Bronco Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 uh, my "friend" has picked up AT skiing this season and seems to have developed an irrational fear of using snowshoes. Is this normal? Will pass with time or can we expect the condition to worsen? Quote
marylou Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 No, as a person similarly newly acquired with AT gear, I see nothing unusual about this aversion. All of a sudden, sLowshoeing seems like a lot of work. Quote
sheskis Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 People still post hole too. Why??!! Skinning's the way to go! Quote
JoshK Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 god, snowshoeing is horrendous. every once in a while, however, it has it's advantages. congrats on picking up AT, you'll have fun. Quote
cj001f Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 Will pass with time or can we expect the condition to worsen? Skin closer to the light.... Quote
DPS Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 Once your friend tries the appoach (and deproach) to Colchuck Lake on skis he may see the value in snow shoes. Quote
JoshK Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 Once your friend tries the appoach (and deproach) to Colchuck Lake on skis he may see the value in snow shoes. Hehe....good point. Then again, in decent conditions the ski down from colchuck to mountaineer creek can be very fun tree skiing. the trail out is generally worthless however. Quote
ken4ord Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 Once your friend tries the appoach (and deproach) to Colchuck Lake on skis he may see the value in snow shoes. Hehe....good point. Then again, in decent conditions the ski down from colchuck to mountaineer creek can be very fun tree skiing. the trail out is generally worthless however. Yeah I think that it would be a great run down. Only disadvantage to snowshoes to AT, (well in my case a Split) is that they are heavier to carry while climbing, but I have managed on easier routes though. Quote
Bronco Posted January 29, 2004 Author Posted January 29, 2004 Once your friend tries the appoach (and deproach) to Colchuck Lake on skis he may see the value in snow shoes. I er, he will let you know about that Monday. Quote
thelawgoddess Posted January 29, 2004 Posted January 29, 2004 walking around with snowshoes on is a hell of a lot of work! "walking" around with skins on your skis is bliss. Quote
JoshK Posted January 30, 2004 Posted January 30, 2004 bliss? I'm not sure I'd go that far. bliss would be an invisible, noiseless snowmobile that magically takes you uphill and is then again waiting for you at the bottom Quote
thelawgoddess Posted January 30, 2004 Posted January 30, 2004 i agree with cracked. come back to reality. joshk. bliss is not some noisy stinky pollutant called a snowmobile. what you're talking about is a chairlift ... and those are mighty heavy in the backcountry. Quote
nonanon Posted January 30, 2004 Posted January 30, 2004 I like my snowshoes long and skinny. But not too skinny! (Luv the skinner, hate the skinnin'?) Quote
thelawgoddess Posted January 30, 2004 Posted January 30, 2004 what's wrong with groomed snow? then you don't even need snowshoes! i'm all for backcountry skiing, but i'll admit i enjoy tearing down fresh corduroy. it's all snow = it's all good. Quote
Cpt.Caveman Posted February 2, 2004 Posted February 2, 2004 I prefer to plod new tracks with skis. Snowshoes are many times the way to go too. Evaluate argue and go out. I have no clue to the snow conditions near Colchuck this weekend but would prefer skis there on a guess. But the way down does suck ass in skis IMHO each time I have encountered it in such gear. I guess that depends on some situations but not usually. It's pretty wooded for the most part. It's after the lake where the skis could be best... Quote
Bronco Posted February 2, 2004 Author Posted February 2, 2004 Went in to just short of Colchuck Lake on Saturday, a little icy and a lot of branches down through the woods on the approach. It snowed 2-3" durring the night so the descent was pretty speedy with minimal wipeouts. Quote
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