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bumpyride

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Posts posted by bumpyride

  1. I took a leap of faith this year and bought a Nitro Quiver Squash.  I searched for several years for boards that I thought would fit the bill.  I ran across the Quiver series from Nitro.  Board is Medium Stiff, which was a requirement for me, and is cambered with an early rise tip.  Progressive side cut (8m to 7.2m).  It was the narrowest board (251mm waist in the 153 size) in the series, has a significant setback and a swallow tail.  The Squash turns on a dime with little effort.  It's blast in tight trees.  With the short tail, I no longer have to worry about hooking the tail in the bumps, or coming down steep chutes.  Back leg burn is not even a consideration

    Coming off the Peak at Big Sky in thigh deep powder, I've never lost sight of the tip.  My trip back into the condo has some very low pitch runs through the trees.  Never had a problem with bogging down in light powder even on such a low pitched slope.

    Picture is the Squash compared to the Burton Coil 156 which has been my off piste board for years. The Squash is slightly stiffer than the Coil, turns tighter and really floats.  I no longer think about turning in deep, I just do a slight angular deflection and it turns.

    I'm using the F2 Intec (sport I think), and riding my boots in the Walk Mode (and have been doing so for 21 years).  My angles on the Coil for off piste are 66/45, and I had to decrease the angles to 51/30 to compensate for the wider board and increased leverage on the Squash.

    The Squash will be in it's own series next year and will be offered in a Split Board, and will also have a Women's model.  I would never hesitate to take this on a Heli trip, and I've had many Heli comparable runs this year at Big Sky.  One day, I was even doing tight figure 8s by my lonesome.  

     

     

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  2. 18 minutes ago, Eric Brammer aka PSR said:

    I could've used something like that in AZ, back in '87...Dang tree wells..

     

    That was one of the main reasons I went to the straps.  The other reason was when I got caught on a cliff band and had to try and release without bending over which would have thrown my center of balance over the point of no return.  And now I'm just a lazy, proud monkey seeing all the other snowboarders stare as I step into the intecs.

    • Like 1
  3. I used to get the clips from REI, but they changed brands.  The jaws of the clips measure 15/16".  The 1" clips from REI are too big.   It takes a 5/8" webbing that I do get from REI.  For a tall guy 6'6" of webbing would be more than enough if you wanted to run through your pants and jacket.  It's easy, 2nd nature at this time.  It take about 5 minutes to adjust for the proper height.

     

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  4. I tried the hip release, but every time I rocketed into the lift line I couldn't find the strap.  I never have to look for it, because it's always in my hand under my mitts.  This has worked out perfectly for me.  Now I'm  always waiting for my skiing buds to get their poles on and I can peddle off the lift lines ahead of them.  Powder pig.

  5. The climber in me would always listen.  The same system has been in place for 10+ years and never failed.  The nylon is already double backed and is quite difficult to thread through with that webbing, and much more difficult than any of my climbing harnesses.  I prefer the nylon biners because or risk to damage to hands in a fall, and they only have to hold maybe 20 lbs, and cold transfer/heat loss are also a factor.   The Derlin buckles are under the same stress.  If one wanted to make a failsafe system, metal would be OK. Thanks for the input.

     

  6. Just posted this in another section, but thought it might be useful here.  I've been using this system for the past 10+ years. No more bending down to release bindings at lift and am able to release anywhere on the hill, even in very awkward positions.  First decided this was a good idea when I had to try and release at a cliff face with very poor positioning. Hope this helps.

    This is my quick release system for intecs. Derlin quick release buckles that will fit into Intec handles, 8' of 5/8" webbing (REI), and a Nylon Double Biner. Threaded through my pants, up through jacket sleeve and and into mittens. Long enough webbing to reach approximately the bottom of the palm of my hand when my arm is fully extended, but short enough to activate Intec release when holding the Biner and fully extending my arm. 

    Yes it is more difficult to release when the binding is loaded upwards, but pulling and doing a little hop should release it when hanging upside down.

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    • Like 2
  7. Just posted this in another section, but thought it might be useful here.  I've been using this system for the past 10+ years. No more bending down to release bindings at lift and am able to release anywhere on the hill, even in very awkward positions.  First decided this was a good idea when I had to try and release at a cliff face with very poor positioning. Hope this helps.

    This is my quick release system for intecs. Derlin quick release buckles that will fit into Intec handles, 8' of 5/8" webbing (REI), and a Nylon Double Biner. Threaded through my pants, up through jacket sleeve and and into mittens. Long enough webbing to reach approximately the bottom of the palm of my hand when my arm is not fully extended, but short enough to activate Intec release when holding the Biner and fully extending my arm. 

    Yes it is more difficult to release when the binding is loaded upwards, but pulling and doing a little hop should release it when hanging upside down.

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    11.jpg

    13.jpg

  8. This is my quick release system for intecs. Derlin quick release buckles that will fit into Intec handles, 8' of 5/8" webbing (REI), and a Nylon Double Biner. Threaded through my pants, up through jacket sleeve and and into mittens. Long enough webbing to reach approximately the bottom of the palm of my hand when my arm is not fully extended, but short enough to activate Intec release when holding the Biner and fully extending my arm. 

    Yes it is more difficult to release when the binding is loaded upwards, but pulling and doing a little hop should release it when hanging upside down.

    12.jpg

    11.jpg

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    • Like 1
  9. I have to say that I was pretty much over it by March (which was a pretty horrible month), and then the snows came once again.  Up until the new snows, conditions were icy and chunky which is absolutely not conducive to any sense of form or flow.

     I manage to keep my interest up by staying off the groomed slope and working the off piste. There's always room for improvement and honing skills for changing conditions (glades, trees, bumps), and trying to keep up with the better skiers. I understand the desire to carve the groomers, but I would have my fill within a couple of hours. Life on the slopes became much more interesting (in my opinion of course) when I have been exploring everything off the groom.

    I'm about to turn 68, and every year has seen an improvement in speed, skills, and in pleasure. I like the challenge of the whole mountain experience even when I find myself taking a fall, and even more so when I don't have to look behind me to see if I'm about to get creamed by a high speed idiot screaming down the grooms.

    Sometimes life is most rewarding when challenging yourself with new experiences - and that may well be on or off piste.

    INTERVAL TRAINING AND MITOCHONDRIA 

     

    By Andy Coghlan

    HIIT it! We’re often told that exercise is the best medicine, and it now seems that regular high intensity interval training (HIIT), in particular, is great for reversing the declining ability of our cells to generate energy.

    HIIT involves short bursts of very intense activity, interspersed with recovery periods of lower-intensity exercise. Sreekumaran Nair at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and his colleagues assigned groups of people aged between 18 and 30 and between 65 and 80 to three months of interval training, weight training or a combination of the two. Muscle biopsies were taken before and afterwards to measure the impact of these regimes on their cells.

    Read more: Just a few hours’ exercise a week makes your heart grow bigger

    Interval training boosted the ability of the mitochondria within cells to generate energy by 69 per cent in older volunteers, and by 49 per cent in the younger group.

    Mitochondrial activity declines with age, which may aggravate fatigue and reduce the size and ability of muscles to burn excess blood sugar – a risk factor for diabetes. But this decline was halted and even reversed in the older interval-training group. “After three months of interval training, everything converged towards what we saw in young people,” says Nair.

    Interval trainers also saw surges in lung, heart and circulation health. The amount of oxygen they could inhale and consume at full tilt rose by 28 per cent in the younger group and by 17 per cent in the older group. There was no corresponding change among weight trainers, although combination training boosted oxygen consumption by 21 per cent among older exercisers.

    • Like 4
  10. 8 hours ago, khoward said:

    Jane and I had a great time riding for 3 days at Steamboat, then 1 day at Copper. Steamboat was mostly hardpack, no powder while we were there, but Bluebird days. Unfortunately, I hit a different patch of Kryptonite on early Saturday morning while staying in Denver on our return trip. Short version, woke up in septic shock due to invasive Group A beta-Hemolytic Strep sepsis. Anyway, home now and recuperating with two weeks of home IV antibiotic therapy. Hoping to be back out at Spirit in a couple of weeks. Ken

    Just popped in for a quick check and saw this.  Deb and I both hope that you are recovering quickly. Really sorry to hear that.

  11. I use 2 boards, almost exclusively, both Burton.  These boards are 20 and 16 years old. Coil year 1996 for soft day off piste bump and glade runs. Ultraprime year 2000 for harder days on icier bump days and when there's no new snow.  Both have had more than their share of rocks and have probably only been waxed once a year.  Board 45 to 70 days a year and they just seem to get better. Don't know if this is normal, but they sure are fun. I have backups for both boards and I figure they'll last me till my days are done. I am, however thinking about having Sean build a off-piste powder board based on the Coil, but have to have it perform the same same way except for better float, a little earlier rise, with the same waist/camber/flex (still working on that).

    I'm too set in my ways to have to learn new tricks, especially if everything seems to be working,

  12. There are several different thicknesses of moldable liners. The thinnest ones I've found have been in soft snowboard boots that I've found in play it again sports. Raichle boots have been the best for a thin liner.  I have a solid 9 1/2 foot and am using a 26.5 shell. The thicker liners did not work, the thinner ones did. When molding I use 4 socks that have been cut off at the ball of the foot, and then duct tape those 4 "footies" to my snowboard sock and mold it. Also I don't use foots beds. When molding, I do a dry run and to get the sequence down and then do  the mold. I also load the front of my foot,  keep the heel stationary and wiggle the toes making sure that I don't rock back and forth. Be more than happy to walk you through any questions you have, just PM me.

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