Yep, we're back, and yep, so is our glorious mountain. The storm started blowing in around 10pm last night, and its ferocity got us into bed and setting the alarm for the early rise. We woke to an 11'' report this morning and made first chair on Christie. Storm and Morningside were closed for av blasting, so we beelined it for Four Points, bracing against sideways winds, white out visibility, and temps we haven't felt in months; -1 at the top. Yea you read that right. My fingers were frozen by the second run, so my clicks on the camera were nill. (Luckily Craig got some shots in!)
We started out with some Godly epic turns down Sundown and Lights Out; the snow was light and fluffy, the hardpack was all but buried once again. (What season is it?) After two weeks of balmy temps and meltoff, you'd think the lines would be packed and the freshies hard to find after the first run. But quite the opposite; there wasn't a soul up there. We got first tracks down 2 Oclock, a little windblown but untouched and nice next to the trees. The only body we saw was a patroller dipping in and out of the trees. Next we hit 1 Oclock, even better than 2:00 was, without the windlips and piled at least thigh high in the 1:30 trees. We followed up with one of our new laps to South Peak: from Sundial to the trees, edging the boundary line down Tomahawk to Ramrod, best snow of the day at the top in Sundial's trees for sure. Any run that had any little bit of exposure definitely had some blowing snow and limited visibility.
The wind began to let up a little around 9:30, the lines increased around 10, and the clouds broke at 10:30 or so. We did one last Elkhead lap down Sunnyside before heading over to Teds Ridge for last licks. Despite being groomed, the difference in snow quanitity from upper to mid mountain kept Teds a little thin- only about 6-8" down there, but still very nice.
0 comments