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Niseko at Christmas

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Hi all, will be in Niseko for Christmas this year woohoo :)

just wondering, does everything close up on Christmas Day?

and can anyone recommend a restaurant in niseko? something fancy..

found an awesome little place last time there that i'll be looking for again, i just have to find the red door...

thanks :)

Oshamambe hotels

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Are there any hotels near Oshamambe station?
Google says no.
I'm planning a transfer from Hakkoda to Niseko and the best way to do it might be to take an evening train to Oshamambe then an early morning service to Niseko.

Trip Report: Runcorn Ski Centre

Kagura in early Feb, is it worth it?

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I've been looking at options for some slackcountry/ easy backcountry in early Feb (7th-). Some of the reviews of the terrain accessed from the number 5 romance lift (the top lift) sounded very appealing. The in bounds sounds a little mellow but as it's the start of the trip I'm sure we'll enjoy a warm up run or three. But looking further it seems that lift (also called Kagura Pair Lift No. 5) is not actually open in early Feb. Was this the case this year? If it is the case is there anything there to appeal to a crew that likes the getting into the trees and some easy back country (on snowboards so prefer to ride out but carry full avi gear and snowshoes).

Hotel in Happo-One Snow Resort

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Hi All, thanks again for your feedback, I've decided on Happo-One Snow Resort so now its just about the hotel, so I'm after hotel close to the lifts with in 5 minute walk, 5 or 10 minute walk to places to eat and close to the ski rentals place, and the odd bar, pub or where the action is, I'm also after a place which has a supermarket for accordable supplies and Post office because I've read getting cash out from your ATM card is very difficult, onsen would be good. also close to the shuttle buses to get to other resorts like 47 and Goryu. Thanks for your advice. also please let me know if there are other things to consider. Cheers Travis

Early Gear deals

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Yeah I know its a bit early for new gear threads, but ever since the onset of spring I had been thinking about getting a shorter board to use early and late season that'd give me a good chance to improve my park/trick skills without worrying about hurting my powder snake......but the prices weren't really there to justify it......until now! On Backcountry, I managed to pick up a capita Thunderstick, 157 (a 6cm decrease in my usual riding length :evilgrin: ) for 25k including shipping (19k excl shipping). I had a search on evo as well and there are some very cheap deals on some Rome boards just now, I saw a couple for $136 and $160 US.....the reason I didn't get one of them was that they were rockered......I wanted a camber board.

Anyone else buying some new gear early?

Appi Kogen, Iwate 2014.3.23-26

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Appi Kogen, Iwate

Visited Appi Kogen for the first time. Late March, following a snowfall; the weather changed during our stay from from winter to pure spring conditions.

The ski area is mostly arrayed around the peak of Maemoriyama. The main base area is at the bottom of the Central Gelaende, with the Sailer Gelaende to looker's left of that, and the Second Gelaende to the left of Sailer. To looker's right of the Central Gelaende is a single lift going up the adjacent Nishimoriyama.

One feature of this ski area is a skier-only zone between the Central Gelaende and the Nishimori Gelaende. A skier-only T-bar and chair lift serve a couple of skier-only trails.

The first day we just had the afternoon on-hill, after a 6-hour drive, so just tried to get the lay of the land. Up the gondola to the top, and down the easy Yamabato course to the bottom. The Nishimori lift, reachable from that course, was running, but we didn't go up it. Also parallel to the main gondola are a series of chair lifts. The runs grow gradually steeper from the bottom to the top, maxing out in the low 30s degrees at the top.

The next day, The Kid wanted to take lessons all day, which gave me a chance to roam a bit more freely. I started off by heading over the Second Gelaende side from the top, and worked my around. Up top, some powder was still being blown around in the wind in the morning. Over on the Second Gelaende side was some sun-softened corduroy runs, and a soft-snow mogul run. Off the bottom of the mogul run is a closed run with new trees growing in it, that used to lead down to what seems to be an abandoned lift at the bottom, in an area that must have originally been planned to be a major secondary base area. Now the only lift running on this side of the mountain is a quad running from above the abandoned bunny slope, to 2/3 of the way up the Second Gelaende side.

Did a couple laps of the mogul run and subsequent corduroy, then decided to head over the the Sailer area, taking the lower renraku course over. Only to discover that the Sailer gondola was not running! Nor were any of the other chairs in that area except for the mid-mountain pair lift, a very slow romance lift. Riding that lift up, I decided to head back to the Central area, and explore in the other direction.

The Nishimori lift was closed that day due to mechanical problems, so I decided to check out the skier-only areas. Taking the main gondola back to the top of the mountain, the drop-in to that area is the top of the Ootaka course, a hard-mogul course with wind-blown powder drifts. Quite nice, actually. Then over to the skier-only Kitsutsuki and Kakkou courses, which start at the top of the T-bar. To be honest, I couldn't see what was so special about them, except that they still had fresh corduroy patches mid-afternoon.

The more notable feature of the skier-only areas is the T-bar. I hadn't ridden a T-bar in probably 40 years. Natsukashii! In addition to the t-bar, there is also a Poma lift, though it was not running while were there. Who the heck runs T-bars and Poma lifts in this day and age??

Actually, I have to admit that the T-bar became one of my favorite lifts later, giving access to the upper reaches of the Ootaka course when the upper chair lift (Chair 4 of the Central area) was closed. (Though of course I could only ride it when my snowboarding kid was not in tow.)

Near the end of the day I dropped back into the Sailer side to try the steepest course on the mountain, the 34-degree mogul course. Hard-frozen, bulletproof, huge ice moguls in the top part of the course. I would say my favorite mogul course that day was upper Ootaka, followed by the Second side course, with the Sailer course following in distant third. On the bright side, at the bottom of the Sailer ice-mogul bahn was a corduroy runout, almost untouched still at 3:00 in the afternoon. Not many people running that course that day, it would seem.

The third day was warm and windy. So windy that the top of the mountain was never accessible. The kid wanted to practice boarding lessons from the previous day, so we mostly looped on the #3 chair lift on the Central side, serving the intermediate section of the Hayabusa and Ootaka courses. We did try to visit the Sailer side once via the Sailer renraku lift, and immediately regretted going to lower elevations where the snow quickly turned to glue. The order of the day was to stay as high as possible on the mountain as possible to avoid the glue-like lower conditions. Unfortunately, around lunch time the #3 chair lift was closed due to wind, so we were driven to the base area for lunch.

Long lunch, and the kid decided to save what could be saved of the day by taking a 1-hour beginner's park lesson, which started at 2:00. At which time also the rain started... but the kid was determined to go through with it. So, off I went to loop the t-bar for the next hour, while the kid studied guratori. Fortunately, the rain only lasted about 15 minutes, and by the time the kid's lesson was over, the #3 chair was open again, so we finished out the day by looping that chair again. It was getting pretty windy up there again, and I almost felt that they should have shut that lift, but were keeping it running out of sympathy for those of us who had stuck through the day.

The fourth day was warm again, but there was no wind, and all lifts were running. Perfect spring conditions in the upper half of the mountain, impassable glue on the lower half of the mountain. Fortunately, by this time, the kid was feeling confident enough to hit the topmost Hayabusa course (30 degrees), so we spent most of the day looping the topmost, #4 lift to the peak. Good soft, but not slushy, spring skiing conditions up there.

At one point I broke away to hit the Nishimori lift, since it was finally running and accessible. Unfortunately the snow in the lower half of the Nishomori Gelaende was sticky glue... but I could see that on a powder day this slope would have nice terrain and on-course treed areas. We also tried going down the Sailer side, intending to ride the Sailer gondola back up, but the snow started turning to glue halfway down, so we abandoned that plan and took the Sailer quad back to the top.

Following that, we looped the top couple of chairs on the Central side until our legs gave out, then hit the road for the 6-hour drive home.

Impressions: It is a big, conical, bubble-era resort, with a large, well-connected area. Not the most imaginative of layouts, to be honest, but enough there to keep one amused for a few days. In winter, when it is all in good condition, it should be a great place to go touring around. In the less-than-ideal spring conditions while we were there, I did notice that they seem to work pretty hard to keep as much of the terrain going as possible. We (almost) always found some good bits to hit even on the challenging-weather days.

I should add that I was quite happy with the progress my kid made as a result of snowboarding lessons there, as of course was the kid. The instructors seem to be pretty good there.

One other thing I noticed: foreigners! I saw at least one or two other foreigners each day were were there. First day was a family from Misawa air base. The second day some ALTs from Aomori. The third day a couple of guys from I don't know where, and the 4th day a nice couple from Melbourne. Niseko it may not be, but seeing other foreigners apparently there as a matter of course (even if only a couple per day) was kind of a novel experience. Even had one of the resort staff try to speak English to me.

We stayed at Pension Mutti while there, a very nice pension run by a former ski instructor who apparently also spent some time in Austria. Importantly for us, it is pet-friendly – dogs are even welcome to accompany their families in the dining hall. At the end of our stay, our dog was given a custom “Mutti” dog biscuit as an edible souvenir.

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From top looking towards Nishimori slope:
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Second Gelaende side, looking down mogul course to permanently-closed course:
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The 2014 Southern Hemisphere Winter Thread


The gnarliest (official) ski course in Japan is...

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OK, so the gnarliest official run/course (ie, not a backcountry adventure) in Japan is....

Spoiler

2015 Ski Trip Booked

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YAHOO we are all booked!!! 3 weeks :party:
Furano with day trips to Asahidake & Tomamu
Asahikawa - Ice Festival - Zoo - Day Trip to Kamui Links
Niseko day trips to Chisenpuri - Mowia & Kiroro.

Interested in any other day trips if anyone has any suggestions :banner:

Helmets

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I went to Tokyo to buy myself a new pair of ski boots today well actually an xmas present from my wife and at the same time I decided to buy a ski helmet.
Been considering getting one for a while but never really bothered before but thought why not get one especially as I do tend to ski rather fast and do lots of fast cornering.
Might help a little if I were to take a spill.

Hope to give both the boots and helmet a try tomorrow depending what time I get back tonight.

Oshamambe hotels

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Are there any hotels near Oshamambe station?
Google says no.
I'm planning a transfer from Hakkoda to Niseko and the best way to do it might be to take an evening train to Oshamambe then an early morning service to Niseko.

Alpine Ski World Cup 2016

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...in Naeba, announced today.

Quite why they have passed over the chance of going with Mt Granview and gone with Naeba, I can't work that one out.

I need some advice on where to go

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Hi I've been lurking around the forums for a while now and thought it was time to post.

I'm planning a snow trip to japan in early feb and was looking for some advice on where to go.
I don't think I want to go to Niseko (full of to many aussies) I wouldn't mind going somewhere a bit quieter, nightlife is not a big deal.

I would prefer somewhere with ski in/out accommodation or a short walk. I've been to NZ and it's not that fun trekking up the mountain each day.
Most likely going to be using public transport to get places. Is it easy enough to use the trains?

I'm on a budget so accommodation it can't be crazy expensive

I'm looking at Yuzawa or Hakuba, but i'm open to other suggestions.

Thanks

P.S whats up with Mt Granview, is it like some sort of SnowJapan inside joke? :wakaranai:

Snova Mizonokuchi-R246

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We'd been planning to try to hit one of the summer slopes at some point (Marunuma or GALA), but the weather has been completely uncooperative so far this year, with rain every single weekend that would have been possible for us. With a typhoon dashing hopes yet again for this weekend, finally figured heck, let's try one of the Snova indoor slopes and see what it's like. We hit the one in the Mizonokuchi area of Kawasaki, a bit off Route 246, imaginatively named Snova Mizonokuchi-R246:
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The entrance is on the second floor, at the base of the slope. Windows to the right offer views of the happenings on the slope, though they are half frosted over, so can't really take a decent picture through them:
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After buying your ticket and going inside, you go down a staircase to the left to get to the entrance to the slope. Go through a couple of doors, and a blast of cold air hits you. It's kept at about -3 degrees. Definitely want a jacket and gloves.

Looking up from the bottom, there are 3 zones.
To the far left, the halfpipe:
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To the far right the 平バーン, which is basically a bunny slope, where they sometimes set up boxes and rails. Check the calendar for how this area is laid out each day. Today there was just a box near the top:
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In the middle is a kicker:
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Against the far-right wall is an escalator, reached by a short staircase:
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That old We're riding on the escalator of life song kept going through my head... (still is):
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There is also a carpeted ramp to the left of the halfpipe that one could hike up if feeling gnarly -- at risk of getting face-bonked by someone taking air off the lip. I declined the opportunity.

The 'snow' is pretty dry, not at all wet or slushy, and even pretty soft where piled up after the kicker. Under it is a rock-hard ice layer:
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The ice base has apparently been built up or maintained over a long period, and is almost black with dirt in places:
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A mini quarterpipe ramp at the bottom of the 平バーン:
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Top of the escalator:
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Looking down from skier's top left:
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Looking down the halfpipe:
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Snow maintenance on the kicker:
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There was a range of people there, from an obvious first-timer shouting for help all the way down the bunny slope, to some really seriously talented kids (and I mean little kids, maybe third graders by the looks) who were tearing it up on the halfpipe and kicker. I wouldn't be surprised to see some of them at future Olympics. Most visitors seemed to be there to train or practice skills and tricks. Quite a few camps and lessons seem to go on there.

I found the halfpipe tougher than I expected, and the kicker more manageable and enjoyable than I had expected. But what really kicked my butt was that stupid box -- I couldn't do anything but ski straight-line over it without slipping and crashing. Really need to figure out what the trick is for rotating on those things. (I suppose a sense of balance would help.)

Anyway, we had fun, and came back surprisingly tired. Ended up getting a decent work-out, it seems.

All in all not a bad way to spend a couple of hours, and forget that it is summer.

Trouble viewing us Tuesday? Networks!

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Some (lots? not sure) people have been having problems accessing SnowJapan and the Forums over the last 8 hours or so --- including ourselves!

Our servers have been all ok throughout this - the problem has been, so I believe, a "major network outage" (whatever that means) in parts of the world that unfortunately we have no control over and is unrelated to our stuff.

Anyway things seem to be getting back to normal now, fingers crossed, so hopefully everyone can see us again.

:wave:

Sorry about that, and thanks fixing techpeople!

Nozawa Onsen 25/12 - 02/01

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Hi looking for snow conditions from previous years around late December. I know they are hard to predict so any info would be greatly appreciated.

I will also be looking at renting a wide all mountain board approx 165 or greater, are they readily available in NO? Thanks for any assistance you can offer

SnowJapan Giveaways - unclaimed lift tickets

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SnowJapan Giveaways 2013/2014

We have a number of unclaimed ski lift tickets that we would like to send out to people - they are no use left here unused!

We have at least one lift ticket from all of the weekly prizes apart the Niseko Hanazono, Happo-one and Hakuba Goryu Giveaways.

The remaining Givewaways - ie. the ones that we have unclaimed ticket(s) for - can be found here:

http://www.snowjapan...0132014-season/

If you would like one of those and are able to use them, please send us an email to editor@snowjapan.com; tell us your Forums member name; and tell us why you'd like one.
Oh yes, and don't forget to tell us which one you would like.
In order to reduce time needed in this process, also tell us your postal address in case you win. (Don't worry, if we don't use it to send you a ticket it will be deleted).

One more thing: If you have already won a ticket from us in the last few seasons, please send us a link showing us the Resort Review you have posted and/or photos you uploaded to SnowJapan.

We'll decide who gets what by the end of the week.

Thank you and good luck.

Hakkoda/Kagura/Tenjindaira

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Doing a bit of research for the upcoming season.
I'm living in the car again but trying to guage if its worth it to drive up to Hakkoda.
Thoughts on which area has the best backcountry terrain on Honshu besides Hakuba.
Maybe I've overlooked an area too.

Guess Where This Is

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See if you can guess where this is?

If you get it right you get to post the next pic and so on..........and so on.

I have made this one fairly easy to get the thread started

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