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-   -   Where to buy? UK or France? (http://www.skibanter.com/showthread.php?t=11609)

nobody December 12th 05 10:34 AM

Where to buy? UK or France?
 
Hi All,
I've decided to get myself some snowboarding boots for this season -
previously I've rented, and found none of the boots fit quite right, and
it's a bit gross wearing 2/3/4/5/6th hand shoes!

Is it more sensible to buy from somewhere like Snow+Rock in the UK or in
Chamonix when I get there (27th Dec)? Is there going to be a huge
premium in one place or the other? Am I likely to get a discount on
renting stuff if I buy boots from the same place?

Cheers...

Tom

Russ (UK) December 12th 05 04:08 PM

Hi Tom,

Its pot luck really, sometimes it's cheaper and others it isn't. I personally don't risk it and buy my stuff in the UK as the last thing I would want is to turn up in resort and find out they have sold out :)

HTH

Russ

Tom Skelley December 14th 05 12:43 PM

Thx for the advice dude. Unfortunately yesterday I tripped and broke my
wrist, so I guess I'm going to miss this season. WAAAAAAAAAAAH! :-(

Russ (UK) wrote:
Hi Tom,

Its pot luck really, sometimes it's cheaper and others it isn't. I personally don't risk it and buy my stuff in the UK as the last thing I would want is to turn up in resort and find out they have sold out :)

HTH

Russ


Stan December 14th 05 03:52 PM

This will be my third year boarding and I learn a lot from this group and
want to pass on a tip that may possibly help with broken bones, in case some
of you aren't already aware of it.

Fiberglass casts with a Gortex lining.

I've had one cast in my life and that was last year when I broke the
scaphoid bone in my left wrist a week before Christmas, trying to make a
turn over what truned out to be solid ice. I had a cast on for one week
with the a regular cotton lining and within two days was going crazy with
the itching and not being able to get it wet. I saw someone working at a
snowboard shop with a cast on his wrist and he told me I had to get the
gortex lining. When I got the original cast off after a week to re-xray I
requested the gortex lining and ended up having to pay for it myself which
was the best $11 I've ever spent. For the next 10 weeks and two casts "no
itching" and you can get them wet and they dry in an hour or so. Hopefully
this is used most places automatically but my HMO didn't and without a
fellow snowboarder telling my about gortex I would have suffered needlessly
all those weeks. I have also passed this on to others that I've noticed in
casts with cotton lining so cotton must still be used alot.

Also, Tom, unless your season to snowboard is a small one you can probably
still get out there. Check with your doctor but after about two weeks I was
back snowboarding. My glove just barely fit over my cast (the fiberglass
ones seem to be thinner as well) and the cast gave me tons of protection.
The anxious part was when I finally got it off. I waited a few weeks
because of the soreness trying to work out my wrist again and then wore a
wrist guard.

Good luck, Stan (new Donek is waxed and ready to go when we get a little
more snow).

"Tom Skelley" wrote in message
...
Thx for the advice dude. Unfortunately yesterday I tripped and broke my
wrist, so I guess I'm going to miss this season. WAAAAAAAAAAAH! :-(

Russ (UK) wrote:
Hi Tom,

Its pot luck really, sometimes it's cheaper and others it isn't. I

personally don't risk it and buy my stuff in the UK as the last thing I
would want is to turn up in resort and find out they have sold out :)

HTH

Russ




Champ December 14th 05 04:15 PM

On Wed, 14 Dec 2005 13:43:09 +0000, Tom Skelley
wrote:

Thx for the advice dude. Unfortunately yesterday I tripped and broke my
wrist, so I guess I'm going to miss this season. WAAAAAAAAAAAH! :-(


Season? Don't be such a poof. It only takes 6 weeks for a bone to
mend. That's if you need to wait for it to mend, of course - I've
ridden a motorcycle with my wrist in plaster, so I don't see why one
couldn't snowboard.
--
Champ

Switters December 14th 05 04:43 PM

On Wed, 14 Dec 2005 13:43:09 GMT, Tom Skelley
allegedly wrote:

Thx for the advice dude. Unfortunately yesterday I tripped and broke my
wrist, so I guess I'm going to miss this season. WAAAAAAAAAAAH! :-(


Are you kidding? I just had my wrist plastered up and went on my next
trip which was 4 weeks later. In fact the plaster made a nice wrist
guard. You do need to keep the plaster dry and for that, you'll possibly
have trouble finding gloves that will fit over it. I managed by finding
some cheap gloves in a normal clothing store.

I'm not saying that you'll be fine though just because I was.

- Dave.

--
The only powder to get high on, falls from the sky.
http://www.vpas.org/ - Snowboarding the worlds pow pow -
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The Snowboard FAQ lives here - http://rssFAQ.org/


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