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Not sure how well you can see the sandy tinge to the snow |
Now here’s a funny thing, we went
out skiing today on brown snow, not really brown, but a light sandy colour.
Overnight we had a light dusting of, what looked like sand, we noticed it on
the car this morning and assumed someone may have been sanding some wood nearby
and had deposited a light dust on the car, but looking down from the chairlifts
we could see the snow was a light sand colour. It was particularly emphasised
on the pistes where people had skied and disturbed the top layer, to reveal
bright white snow beneath, churning up the top layer to a slightly deeper shade
of sand. It became ‘creepy’ later on when mist descended (despite the forecast
predicting clear skies) and we were in an unfamiliar area, having caught two
buses to La Chapelle.
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Here's another picture of sandy snow with white skied bits |
Through the mist it looked as though we were skiing on
very light coloured sand dunes, of the type we expect on tropical islands (and
incidentally off Northern Scotland by Picton), giving quite a surreal
experience. We don’t know what caused it, but the light winds were coming from
the south-east, the direction from North Africa, so we suppose it could be
desert sand carried across on the wind, a phenomenon not unknown in the past,
but we can’t find anything on the news about it.
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Jackie skiing through fresh powder |
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Someone not-so-lucky being lifted into a rescue helicopter |
It’s half term this week and
therefore pretty busy, so we’ve been selecting our skiing area carefully to
avoid the crowds and have been going to more isolated areas, requiring more
planning and travelling, but also giving much more variety. Getting up and out promptly
has been the order of the last few days, as locals on holiday travel by car,
filling up the car parks at the main lifts early, but we’ve managed well and
only been caught in a lift queue a couple of times.
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A nice mountain picture? Look closer at the zoomed in section below.... |
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Can you see four skiers, one of whom (on the left, halfway down) is throwing up a powder trail as he skis? The second person is to the right and a bit lower, the third person is near the bottom about three quarters of the way across the picture and the fourth is just left of a large rock near the bottom right hand corner. Now go back to the big picture and work out where they are on that mountain. We watched them ski down from the very top and this was the best picture I could get with our relatively basic camera. It's still very impressive and they must have had a fantastic descent, well worth the effort of getting up to the summit |
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Jackie in front of a couple of piste grooming mchines |
Our ‘getting off the beaten track’
led us to Morgins, a quiet Swiss resort that we can get to from our usual local
car park within 9 or 10 lifts and pistes, taking about an hour. We did some
runs we had done before and then, looking at a noticeboard showing an old area
piste map, we spotted a red run not shown on our modern piste map. We could see
where it should go on our map, but no piste was marked, so off we went to see
if we could find it. Halfway down a blue run an opening through some trees had
a small ‘closed’ notice, barely visible so, ignoring it we followed a couple of
previous ski tracks through the trees and onto a narrow but brilliant ski track
that twisted and turned down, eventually joining another piste, which went back
to a lift out.
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Jackie on the 'lost piste' of Morgins |
It was THE run of the day, offering some pretty exciting skiing
in a very isolated area with no-one else about, so good in fact we went back
and did it again! Disappointingly we went back again the following day to find
a piste grooming machine had gone through overnight and groomed it into a
proper piste overnight, making it remarkably easy and much less inspiring. We
think they must be keeping it for only those in the know, but in the day since
we first found it and were one of only a few people down, by the next day it
was really skied out – but by whom?
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Husky dogs take a break from pulling sledges |
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And here's a close up showing them having a well-earned rest! |
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Jackie putting the 'skins' on her skis |
We’ve finally managed a bit of
ski touring, getting out and using our ‘skins’ to ‘skin up’ or walk up hill on
skis. The ‘skins’ we use these days are not animal skins, but a man-made
material that is adhesive on one side to stick to the base of skis and provide
friction on the snow one way to stop the skis sliding back downhill, but slide
easily uphill. Normally they are used to access remote areas, not serviced by
ski lifts to give a true mountaineering experience, the kind of thing we have
done several times in previous years when we have toured hut to hut in remote
mountainous areas, but this time we used them to skin up a piste, just for a
bit of exercise.
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And off she goes up hill |
Jackie did ask ‘why’, when we have perfectly good ski passes
to avoid having to walk up hill, but I told her it would be good for her, so
off we went! We only did about 2km and 410m of ascent up a ‘blue’ piste,
keeping to the edge to avoid downhill skiers, but it was good exercise and we
saw so much more than we would normally, taking lifts and pistes to get to an
area in our local resort that we wanted to tour through, not to mention how
many people said “Bonjour” as the easily slid down past us!
We’re hoping for a bit more snow
in the next few days as higher temperatures have removed most of the snow below
1100m (we’re at 900m, so can see mostly green around us now), there’s still
plenty about, several meters deep at higher elevations and loads of great
skiing, but a new covering, particularly to cover the sandy coloured layer
would be very welcome, but we’re not complaining!
1 comment:
The Day the Snow Turned Brown....... sounds like a sequel to something - I'm not witty enough to think of it currently! Hee hee! xx
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