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#1
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Canada this winter... where to?
Hi, I'm planning a trip to Canada this winter, probably in January,
for 2 to 3 weeks, and probably can't stay until February. This will be my second season, I learned to board at packed powder/hard pack condition of Hunter Mountain, NY State (my arse's still sore), and I managed to get out of beginner's area by the end of the season (barely though). Any good mountain recommendations in BC/Alberta, with snow that is more forgiving to my snowboarding abilities? I'm thinking of Fernie, Sunshine, and Lake Louise. Thanks Serena |
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#2
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Canada this winter... where to?
Hmm.. for forgiving snow there's no place like Utah, that's some of the
lightest powder. I went to Whistler in Jan. Don't get me wrong, it was a great trip, but I wasn't impressed. "Serena" wrote in message m... Hi, I'm planning a trip to Canada this winter, probably in January, for 2 to 3 weeks, and probably can't stay until February. This will be my second season, I learned to board at packed powder/hard pack condition of Hunter Mountain, NY State (my arse's still sore), and I managed to get out of beginner's area by the end of the season (barely though). Any good mountain recommendations in BC/Alberta, with snow that is more forgiving to my snowboarding abilities? I'm thinking of Fernie, Sunshine, and Lake Louise. Thanks Serena --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.500 / Virus Database: 298 - Release Date: 7/10/2003 |
#3
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Canada this winter... where to?
If your going into Calgary i strongly reccomend taking the drive out to
Golden BC, its only about an hour drive from lake louise. Its a small mountain town that has a huge mountain and isnt to touristy (but dont worry they still have fresh meat mondays at the local bar, new stripper every week). I lived in Jasper AB and rode at both sunshine and lake louise and i'd take kickinghorse (Golden) any day of the week, plus its not that far out of the way that u can hit more than one hill. |
#4
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Gary Griffis wrote:
If your going into Calgary i strongly reccomend taking the drive out to Golden BC, its only about an hour drive from lake louise. Its a small mountain town that has a huge mountain and isnt to touristy (but dont worry they still have fresh meat mondays at the local bar, new stripper every week). I lived in Jasper AB and rode at both sunshine and lake louise and i'd take kickinghorse (Golden) any day of the week, plus its not that far out of the way that u can hit more than one hill. I was in Kicking Horse last season and oh my what a great mountain. Although for a boarder with limited experience, Kicking Horse, I dare say, is a little too advanced for you. It is nothing like anything on the east coast and it is one of the more challenging mountains I've been to. I was ripping down Lake Louise just fine on pretty much all of the runs, but I'd have to say Kicking Horse kicked my ass. For a boarder in his second season, I'd recommend Lake Louise or even the mountains in Vancouver. STu |
#5
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Waco Paco wrote:
I was ripping down Lake Louise just fine on pretty much all of the runs, but I'd have to say Kicking Horse kicked my ass. Kicking Horse is a tough hill. They've got one lift that services beginner runs, and everything else is pretty tough sledding for a beginner. The main lift is a gondola that runs nearly the entire vertical. If you come down the front, it's cat-track city for beginners until about half-way down where there are one or two steepish blue runs. If you go the back way, there's pretty much only one run that's doable. I'd say a beginner/intermediate would be happy there for a weekend, but there's not enough for a week. But if you're a strong rider, confident in steeps and in bumps, it's a fun, fun hill. Just be aware that much of what they label black would be double-diamond on other hills. Another good thing about KH is that it is uncrowded and the weather is supposedly usually good - at least, it was while I was there and Ski Canada gave it "best weather" in their "best of Canada" feature. Neil |
#6
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Just be aware that much of what they label black would be double-diamond
on other hills. I gotta come up and visit. It would be a nice change from Mt Hood where the only real steeps are way too short. |
#7
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I am going to try Red Mountain Resort this year. A couple of hours north of
Spokane. I haven't been there before, but I received some great reviews as far as terrain, snow, cost, and lack of crowds. Anyone with first hand experience of it? |
#8
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tg wrote:
I am going to try Red Mountain Resort this year. A couple of hours north of Spokane. I haven't been there before, but I received some great reviews as far as terrain, snow, cost, and lack of crowds. Anyone with first hand experience of it? It's on my "to-do" list for sure. The in-bounds terrain is supposed to be insane, especially in the trees. Another expert's mountain by all accounts. Neil |
#9
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On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 18:24:14 GMT, "tg"
allegedly wrote: Anyone with first hand experience of it? waves It is a great place, and some of the runs are pretty steep. It can get crowded though, and you may find yourself waiting 20 minutes at the bottom of the motherlode chair. On a powder day, you better get up very early if you want fresh tracks. Some of the trees are tightly packed, and when the slopes is 35 degrees and more it can get interesting. Add some low level cloud cover and some cliffs in amongst the trees, it can get dangerous. Take a buddy, especially down runs like Powder Fields, and in the trees on the Slides. If you head up that way, you should try out White Water as well. Has even less lifts and less terrain, but it's got a nice vibe from it. Visit Nelson as well, if you need a break from riding. Great place. - Dave. -- The only powder to get high on, falls from the sky. http://www.vpas.org/ - Snowboarding the worlds pow pow - Securing your e-mail The Snowboard FAQ lives here - http://rssFAQ.org/ |
#10
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Neil Gendzwill wrote in message ...
tg wrote: I am going to try Red Mountain Resort this year. A couple of hours north of Spokane. I haven't been there before, but I received some great reviews as far as terrain, snow, cost, and lack of crowds. Anyone with first hand experience of it? It's on my "to-do" list for sure. The in-bounds terrain is supposed to be insane, especially in the trees. Another expert's mountain by all accounts. Neil Im going over to Canada as well in January for a month. Ive booked a holiday in Fernie for 10 days and then after that ive got nearly 20 days to go other places. Im looking forward to Fernie and then possibly Banff. Is it worth going to Whistler, or is it just hype? Which other resorts are worth visiting? Cheers Steve |
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