This picture reminded me of a scene from one of my favourite holiday movies. Taken while digging a new outhouse at the cottage.
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On big snow days, those of us who have to work to maintain a lifestyle of certain standards are forced to sit in our offices and listen to avalanche control set off explosives. At Whistler-Blackcomb, alpine lifts like Peak, Glacier, and 7th Heaven will remain closed for one or more days for safety reasons until the avalanche risk is minimized. Live lift status is provided by light-boards on the hill, and those behind desks can monitor live lift status on the Whistler-Blackcomb website. Knowing which lifts were closed on any given day is very important to ski and snowboard enthusiasts. If you don’t understand why, I can explain with a story:
The moral of the story is that you can miss out on some great fresh tracks by not knowing the alpine lift status. To keep on top of things, you have the following options:
Enter a new friend – the friend who you can call anytime and will always know which lifts were closed, not just for today, but for the last 7 days. Don’t end up like Johnny – use the Alpine Lift Forecast. At the moment, the Alpine Lift Forecast doesn’t actually predict anything, but it will show you 7-day lift status for all Whistler Blackcomb resorts, which is a good start. GPS and Google Earth files for hiking trails around Garibaldi Lake. Includes the popular Black Tusk and Panorama Ridge routes, along with the lesser-traveled Clinker Peak / Mt. Price trail. Garibaldi Lake (.gdb) / Garibaldi Lake Trails (.kmz) We recently did this as a 4 day trip: hike up Friday after work to beat the crowds (it didn’t work!), Black Tusk Saturday, Clinker Peak Sunday, and a lazy lake day on Monday (nice and quiet once the weekend warriors left) before hiking home. Wavesport Forplay C1 for sale:
Send an e-mail for more details. |
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