Showing posts with label Valhallas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Valhallas. Show all posts

Friday, January 30, 2009

Cause it was so good - Valhallas again, Jan 18-25



Another excellent week in the Valhalla Mountains at VMT! Christmas skiing was so good we just had to come back. No, seriously, I booked this January week a while back and we went for the Christmas Special because skiing around Vancouver looked pretty dismal at the time.

Not sure if it was me getting used to the fast snow in the trees or if we kept finding better spots or if the snow somehow fluffed up, but skiing just got better every day. And a week in sunshine isn’t all bad either, when the rest of the world is buried under a thick layer of inversions clouds – Vancouver was wet, dark and cold for 18 days!

We started with trees in Ruby, followed by steeper trees and a low angle open run on Gold Ridge the next day.


Shannon Lake - Shannon's Throat above skier #2


Shannon Lake, Rugged, Big Sister and Little Sister Trees


Avalanche below Rugged

Tuesday we ventured into Shannon Lake, where the bold (or maybe the least concerned) tested the steeps on the wide open Shannon’s Throat. The rest kept to low-angled treed glades. Although the temperatures had been around -5oC, Shannon Lake was a cold sink with -22oC.


Everybody is glad to get a ride back up to the Lodge

Wednesday’s objective was Saphire Bowl where we picked some good lines between wind-affected ridges. The way back along Ruby Ridge was somewhat challenging with a boot-pack down a difficult spot. I followed Pete and choose to drop into the steeper section of Ruby Bowl instead.


Tim and Pete on top of Ruby


Sundog over Star Saphire


Howser Tower in the Bugaboos just left of Big Sister


Ready to drop into Saphire

Only four of us visited Jasmin on Thursday, a short, sweet and steep open slope. Pete and I each put 9 nicely spooned lines in the snow. The gulley on the way out was completely covered by a huge avalanche of Big Sister. It had run full track. On outside bends of the gully stands of big trees were taken out. On trees still standing branches were broken to a height of 10 meters. Truly an awesome sight.


Making my turns on Jasmin



Ruby Bowl, Ridge and Glades



Big Avy off Big Sister

Of to Cariboo on Friday. After one run in the somewhat wind-affected alpine, we decided to explore a treed run from a minor ridge towards the main valley, which opened up into a clear cut. We called this run “Day 14” (as in 14 days without new snow). The best snow came last; knee-deep pow covered by a layer of surface hoar which made swishing noises when skied. Ski-out along the logging road was smooth in ankle-deep hoar, but interrupted by several walls of hard snow boulders where avalanches had crossed the road. Very weird.

Ruby Trees again on Saturday, back for lunch and a hot soup to the Lodge, and finally the short steep slope on Gold Ridge, where we found the possibly best snow of the week.

I wasn’t going to ski out, but Pete decided he needed some exercise before the long drive back to Vancouver, so we climbed Ruby Trees for one last time and then skied the 15 km down to Slocan Lake.

What a great week. Skiing was much better than I expected, after the huge avy cycle two weeks ago, no fresh snow and the strong inversion. Over the week we climbed almost 10.000 meters – probably a new record for us.

Another avalanche - weird snowballs and snow-boulders

Can you say: Surface Hoar?

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Christmas in the Valhalla Mountains, December 21 - 28

After four years of sampling other back country ski places we are back at Valhalla Mountain Touring as a special Christmas present to ourselves. A group of Calgary skiers allowed us to join them for a ski week and their excellent Christmas dinner.




VMT Lodge


Pete's catching up with the grey in the beard


Pete receiving B-day wishes from the Wise Guy ( much better than last year - avoid Mexican B-day traditions that involve eating cake with your hands behind you back)

Snow took its time to show up this year and the pack was still below average. But the Valhalla Mountains provided plenty of Pow. When we arrived there was over a meter at the lodge – enough for fun skiing. Good thing tree skiing at VMT is fine and plentiful as the alpine slopes were somewhat wind affected.


My line


Pete sampling the steeps of Emerald Trees


Keith in the Little Sister trees


Dave


Lars - Ruby Trees


Pete looks concerned - where is the second ski?


Must have missed that line!




The 'A'


More trees over there!


Ruby and Emerald Trees and the VMT Lodge (in the notch between the trees just left of midline)


Looking NE from the ridge to Little Sister



The promised snow arrived on the last day of our week – about 30 cm fresh and continued falling all day. More tree skiing!

The ski-out was good fun, thanks to tracks of a couple of snowmobiles and some skiers that compacted the 50 cm of fresh that had accumulated (and thanks to hooking up with the cat in the flat sections).




I’m sure we parked the cars somewhere around here!?