Wednesday, 01 February 2012 17:35

Field Report: Monarch Mountain, CO

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Secret stashes in plain view.

monarch-mountain-patrol-shackPlenty of snow, no one to fight for it. Photo by Gavin GibsonIt's 2:30 p.m. on Saturday at Monarch Mountain, and I'm just slipping into my ski boots. The locals keep telling me that they wish there was more fresh snow. Undeterred, I venture through an empty lift maze and onto the chair. My first run ever at Monarch consists of slipping into the trees and skiing largely untracked boot to knee-deep snow. My next run, off the Panorama chair, yields more of the same. The coverage might not be perfect, but I struggle to find "bad" snow. In a winter with more consistent precipatation, the snow at Monarch Mountain must be unreal.

 

"We don't make snow here; it's 100 percent natural," says Caswell Rico-Silver, who's been at Monarch for 18 years and is closing in on a decade as the director of ski patrol for the resort. I tell him about the snow I just had to myself. It's been days since any noticeable snowfall, and his response is simple: "That's Monarch. It's pretty amazing, isn't it? Our demographic is largely people who show up by the busload and don't venture off-piste as much. That leaves lots of good skiing open for good skiers, on top of the great skiing in general."

 

The lack of snow this year has kept Monarch from opening up Rico-Silver's favorite hike-to terrain in Mirkwood Bowl, but the latest storms show promise for the rest of the winter. In the mean time, there is plenty of great in-bounds skiing—despite what the locals might tell you.  —Gavin Gibson

For more information, visit skimonarch.com.


Last modified on Wednesday, 01 February 2012 18:35
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Swami won't take offense if you mount tele/touring skis with AT bindings, but the easy flex makes tele-turning most joyful.
Time for Swami to trade in his String Cheese Incident rucksack and acquire a modern pack with adjustable straps, back vents, and such.
When seeking frontside skis, look for damp skis with ungodly edge penetration.
For all-mountain skis you seeketh a balance of powder flotation and hard-snow guts.
Big Mountain ski buyers: Meditate on tip rocker if you crave the pow. Ex racers go traditional.
Using AT boots? Swami sees 90 to 100 millimeter crossover skis in your future Facebook postings.
Swami sayeth: Choose a mountain bike with a blend of climbing and descending performance for the exigencies of the mountain trail near you.
What's with all the skiers passing us in the powder, you snowboarders ask? Rocker lets you float without effort. It's pay-to-play Zen.