wide ski boards so I think I'm going for it! Thanks a lot for all of your help guys!

  7. I use ascent skiis now, but have climbed MtHood at least 8 times in hardboots by just walking with crampons . I am definately interested in getting a split setup soon but ascent skiis work pretty good.

    Jim

    What kind of bindings are those? I'm thinking my cheapest option is to convert some ski boards not currently in use to ascent skis. Then I'd just need a binding and some skins and I'd be set (I think). The splitboard looks good but they are not exactly cheap. I could get the kit and an inexpensive used board and get out the saw....but I'd still be in 150 for the kit, 150 for the skins, and 50-150ish for bindings...plus the cost of the board. Sounds like 500$ minimum.

  8. Ok, this has been helpful so far :) Let's review

    Ascent skis

    or

    Splitboard

    Now I've got some ski boards, fat ones, maybe 99cm long, could those work as ascent skis? What kind of bindings will work as regular tele bindings won't ( I don't think ) with alpine snowboard boots.

    As far as application I go on a trip each year with my brother. He's a tele god and I'm a midwestern Sith lord ski carver. So he knows a lot and I know not much about backcountry stuff. We've hiked up "some pass" near Sun Valley for the last 2 years and it's been pretty neat. Not very steep, maybe a blue run for you western guys (black here in Southern WI), but it's like, pow (!) baby. He's like "just get some tele stuff" and I'm like "sucks in the midwest!, need a local application" so that's where snowboarding comes in. So for just a couple of days per year I don't want to spend a ton....on the other hand I don't want a few dollars to get between me and a good time. I'm thinking ascent skis but...with more info...what do you think?

  9. There was an article in Scientific American a little about this-the study compared health for the rich and for the poor-people would declare where they fell in the socioeconomic strata by picking a rung from a 10 rung ladder. They tried to correct for obesity and lifestyle differences like smoking and diet, they tried to correct for the differences in healthcare due to not having as much money. Interestingly, that even corrected for all of that stuff, people who felt they were low on the socioeconomic ladder actually were less healthy. They theorized that the stress of being poor, or actually the stress of thinking that you're poor, actually increased the risk of disease. Which kinda makes sense. The stress of thinking about which carving deck to buy is just a lot different than the stress of maybe not eating dinner tonight or having a place to stay next week.

  10. So, got a dumb question maybe but how well can a skilled rider carve with soft boots? Are we talking carving like the pics from SES last year or some of the extreme carving videos from the swoard guys? Or are we talking more laid back carves...best on soft snow kinda stuff? I'm not trying to start any flame wars, I just want to know how carvy a guy can get with soft boots.

    OK, long story, it's just that with alpine skiing I can carve the **** out of it with just about anything as far as boots are concerned. I can run my boots without buckling them and it's no problemo to carve it right up. Not exactly going to win the world cup with a loose boot but very high level carving is not any trouble at all.

    It is really a matter of getting yourself lined up right, it's not like a ski boot (even a "soft boot") flexes sideways to any appreciable degree. Canting makes a difference, and the insole is important IMO, but if you can roll your ankles and body in the right direction, modern skis (borne of snowboarding I understand) will hook right up and rail around.

    So could this be the same with snowboarding? Do we need all of this stiff stuff to really rail it? Tipping the board on a high edge and pressuring it just can't require a super stiff setup....or does it? And some ability to absorb irregularities, now that just can't be a bad thing, can it?

    (sorry this is way OT)

  11. LMFAO what a fabrication!

    They completely disregard the fact that those are mostly quite affluent counties as well, which means people have more money for health care.

    advertising = :barf:

    You know, you remind me of my brother-in-law (which is a good thing)

    You don't live in Florida, do you??

  12. So, got a dumb question maybe but how well can a skilled rider carve with soft boots? Are we talking carving like the pics from SES last year or some of the extreme carving videos from the swoard guys? Or are we talking more laid back carves...best on soft snow kinda stuff? I'm not trying to start any flame wars, I just want to know how carvy a guy can get with soft boots.

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