Showing posts with label Mt. Hood Meadows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mt. Hood Meadows. Show all posts

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Pray For Snow With Mt. Hood Meadows

UPDATE: Meadows added a limited slope opening. The Buttercup lift will be turning from  3-7pm and will include a park setup with five rails. Lift tickets are just $10 and for those over 21 that will get you in to the Pray For Snow party as well.

Opening soon or opening now? Either way we need more snow. Get to Mt. Hood Meadows and make it happen this Saturday, November 21 from 11 in the morning 'til 11 at night. That's right, on the mountain. The place where we want the snow. Earlier in the day, until 5pm will be all-ages as various food, drink and retail establishments will offer discounts and previews of the coming year. Then comes the sneak preview dinner with Meadows' new executive chef, Matt Stine, and owner, Matthew Drake. Finally, the Pray For Snow Dance Party with music by Hit Machine also featuring fashion shows, raffles and a slide show from staff photographer Grant Myrdall. Doors at 7:30, 21+  Get up there and party down!

Envision everything you see covered in snow. Except the band, that would mean a faulty roof.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Drone Wars?

Mt Hood Meadows and Timberline both signed exclusive aerial drone usage contracts with California-based Cape Productions for the coming season. Drone use by the general public remains prohibited at both areas (See policies from Meadows and Timberline) without proper permitting. In exchange, Cape will provide a service similar to what Grant Myrdal provides at Meadows, namely, capturing images of you on certain runs for a fee. Here's how it works:



This is the right time to make this sort of decision. I have seen very few drones at Meadows or Timberline during normal business operations. I saw a few during Snowboarder Magazine's Superpark at Meadows two winters ago and one in the parking lot at Timberline once. That said, drones are are getting easier to come by every year. I wouldn't be surprised to see signs at the resorts that warn of drone usage soon. Now that I type that, I feel like I've already seen these signs.

I think they got it right. I definitely don't want to see someone's drone and wonder whether he or she knows how to pilot it properly while I'm enjoying a day on the hill. GoPoles are one thing, at least they stay close to the operator. Flying- spinning- knife-camera machines up the ante a little.

What do you think? Should people be able to drone where they wanna drone or is a little regulation good? It sounds like the deal is for just one year to start with, so we'll see what happens. If you have strong feelings on the topic, be sure to get in touch with Meadows, Timberline and/or Cape Productions and let them know how you feel. Also, check out Shred Hood's commentary on the issue.

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Mt. Hood Meadows FREE Avalanche Awareness Class

It's good to see Mt. Hood Meadows offering a free avalanche awareness class. Hell, it's good to see anyone offering an avy basics class. And that's all it is, folks. Just the basics, an hour and a half, all indoors. You want the full cert, you gotta go elsewhere. Hopefully they'll offer something like that at Meadows or at least through Meadows soon, what with all the gated backcountry access and all. Also, it's the same day as a Base Camp Brewery tasting event. Sounds like a combo to me. Here's the full resort verbiage.

Time: 1-2:30 PM
Location: White River Room at Mt. Hood Meadows

Course Description 
Introduce and explain to students where and why avalanches occur. 
Describe who gets caught and why. 
Provide a basic approach to staying safe in the backcountry. 

This course targets the unaware backcountry traveler, and introduces the recognition of avalanche danger and how to reduce the risk. 

Student Learning Outcomes 
Learn to access local avalanche bulletins and weather reports.
Recognize basic signs of avalanche danger. 
Learn to avoid avalanche danger. 
Understand the need for companion rescue techniques and equipment. 
The course will utilize interactive presentation materials and local case histories and encourage questions from the audience. Participants that are more than casual users of the backcountry are encouraged to take a multiple day avalanche course.

No required equipment is required. This course will take place indoors. 

Please sign up for this FREE course by emailing Nick Asher at nick.asher@skihood.com

***

Then head over to the mid-hill Mazot for a taste of Base Camp Brewing's first packaged IPA the Ultra Gnar Gnar IPA (no I did not make that up) 'til 4. Full words here.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Mt. Hood Meadows and Mt. Baker Buddy Up


In a slick partnership between two locally owned and operated Pacific Northwest Snow Recreation Areas, unlimited passholders at either area will get five free days at the other area. Restrictions apply, void where prohibited, etc, but this is a sweet little deal. Here's the press release.

MT. HOOD, OR (September 4, 2014) – Mt. Hood Meadows (Oregon) and Mt. Baker Ski Area (Washington) are offering five free days to each other’s unlimited passholders this season. The two ski areas have many similarities – both are locally owned and independently operated – no conglomeration on these slopes. They receive massive amounts of snow but it’s the terrain under all that snow that delights skiers and snowboarders.
The Deal – Five Free Days
Mt. Hood Meadows and Mt. Baker Unlimited Passholders will each receive five free days at the other ski area. These free days are valid Monday - Friday from January 5 through February 28; and then any day beginning March 1 for the rest of the season. Check www.Skihood.com or www.MtBaker.us for their respective operating schedules. Passholders simply present their valid 2014/15 unlimited pass with photo identification at the other ski area ticket office to receive an all day lift ticket, which is for the passholder only (not transferable).
Mt. Hood Meadows President and CEO Matthew Drake says the partnership provides value for passholders. “We sought out a compatible ski resort and ownership / management team that shared our core values, consistently provided a high quality experience with dependable snow that would excite our unlimited passholders. Mt. Baker has the terrain worth driving to and accumulates more snow than any ski area in the country. Our passholders indicated it is one of their favored areas that they want to visit in addition to Mt. Hood Meadows. We’re eager to add these five free days as a benefit that is a real value for our loyal unlimited passholders.”
Mt. Baker Ski Area General Manager Duncan Howat says this is a unique partnership, and Mt. Hood Meadows was selected carefully. “We chose to do this program because we appreciate that both Mt. Baker and Mt. Hood Meadows are locally owned and operated ski areas. That fact combined with Mt. Hood Meadows' long spring season and the area's variety of recreation will make for a fun opportunity for Baker's pass holders.”
The ski areas are about a five-hour drive from each other’s population base, close enough for passholders to take a few trips over the course of the season, or an extended stay to use all five of their free days. The ski areas are working on preferred lodging partners to offer extended stay packages to accommodate passholders. More information will be provided on the ski area web sites: Mt. Hood Meadows (www.skihood.com); Mt. Baker (www.mtbaker.us).

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Snowboarder Magazine Superpark 18 Recap

Big method. Big mountain.
Snowboarder Magazine's Superpark is a wrap and like host resort Mt. Hood Meadows it was predictably unpredictable. I can't believe I just wrote that. You know, the weather was a factor, like it always is on Mt. Hood. The features were gigantic and gnarly, as usual. There were even some good mini shred opportunities and a pow morning for good measure. If you want to ignore my unpredictable ramblings and go straight to the hammers, check the videos at Snowboarder.

Before the event even started, the weatherman was calling for a mixed bag. Anyone with an eye on the forecast - as every snowman worth his salt should be - might guess that the schedule could get compressed by a day or two due to rain. With this in mind, every day had to fully count and there was no half-steppin on day 1.

After a quick couple lifts to scope the show, I checked out a session at the Woodward Dam step-up feature. Get an eyeful of this land mass. I can never judge how big things like that are, but the airtime was two to two-and-a-half seconds.

Big dam jump
Dudes were chucking carcass when I got there. I left after an hour or so when they had to do some maintenance. Some bros were spinning and corking as hard as they could. Some went the single cork route. Others didn't spin at all, they just turned their backs to the mountain and grabbed with tweaked out style. It was quite the display.

One thing I don't like about Superpark is I never know who's jumping. You'll notice almost none of my photos have proper credits. Everyone is in full outerwear and it's impossible to tell who's who when they're maching at a jump. It's a little better on the rail features, but it's still pretty quick. Maybe next time I'll bring a two-way radio and listen in on the Snowboarder channel.

The way around that of course was the live webcast. T-Bird and Java Fernandez make it interesting. Now if I had a device that could stream the webcast from the event, that would be the bee's tits or the cat's knees or whatever.

One thing I would not recommend is poaching. I guess the worst that could happen is you get kicked out. I watched that go down on my second lift. No violence at all (at least not in sight). The guy made it up one lift and got shut down by the scanners at the second. Then he got personally escorted (most awkward chair ride ever?) up and out. He would have had to ride past a couple features to get out, but I'm guessing his escort liftie wasn't in good spirits. Maybe if you slip him a Hamilton or some bud he lets you watch for a bit. I don't know. They let my dumb ass in for whatever reason. Apparently all you have to do is tell them you have a blog.

OK, back to the park. Feature number two is the obligatory giant-ass hip (see photo up top). More nameless chucking. It's kind of surreal, really.  Dudes just boosting. Big ole volcano in the background. Watch out for that on the cover of a Snowboarder next volume: big method, big mountain. This year, they didn't have a channel cut out of the hip, so there were some dudes going pretty small, too. Hell, I could have hit it. And that is the only marquee feature I can say that about. Well, I could firecracker the stairs on the rail plaza, does that count? Didn't think so.

Days Two and Three were mostly weather wipeouts. They ran the rail plaza, but not the lifts. Dudes ran around Govy. Drinking, smoking. Street shots, bar shots. Mt. Hood in May. You can plan a pretty picnic, but you can't predict the weather. Outkast. Fitting.

Frank April is also a 5-handicap golfer according to the web commentary.
Day Four, back on the grind. Day four was the day I had other plans, so I caught a little of the webcast. T-Bird and Java with some special guests. Woodward Dam step-up/over/big ass jump. Cool to hear the action and pseudo-play-by-play. I guess that's what it's like. Think of a sports game that usually has announcers, then take the announcers away. That's Superpark. Maybe they need announcers. It would add some personality. It would take away that chill vibe of riding on the hill with your friends, though. As if it ever feels like that with me and my friends. We never hike and session anything, much less 90-footers.

Slim Fast. Do they sell that stuff any more?
The Final Day was when the Woodward 'Slim Fast' jump finally got sessioned. This is the jump that Pat Bridges must have had in mind when he spoke of sending riders "to the moon." This is also the jump that Sage Kotsenburg, him of the gold medal on a sketchy slopestyle course, wondered, "Could that jump be any more dangerous?" I managed to miss this session, but as you can see by the Day Five video (that first hit by Jeremy Page is the Slim Fast [there's also a triple cork and a triple rail transfer in that video, if you're into that]) dudes were sending it and the landing was a bit on the narrow side of optimal. They're pros, though, and they have plenty of options. If they don't feel comfortable with it, they can go to one of the dozen other features on the mountain. There's more giant, photogenic features than the pool at the Playboy Mansion.

To wrap up this already-too-long blog post, Superpark's 18th version had it all. Even weather delays. I've never seen so much next-level terrain packed into one spot, on one lift, in my life. The Superparks at Bachelor always had two lifts worth of terrain to work with. That made Meadows' park feel smaller, but denser. The rail plaza was definitely more limited than previous years, but having it visible from the patio bar was certainly a bonus. Giving the public a free show is always fun, especially when you're taking away one side of the mountain. Many thanks to Gatorade, Woodward, Pisten Bully, Sony ActionCam and all the sponsors. Hopefully Snowboarder decides to give Meadows another shot. I'd love to see what they could do with another year of planning.

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Pat Bridges Speaks On Snowboarder Magazine's Superpark 18 At Mt Hood Meadows

20-foot tall channel hips, 100-foot jumps and 10 photogs per feature, standard Superpark
For the last 18 years, Snowboarder Magazine's Superpark has been spring's final party. One last chance for riders to stack footy, shred insane features put together by the top builders in the world and hang out with all their buddies who do likewise. This year the show is coming to snowboarding's traditional summer home, Mt. Hood, but on the other side of the hill from the camp venues: Mt. Hood Meadows.

The captain of this ship is Snowboarder Creative Director Pat Bridges. You can generally find him at whichever feature has the biggest session. He'll be under the shade of a shrubbery-like beard and a Panama straw hat. If he's not barking orders into a radio, he might be upside down with one hand in the snow or on the coping. Yes, he hits the features. He also dishes out advice on inverts and other low-impact riding to any and all assembled. It's a big moment when Pat spots the real deal in a sea full of up-and-comers. He'll give the kid props and invite him to the sunset photo shoot or webcast session. The kid will express his gratitude. He knows this is a big deal. You will see more from this kid in the future and not just in the pages of Pat's magazine.

Here Pat speaks on everything from his favorite Wu-Tang Clan member (Inspectah Deck) to his interest in lunar launch vehicle design and finally his riders to watch at this year's Superpark. Listen up!

BY: What prompted the move to Meadows after three years at Bachelor? They kicked you out, didn't they?
PB: We have never held Superpark at any resort for more than three years in a row. Bachelor was an amazing Superpark partner and I can see us eventually returning there. The reason we change Superpark venues every two-three years is because we want to mix up the terrain opportunities and get some fresh backdrops in front of the lens. On a side note since 1999 Superpark has never not been welcome back at a resort as proven by the fact that Keystone, Lake Louise, Mammoth, Breckenridge and Mt Bachelor have all held the event multiple times. I am proud to say that the resorts have all been more than eager to have Superpark return and at least three of the names I mentioned above approached us about hosting this Superpark but ultimately we decided to give Meadows the opportunity to prove that they have terrain on a par with the more hyped hills.

We're not exactly known for sunshine up here. How much are you concerned with Mt. Hood's notoriously unpredictable weather?
Obviously we aren't ignorant to the fact that Mt Hood isn't known for having the most predictable weather in late Spring. Of course three years ago when we said we were going to bring Superpark to Bachelor our constituents brought up similar concerns. 150 Superpark hours in Oregon later we only missed out on 10 event hours over the course of three years. I am optimistic that the weather will work out just fine.

That's an army of shreds in a small town. What is Govy going to look like during the week? Summer camp week 0 with Cobra Dogs and Volcano Cones?
Because of its importance as the epicenter of Summer shred in North America most of the Superpark attendees from North America have Govy and Mt Hood entrenched in the fabric of who they have become as riders. Being able to come to Govy and hang at Charlies and lap a side of Mt Hood many have never seen before is gonna be real cool.

Meadow's parks are undergoing a bit of a renaissance the last few years with a couple different partnerships. Who else will be building this year and what kind of new features can we expect at Superpark 18?
Keystone, Woodward and Seven Springs are the visiting builders extending their talents to us. The terrain footprint at Meadows is a great mix of mid angle traditional park style slopes and steep valleys lending itself to both conventional features and weird options. As of late SNOWBOARDER has been seeking out poppier takeoffs that allow for better style due to unweighting. This has prompted me to adopt the motto of "Why send riders around the world when you can send 'em to the moon."

These guys can build anything the snow will allow, has there ever been anything you wanted that they couldn't make happen? I heard rumors of a chairlift gap that got shut down.
Chairlift gaps are pretty gimmicky. I am intrigued by saddle features where riders either crossup in the air or are dealt with multiple fall lines so they needn't be on edge either for takeoff or landing.  I also am interested in incorporating more pitch into the deck of hips like you have with halfpipes. If a world class halfpipe has an 18 degree pitch then why not explore that possibility with hips as opposed to the 6-10 degrees you usually see.

Superpark is not open to the general public, how can folks get a look at the madness that's going down? What's the hashtag to follow?
#Superpark18 is a good start. We also have daily galleries and video recaps on Snowboardermag.com, but the best way is to check out the sessions we are webcasting Friday and Saturday from 1-3pm PST [Note: Those in the area can also catch a free exhibition on the Woodward Plaza feature Saturday from noon until 3. It will be visible from the Meadows sun deck, so you don't even need a lift ticket. Just grab a drink and rock out to DJ Matty Mo while the riders do their thing.]


What does a plaza feature look like? I'm glad you asked.
Got any thoughts on who might be riders to watch this year? Which names are we going to hear the most on the webcast?
Roope Tonterri, Ben Ferguson, Louif Paradis, Jamie Lynn, Mikey Leblance, the Mindnichs, Sam Taxwood, Nils Arvidsson, Dylan Thompson, Jess Kimura, Christy Prior… The list is endless.

Who are the top low-impact riders in the field?
Forrest Bailey, Shane Flood and Dustin Craven with Scotty Stevens a distant 4th.

Any kids coming up that you expect big things from, maybe making the transition from The Launch?
This is Ben Ferguson's year to take the standout.

You've ridden everywhere, what do you like about coming up to the northwest and Meadows in particular?
Meadows has character. It is real. Everything in the Northwest is about the line from the top to the bottom, not the bottom line.

***

There you have it. Follow #Superpark18 on all of your favorite social medias (@boredyak, @snowboardermag, @mthoodmeadows), drop by Meadows for the exhibition at the Woodward Plaza feature on Saturday and be sure to check out all the updates on snowboardermag.com including the live webcasts on Friday and Saturday from 1-3pm PST. To the moon!

Monday, April 14, 2014

How To Save a Season In Just One Trip part 1

I've never been the kind of guy to ride or even strive to ride 100 days in a season. I don't live close enough to the mountain and I don't have that kind of ambition. Quality powder days are more my style. Problem is, sometimes timing, weather and circumstance just don't cooperate. This year was one of those years until I pulled off a small miracle in early-April.

Early season sucked. Mt. Hood Meadows is good enough to give me a media pass and I always try to make it up for opening weekend. The last few have been good. Cold, dry snow covered most of the terrain. This year, they pushed for an early opening and it was a 'white ribbon of death' scenario. They didn't even run the main lift. It was Buttercup to Vista to dining room table runner. This is all second-hand, of course, I didn't even show. Snow came at a trickle through December and a week into January we were still looking at only two feet of total snowpack. One big storm in mid-January brought plans for my first pow-day of the year. The rain that came after dampened those plans.

The alternating rain and snow of June-uary continued. One day, sunny and 50. The next, rain. January was mostly a bust, too. The second-best storm came as I was leaving town for Colorado at the end of the month. Luckily, it was snowing there, too and I got some good days in. Realistically, though, it was SIA and I was demoing boards and nowhere near mid-season form. I was almost glad to take a break every two runs. On top of that, it was a new resort and I didn't know my way around anyway. I took a couple good runs with a knowledgeable local guide (thanks, Gags), but overall it was more business than pleasure.

SIA. Intense.
SIA was, however, the source of my season-saver. Wasatch Equality was having a silent auction fundraiser and the deals were smoking. I picked up a bunch of gifts for family and one big steal for me: a four-day trip to Baldface Lodge for about one-third of normal price. Winter was starting to look up.

February came in hot. So hot that the entire city got shut down from the snow for a solid week. About the time I was going to head up to Baker for the Banked Slalom, my buddy from Bellingham was headed down here claiming that they didn't have any snow. So I stayed put. The mountain wasn't nearly as good as you'd hope when there was so much snow in town. A little inverted. Some rain. I got in a good day or two, but nothing consciousness-expanding. My first legit pow day didn't even come until the last week of the month.

March can be the best month of the season. Everything comes together, the base is built and the storms are a little more mellow. This March was unspectacular, especially after we just got done with a February that dumped 11 feet on us. Again, a couple good days, a couple fun days, memorable, but not all-time.

Now, I'm not Nose-dradamus, but I bet you're wondering, "What the hell did you do with yourself all winter? You weren't updating the blog, that's for sure." Actually, I spent a bunch of time in the gym preparing for pow days, so I wouldn't fold three runs in. I took my frustration out on some weird metal plates, some stretchy bands, some cables and pulleys. I climbed up some wooden and plastic walls a couple times a week. I ended up rather liking it. I even put on a little muscle. The whole time, my eye was on that Baldface trip at the end of March. If I wanted to charge for four days in a row of cat boarding, I needed to be ready.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Mt. Hood Meadows Offers 'Rest of Season' Pass

It's finally winter on Mt. Hood and Meadows is already rolling out what it normally calls its 'Spring Pass.' It's hard to call it that this year since over the past few weeks they've just started running all the lifts and they also just cracked the 100" base mark. You know, things that generally happen in January. In other 'every winter is weirder than the last' news, I haven't even ridden at Meadows yet! Tomorrow is set to be day #1 there. It's mid-February and I've been spending all my time in the gym hoping I'm ready when the snow finally hits. Well, it's hitting now and I won't be. I got that wake-up call a few weeks ago at Copper Mountain, Colorado. Good thing it was a demo, so I had an excuse to stop every two runs. Now it's just time to break out the pow trousers and the Charlie Slasher, wax that ass, fall off the lift and point it SFD. Hoo Wee! Good times ahead!!

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Big Weekend for Mt Hood

You thought April spelled the end of snowboarding? What am I thinking, my reader(s) know better than that. This weekend all three major Mt. Hood properties have big-time goings on.

Let's start with Meadows because that's where I'm usually riding. They're hosting the Ski to Defeat ALS event on Saturday the 13th. ALS is also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, so yes, it's a cause worth championing. Last year they raised over $160,000. Let's get out there and double it. Apres entertainment will be provided by electro-acoustic troubadour Tony Smiley. Oh and kids lessons are 2-for-1 now 'til April 28, so bring the tykes and show them the reason you're all excited about winter. And if that doesn't get 'em, the hot cocoa will.

Not an Olympic-qualifying event... yet.
Timberline is where the real jam is. Saturday is the first ever Yobeat Powder 8 contest. Get judged on which team makes the best '8'. Simple, right? Better get signed up now, there's only room for 15 teams. Who am I kidding, if it's not full already, I'll join myself and call my team 'The Dummest Man in tah World and His Only True Friend' and get one of those 'I'm with Stupid' shirts for my friend. You should still watch, though. It should be a real hoot. Sunday is Airblaster's Board Games. That one's all about Terry's Maximum Airtime Rhythm Section. They've had years to perfect the section, so you better be ready for an on-point set of humps that will put Fergie to shame. Check it out.

Next year, I'm starting Bored Games. Events include sarcasm, mediocrity and innuendo. 
Even Ski Bowl is getting in on the action this weekend. Friday through Sunday, they're hosting the US Airbag Demo Tour. You know the drill, cheese wedge to Paul Bunyan's lunch bag. Huck your junk. Tickets start at $10 for three jumps. If you prepay for 25 jumps ($45) you get a free die-cut sticker. If that's not the worst freebie you've heard about today, leave a comment below. They make up for it on Sunday, though. Sunday you get to ride free. Seriously. There is a suggested donation of four non-perishable food items. Note to crunchy prospective attendees: kale, while healthy as all mana and probably something everyone should eat more of, is perishable. They will not accept it. They will take Twinkies before they take your kale. Do us all a favor and eat the kale yourself and go get a couple cans of chili. Also bad form: 10-cent canned corn, there is no nutrition in that. Just follow Rule #1*.

Ski Bowl: It's April and their hill doesn't look like a soccer field. Party!
If that's not enough to get you on the mountain this weekend, well just imagine they're giving away beer, too. I'm sure one of them is. Probably Yobeat.

*Rule #1 is "Don't be a dick."

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Spring Season Passes Coming Soon from Meadows and Timberline

Looks like a good time there. Just $109 to join them as much as you want this spring.

More Meadows details here.
The best deals on the mountain are back. Ride for two to three months for the price of two days. If that's not enough, both resorts are offering other perks from discounted summer lift tickets to discounted food and drink. Get on this and you're set 'til summertime

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Burton Mountain Festival Hits Mt. Hood Meadows

Do I need 3D goggles for this flyer?

Demo some boards, get your kids a jump on the 2026 olympics (if we still have snow then) at the smallest terrain park ever, lose to me at trivia and listen to some live entertainment (maybe drink some liver entertainment, too). The Burton Mountain Festival. I can't wait.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

The Northwest Awakens

Thanksgiving was especially apt for the northwest snowboard scene this year. Riders from Washington and Oregon are giving thanks for the start of the winter season as resorts from Mt. Baker to Stevens Pass to Mt. Bachelor all opened this week. On Mt. Hood, Meadows fired up the chairs and Timberline opened some lower-mountain terrain, too.

Word from Meadows is that it was as good as an opening day can be. And that's not just the company line, even Yobeat agrees.

Bachelor dropped a quick opening day edit, too. Cameos from Austin Smith and Curtis Ciszek at the end. Looks like they got it good.

Baker, to the surprise of no one, is claiming the deepest base on the continent. They have all of their lifts firing.

Yes, folks, happy days are here again. Get out there and get it, but remember to ease into it. Remember how to drive in winter conditions. Remember that rocks, stumps and small woodland animals lurk just under the shallow fall base. And remember, if you play your cards right, you could have a long and happy winter. Check your landings and start your winter beards. Let the good times roll.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Board Exam: 2012/2013 Salomon Man's Board Snowboard Review

What the Rep Said: Camber and a radial sidecut, crazy right? More bamboo, less fiberglass.

Stats/Setup: I was 6'1" and about 165# when I rode the Man's Board 159 at a Mt. Hood Meadows demo day. Salomon Dialogue boots and Union Force SL bindings completed the kit.

Conditions: variable groom, some ice, some old fluff off the groom

First Impression: Beer and a scantily clad woman, I guess I'm a man now. Average weight.

Nothing says 'manly' quite like it. Just ask Salomon.
The Ride: There is no substitute for camber pop. If you want to get up like a pole vaulter, do yourself a favor and get a cambered board. I've got to say that the bamboo Salomon uses is legit. This board not only boosts, but it maintains stability at speed, too. It's pretty stiff though, a full 7 out of 10. 

That's the key to this board, speed. It wants to be ridden hard and fast (mmhm). Low-speed turns don't get much reaction. It would rather blast fast turns that spray everyone from here to the nearest green run (which is waaaay over there).

On edge, I prefer a board with some sort of augmented sidecut. I feel more confident on ice and other hard conditions with the extra contact points. Not that you're going to be riding icy slalom courses all the time, but it would be nice for this board's straight-line aggression to carry through the curves. The tight tree run gave this board fits (again, lower speed turns).

I didn't get to test this board on rails or in pow. It should be fine in pow with rockered tip and tail and a little stance setback.

Bottom Line: This board rips hard in a straight line, but not as hard on edge. Point it and let loose. If anything is in your way, don't turn, just ollie.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Mt. Hood Ticket Prices Going Up

If you want to snowboard on Mt. Hood this winter, you're going to pay more than last season, unless you ride at Ski Bowl exclusively. Is anyone surprised? Leading the way is Mt. Hood Meadows. 

Meadows ditched the shift ticket pricing they've done in the past in favor of one open-to-close ticket with different pricing for peak and off-peak days. The shift pricing featured three sliding shifts per day that shared a ticket price 9am - 4pm, 11am - 7pm and 1pm - close. That price was $74, but you could upgrade any shift to open-close for $5. Effectively an open-close ticket was $79 last year. This year an open-close ticket will cost the same $74 off-peak and $89 during peak days (which are December 26-31 and Saturdays and Sundays in January and February or 22 total days).

One bonus, if you're coming from Portland, you can get a seat on Meadows' PDX Park and Ride for free on these peak days. The same $89 buys you bus ticket and lift ticket. The same bus without a lift ticket is $20, which I think is lower than last year, but don't set fire to my hair if I'm wrong. They're even increasing the number of buses making the trip in anticipation of higher demand.

Meadows is clearly trying to tackle the parking problem that's plagued their lots. Weekends at Meadows have gotten to be a parking nightmare with parked cars lining the access roads all the way back to highway 35. One way or the other, this year will be different. Either the increased bus service will keep skier visits up and cars down or visits will plummet in response to ticket prices and all those buses will go idle. I think Meadows better start advertising those buses better.

One good reason to think Meadows will lose business is across the mountain at Timberline. They also increased ticket prices, but only by $2 up to $66 peak and $60 off-peak. Timberline does have more peak days; November 22-25, December 22-January 2, January 21 (Martin Luther King Jr. Day), February 18 (Presidents Day) and weekends from Jan. 1-March 4 [that's 36 total days] but you pay $23 less  when compared to Meadows' peak days and still $8 less than Meadows' off-peak.

Skibowl won't be open during the day on weekdays, which means fresh pow at 3pm. They're also holding the line on ticket prices, just $49 per shift (shifts are open-4pm, 11am-7pm and 1pm-close) or $69 for open-close.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Get To Meadows While You Can!

This is the last weekend of the season at Mt. Hood Meadows! Get your Cinco de Mayo shred on today and your, well, Seis de Mayo shred tomorrow. Sunday is looking like the nicer weather day with sun and upper 40s. Either way, once the lifts stop running Sunday at 3pm, they won't start up again 'til next season.

Coming next season, RFID gates like at Mt. Bachelor...

Friday, March 16, 2012

Meadows Demo Day Sunday

Ever wonder how I ride all the latest snowboards before they're even on store shelves? Seriously!? It's all about demo days at my local resorts. These days you can try out boards as fast as you can switch your bindings. All for free! This Sunday (3/18) the Northwest Demo Tour hits Mt. Hood Meadows. Get there by 9am for first shot at more boards than a lumber yard. Rapid fire you're way through a dozen boards or pick one and give it a good thrashing. Reps will be on hand from K2, Capita, Never Summer, Lib Tech, Gnu, Arbor and maybe some more if you're lucky. Be sure to bring your own boots, though. Full details at Mt. Hood Meadows' site.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Mt. Hood Spring Passes Looking to Offer Good Value

If somehow you were able to wait out the season, through the positively paltry December, January and February snowfall and arrive in March with a couple hundred bucks saved, well, good job. Mt. Hood will reward you now. Meadows is offering a spring pass for $149 and Timberline is running theirs out at just $110. At these prices, two trips is the break-even point either way. I'm a Meadows season pass holder and I might just get a Timberline spring pass for the longer season and better park action. Meadows has the Pond Skim coming up as well as a demo day. Don't forget about the Bonezone Banked Slalom at Timberline. Either way, the season is just getting started, so you can't lose.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

3rd Rail Jam Coming to Meadows

3rdrailjam.com
Looks like a non-scaffolding rail jam. Winner-take-all? Graffiti artists and DJs? Everyone gets a free Kangol? They better sign up some breakdancers quick for the full hip hop effect. Saturday, February 25. Get to Meadows' site for the 411.

Mt. Hood Meadows Announces Spring Pass Dates and Dollars



Maybe the snow will come in the spring. It can't just not snow this 'winter,' right? That in mind, Meadows is offering a $149 unlimited spring pass good from March 12 until the lifts stop turning. That should give you two months. If you buy before then, you get $20 midweek lift tickets until March 9. You really only need to ride three times to make that a good deal.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Mt. Hood Meadows Chairway 2 Heaven, Sunday



Yes, CHAIRway. Apologies to Led Zeppelin. Here's the deal, speed dating on Meadows' Blue chair. If you know anything about this chairlift, you know 'speed' isn't usually anywhere in the mix. It's a nine-minute ride barring any slowing or stoping, which usually happens due to the exit ramp being among the gnarliest lines on the entire mountain.

Anyway, the lift lines are split into one line for ladies and one line for fellas. I guess it's hetero only, look, I don't make the rules. You get nine minutes to get to know one another and then decide. Did he blow you away with his use of 'bro' as almost every word in a sentence? Did she flawlessly navigate that dicey exit ramp? Perhaps it was meant to be. Make your way to the 'Meadows Mingle' near the bottom of the lift for some mellow tunes from Barry White or Luther Vandross while feeding each other chocolate-covered strawberries by the fire pit.

Take a long walk on the beach over to Mt. Hood Meadows' website for full details.