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Dan

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Posts posted by Dan

  1. 22 hours ago, Erik J said:

    Dan - for some reason your avatar migrated its way into my family photos like 6 cell phones ago which could be 10 - 18 years ago. Probably during some botched data transfer on my part. My wife asked me years ago "who's that?" I didn't have an answer.  She already thinks I'm a weirdo so whatever. 

    Ha! Just tell your wife I'm a voodoo priest you met on a snowboard trip, that should clear things up. Might make it hard to get away for future trips though. 

    That was Halloween 2001, I believe. I don't even have the original photo anymore, it might have been taken with a film camera... Happy to be part of your family lore ;-)

  2. Hell Lee, I didn't know you spent that much time around here! Are you from Portland? I grew up in Beaverton and live in Richmond (SE Portland) now, my sister has been in and out of town, but back in Beaverton for 10+ years, and my folks are in Camas. I was just starting to get into alpine in the 2000/2001 season, riding at Meadows (on a Sinner with maximum stance width around 17" lol), were you still around town then? 

    Both of those campers are sweet - love that Hilux kitted out for expeditions. Good thought on the traveling for better prices - when we're ready to pull the trigger, I'll look around other states - Tacomas are definitely hot here. Thanks for the suggestion.

  3. On 10/9/2018 at 11:59 AM, LeeW said:

    Hmm. I got a '99 Tacoma PreRunner and that thing is still an animal! Beaten up pretty good, cosmetically. otherwise, works just fine and dandy. from what i can recall, 95-2004-ish tacoma has been consistent with reliability with owner satisfaction (source is Consumer Reports which I swear by for good number of years). 

    Good luck, buddy.

    Meadows/T-Line/bowl sucks ass when it coems to driving on that death highway. Have you considered moving to g'ovy or is something else holding you in pdx-town?

    Nice - we are lusting after a Tacoma with one of these light 'n' fast campers on top: https://gofastcampers.com/pages/camper-landing. We'll get there. Funny thing is my wife is even more eager than me and wants to know our timeline for making it happen -- just a little hard to convince myself to trade in a 2013 Outback that we bought new for a used truck with 100k more miles.

    Govy is close to skiing, but pretty limited other ways - no grocery store for example. I'd love to move to Hood River or somewhere else in the Hood River Valley, but for now work and family commitments are keeping me in Portland. Housing around Hood River is $$$ anyway so it's hard in that respect.

  4. I got some compression road biking shorts and didn't notice a difference in performance or recovery, but they were on sale, so no complaints. There's enough high-end athletes using compression gear that I imagine there must be something to it, but maybe it only comes into play when you're really getting after it.

  5. On 9/9/2018 at 11:18 AM, LeeW said:

    Hey man... ah, just working my ass off at Coors factory these days. At least, it's able to help me get this awesome diesel shooter: BMW 335d. ? 

    I realize my alpine board is collecting dust so I might sweep it off and gun it in bimmer and ride the madd 159 "the pimp" for a round or two this coming winter up on megametropolis ski resorts on i-70. What about you, Dan?

    Hey Lee! Sorry, I missed your post when you made it. That BMW looks like a sweet ride -- my wife and I aren't looking at anything quite that cool, but we are talking about trading in our Outback on a Tacoma for better camping access on Forest Service roads. 

    As far as snowboarding, I failed to work through my 10-pass at Mt. Hood Meadows last season (sigh), so I think I'm going to skip the 10-pass this year, buy a spring pass, and do more trips and some skinning in the winter. I still love riding and my new Thirst board (first custom board I've ever bought new) is a blast, but the 90-minute drive to Mt. Hood (and the long waits for good carving days here) has gotten pretty old. 

  6. Yeah, certainly for snow sports, the midweek riders (at least on Mt. Hood where we don't have destination resorts) are the people who really get it. Midweek riders have generally been at it a good long while, know how their skills compare to other riders, and are just out there to have fun. Weekend riders are much more likely to feel they have something to prove..also, it's crowded!

  7. Conditions weren't great for photography, but I grabbed a few snaps. This top one below is the best one - Dane mid-driveby. LOL, I wasn't ready for him to come around on that side or this would have been a real front-page photo.

     

     

    image.png.8f590e1a44f55f934c5898f00e910cc0.png

     

    Got a not bad photo of the Flyin' Hawaiian Buster too:

     

     

     

    image.png

     

    And...a couple more photos.

    The groom was not bad...

    image.png.3fd9ad2c0b9c841412182b44a4d9ff4f.png

    And we had a good crew...(from left to right, Gray on Tray, MikeT, Keenan, Buster, Kram, and Dan - this is day 1, before DW3, Jburk, Pusbag and his wife showed up. Dane was the photog so not shown).

    image.png.dc2b144c9b2d53c607897751fbe4c476.png

    MikeT was working on his nose grab:

    image.png.4b15452bd34539325b22a5b65d41d538.png

     

    And generally kicking a** and taking names...

    image.png.eb2ee3b3e88a1864e51a954d18f2eaf2.png

     

    Kram was smooth as usual

    image.png.e5a1c062ed2d2fa34156f29a766dd630.png

     

     

    All that carving is Thirsty work!

    image.png

    • Like 3
  8. 9 minutes ago, lonbordin said:

    No it's their leader... The Russian people are great, you'd like them.

    Yah, I feel pretty confident that this inner tube carver would be a great person to hang out with...just like we Americans are...let me just say "easier to get along with" than our president. 

    Also, this looks both hilarious and fun. 

  9. 1 hour ago, BLOODTYPEZX10R said:

    Dan, those Tekonsha controllers have an accelerometer inside and can be mounted horizontally or vertically.  The unit needs to be oriented properly in either case, i,e. not sideways.  Normally there is a harness adaptor that mates with the wiring for your car to the controller.  Hard to say how it was installed and if this harness connector is accessible; though it could be hard wired to the vehicle also.  Getting under the dash of Subaru's can be a bit difficult and cramped.  You could mount the device with some sturdy Velcro or a mount that could be removed, it does need to be mounted fairly rigidly to the vehicle so it does not flop around and receives proper input as you are braking.  The original bracket is such that you must remove the controller via two pins on either side, then you would need to remove the bracket itself (I'd rather hit my knee on the controller than the thin bracket).  It is best to have the device located so you can reach it to make delay and gain adjustment due to a change in trailer weight.

    Thanks Mark! Yep, I know about mounting orientation, and this controller is a little more limited in what it will tolerate, but I still have options. Agreed that the controller is better than the bracket, that thing would hurt, especially in an accident. Velcro is a great idea - there's enough slack in the cable that I can move it to the side out of the way and then put it in its original location when I'm actually towing. 

  10. So, I didn't know anything about trailers or towing when I got our Subie set up to tow our teardrop, and I especially didn't know that the damn brake controller was going to hit my knee all year long just so we could use it for three months in the summer. We had it done at Uhaul, and they put the brake controller in a very standard location by the driver's right knee, where you can reach it for adjustments and manual trailer braking if needed. It's fixed - screwed to a mounting bracket which is screwed to the dash. 

    If I had done some research up front, I might have found out that there are unpluggable / detachable brake controllers, which would have made a whole lot more sense for us. Does anyone know if it's possible to retrofit, or would that require a whole new installation? 

    My other option (actually, might be my first option) will be to look for a detachable mounting bracket that clips on or something like that so I can move the brake controller out of the way for the bulk of the year when it's not in use. I haven't seen anything stock from Tekonsha, but I need to check the controller model and look again -- otherwise, I think I might be able to McGyver something. 

    All wisdom appreciated! 

  11. 15 hours ago, pow4ever said:

    I can't make it this year /sadface. 

    Too much going on at work.  We got 6 feet of snow and I can't even take advantage of that...   
    Done enough research to know what to do.  Next year for sure.

    Sorry to hear it, we'll catch you next year. I am definitely familiar with the "too much work to ride" predicament and it blows.

    • Thanks 1
  12. I looked at the Wahini site after the owner posted in the "buy Bomber" thread. It looked like they were suggesting you could mount their boards as teleboards or with alpine snowboard bindings...is that what others got out of it? I've never ridden one though. Chances are they don't actually have Bomber bindings in stock; if they did, they should be charging a premium for them at the moment. 

  13. Conditions can play a part too...one day maybe 11 or 12 years ago, when I was at best an intermediate level carver, I made pretty much perfect laid out carves down HRM face at Mt. Hood Meadows. It's a reasonably steep pitch and the snow was hardpack that day. I was riding an Oxygen F-67, which even then was nothing to write home about: a very soft freecarver with a very perceptible speed limit - you don't have to go very fast before you start blowing out of turns. But somehow everything lined up and I nailed the run a few times, I think the soft flex played well with the hardpack conditions. 

    Well...it was probably 6 or 7 years of more learning before I made turns that good again, lol. Fortunately there were a few witnesses to my moments of glory that day who developed a wholly inaccurate idea of my skill level. :biggthump

  14. 16 hours ago, www.oldsnowboards.com said:

    You looked REALLY Good Dan!!!  Thanks for taking the time to ride with the ole man!!! Missed riding with you the past few years!! Bryan  

     

    It was a great carving session with everyone at MHM!!

     

    Thanks for the kind words Bryan! It was a great day and everyone was slaying...too bad conditions were too perfect to take the time to shoot video ;-)

    Have definitely missed seeing you on the hill; hope that we connect a few more times before the lifts close down!

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