Vermont Photographer Benjamin D. Bloom

A photographer in Essex, Vermont specializing in sports, events and portraits, but always branching out into something new.

Browsing Posts in Skiing

I could have also titled this, 5 desperate skiers climb a mountain in search of the last dregs of snow.  Burlington received a little snow this past week, Essex a little more, but the mountains really got hammered.  While the snow in Burlington has completely disappeared, Stowe is still hanging onto some snow.

The email arrived late last week; Cinco de Mansfield would take place on Saturday, May 1st. I haven’t done a lot of skiing in the last few weeks, my season really ended in March for some reason. I packed a pair of skis, boots, poles, skins, and cameras into the car and headed to Stowe for our 11:00am start.

It was looking pretty bare at the bottom when we arrived. Instead of heading up the gondola, we stuck to Nose Dive.

Looking up the gondola liftline at Stowe.  Vermont skiing is fading quickly.

Telemarkers clicking in to skin Mt. Mansfield for a final day of spring skiing.

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 3 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 4 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

I guess there were 6 of us – how could I forget Carter?  He spent the day looking for snowballs and squirrels.

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 5 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 6 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Cinco de Mansfield wouldn’t be complete without margaritas at the top.  Chris played bartender this year and mixed up a tasty drink.

Cinco de Mansfield wouldn't be complete without margaritas.

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 8 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 9 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

After some time relaxing at the top, it was time to ski.  The first turns down Nose Dive were sticky and challenging.  I took a digger on my second or third turn and then started to figure out my balance again.  It turns out I missed skiing in the month of April.  What an odd ski season.

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 10 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 11 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 12 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 13 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 14 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 15 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 16 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 17 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 18 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 19 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

Skiing Vermont Stowe Telemark 20 Cinco de Mansfield, 2010

You can see the full gallery of photos on my Smugmug page.

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Tawny & I celebrated Valentine’s Day by taking her splitboard out for its first backcountry experience. Tawny’s been in the backcountry before, but slowshoes made it hard to keep up and took a lot of energy out of her. With her old Burton board split, and the hardware mounted up, we were ready to go.

20100214 bdb 3280 Valentines Day with my wife

Tawny said that the first few steps were awkward, but she soon fell into a skinning rhythm.  It made me remember my first time on skins and my amazement as they grip the snow.

20100214 bdb 3287 Valentines Day with my wife

There were a lot of people in the parking lot, but we only ran into one other couple on the trail. We had plenty of time to enjoy the beautiful Vermont scenery.  The trees had a light frosting of snow on them, making the branches blend in with the cloudy skies.

20100214 bdb 3290 Valentines Day with my wife

20100214 bdb 3291 Valentines Day with my wife

No matter how many times I look at them, splitboards still look odd to me.

20100214 bdb 3293 Valentines Day with my wife

20100214 bdb 3301 Valentines Day with my wife

Are we there yet?

20100214 bdb 3304 Valentines Day with my wife

A peek into the treats that awaited us.  while the lower part of the skin is a buffed out cross country trail, the upper part opens into large expanses of tracked snow.  Considering we haven’t had significant snow in the last week or so, there’s a fair amount up in the Green Mountains and a surprising amount of untracked still available.

20100214 bdb 3307 Valentines Day with my wife

Tawny begins her first skin/ride transition.

20100214 bdb 3315 Valentines Day with my wife

I had some skin cheater strips hanging around.  I never appreciated them, but with Tawny’s size, new skin glue, and the fact that her skins are super wide, I think they’ll be helpful for her.

20100214 bdb 3309 Valentines Day with my wife

I’m amazed that Voile’s hardware keeps the board together.  It’s such a simple set of devices, but it works quite well!

20100214 bdb 3323 Valentines Day with my wife

A quick cup of hot cocoa to warm up and provide a bit of sugar for the descent.

20100214 bdb 3329 Valentines Day with my wife

Nice, moderately spaced trees awaited us below.  There were tracks down many of the open areas, but we didn’t have to look too hard to find pockets of untracked.

20100214 bdb 3335 Valentines Day with my wife

Was it deep?  Nope.  It was fun, though.  I’m so lucky to have a wife that will join me in the backcountry. Happy Valentine’s Day, Tawny!

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With temperatures threatening to hover around 0°F all day, a group of SkiVT-L regulars headed into the Backcountry.  The initial plan was to meet at 10am at the trailhead, but due to some slight forgetfulness, I missed that group.  No worries; the skin in was along the Catamount Trail and the area we planned to ski would continue to drop back onto the trail.  As it turns out, driving from Essex, to Waterbury, to Essex, and back to Waterbury to the trail head meant that I would run into the group just as they were finishing their first lap. Watching some of the final descents, I could tell the snow was going to be interesting.  The winds that swept through the region on Friday had done their damage to pockets of snow making for inconsistent conditions that would throw you over the handlebars when you least expected it.

Telemarking is supposed to make you more stable in variable conditions, right?

We all had our moments adjusting to the snow.  I certainly played ostrich more than once, but I was lucky enough to capture Bobby with a spectacular display on his first run.

20100130 Catamount Montage 630x376 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

As much as we joked around, complaining about the snow conditions, it was really quite good skiing in many places.

20100130 catamount 6188 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

Definitely good enough to slap the skins on a few times and hunt out more pockets of non-wind affected powder.

20100130 catamount 6008 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

20100130 catamount 6103 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

20100130 catamount 6175 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

20100130 catamount 6161 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

20100130 catamount 6125 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

Roger – you look like one of them Famous Internet Skiers here.

20100130 catamount 6110 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

With temperatures hovering just above zero, not all of our skin glue worked all day.  Seeing as it was a simple out and back, the penalty for complete failure was pretty low.  Any good backcountry skier will have a bag of tricks to dip into when equipment (bindings, skins, boots, etc.) breaks.  In this case, Patrick had duct tape (plaid, mind you) holding one skin on and zip ties holding the other.  It’s worth paying attention when you zip tie your skins, though, otherwise you end up with a predicament like this:

20100130 catamount 6178 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

20100130 catamount 6100 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

20100130 catamount 6090 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

20100130 catamount 6060 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

20100130 catamount 6207 Backcountry skiing on the Catamount Trail

As usual, it was great skiing with all of you.  Pray for snow!  We could use some.  Roger Hill posted a graphic on the SkiVT-L Listserv that compares this year’s snowpack to the 2009 season. It’s pretty dismal.

More photos from our backcountry excursion are on my SmugMug site.

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Perfect Last Day

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Our last day at Snowbird provided soft snow and sunshine.  The initial plan was to ski in Mineral Basin in the morning and then head over to Little Cloud, where we had previously spent little time, but had good runs.  Well, Mineral Basin was too nice to leave.  The snow on skier’s right was mostly in the shade and softer while the snow on the left was baking in the sun, soft, and heavy (but not manky / mashed potatoes.)

After skiing “Living the Dream” we felt like we were.  Soft, swooping turns down a relatively steep untracked face.  Being on a snowboard, the traverse was some work, but worth it.  To the guy that we met at the bottom, you can see one of the photos below and some more in the gallery titled Snowbird – 1/3/2010

20100103 Snowbird 55051 Perfect Last Day

20100103 Snowbird 56951 Perfect Last Day

20100103 Snowbird 56851 Perfect Last Day

20100103 Snowbird 57231 Perfect Last Day

20100103 Snowbird 56621 Perfect Last Day

20100103 Snowbird 57241 Perfect Last Day

At some point, I’ll finish going through most of the photos and put up a combined set of galleries from our Utah vacation. What a great trip!  We can’t wait to head back.  Next time, later in the season when the snowpack is a little more consistent and predictable.

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Solitude

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While it’s full on puking snow in Burlington, VT, we’re out in Utah. It’s snowed a bit over the last few days out here, with 16+ a few days ago and a few fresh inches on top, so Solitude skied wonderfully yesterday. It’s not the 30″ that I see reported in Vermont, but we’ll take it.

Tawny and I met up with Jorden, Pete, and Brian giving us one snowboarder, one telemarker, and three alpine skiers. Brian was also skiing with a camera, so we’ve got a couple extra photos.

The day began by heading up, and then up, and then up to get to Honeycomb Canyon. We were going to traverse out the high line skiers left right off the lift, but it wasn’t possible on a snowboard. The traverse was more of a horizontal sidestep that fought gravity the whole way across. So down we went, finding a few inches of fresh snow on top of skier packed perfection. It wasn’t deep, but the turns were delightful. About half way down we passed through a gate and traversed through to a gully that had deeper snow and nice turns, but a long runout to get back to the lift that would bring us back to civilization.

20100102 solitude 5338 Solitude

Opting to save our energy, we stayed on the front side for a few runs, finding pockets of untracked snow 2-4″ deep in the trees. Weaving around on the mid-mountain lifts, we had a ball.

20100102 solitude 5378 Solitude

20100102 solitude 5364 Solitude

Tawny then decided to take a breather and let the guys take the high traverse into Honeycomb. Off we went, heading left for a ways, but not quite to the second gate. We came down a pitch that had few tracks, and beautiful snow. It was supportive and thick, but somehow still easy to ski. Westerners probably wouldn’t call it powder, but I would. It was great! Over the next knoll, into some shrubby trees that had been largely ignored, and into more great snow.

20100102 solitude 5429 Solitude

20100102 solitude 5419 Solitude

20100102 solitude 5410 Solitude

20100102 solitude 5400 Solitude

At the same middle gate we hit on our last run out here, we traversed out further. Brian and Pete dropped in where it looked pretty good, but had some rocks lurking beneath the tempting snow. Jorden had a theory that people had started dropping here because the rocks got more prevalent, desiring good skiing before the terrain got worse. He thought that over the next rise we would find a stash of great snow (No experience, just a gut feel..) Follow Jorden’s gut. We discovered an open bowl area as opposed to the chutes & gullies we had traversed over. The snow was just like above and lightly tracked, making for a few dozen great turns.

The rest of the day was spent on the front side of the mountain, meandering around from soft snow to soft snow, with some bumps thrown in. Solitude’s a great mountain with a feel more like the east coast resorts I’m used to (Smuggs, MRG) The terrain may not be as challenging as Snowbird or Alta, but it’s a whole lot of fun and there’s a feeling of freedom when you ski a mountain you’re not familiar with and don’t have to worry as much about what’s over the next rise or below the next roll. Snowbird could contain a rocky chute, cliff, or something else; Solitude seems to just have good snow. Sure, there are some spots that you can scare yourself, but you have to try to get there instead of stumbling into them.

Solitude posted some of Brian Kretschmar’s photos on their community website / Flickr stream.

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