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Sierra Nevada

Return to Sierra Backcountry Powder

We really thought we would get skunked today, not for snow – but for howling winds and driving snow – low vis, cold, the return of winter. Our days of skiing corn are a thing of the past. Janine was totally irritated. The woman wants warm, sunny days. But, our friend Stuart was a motivating force for us to drive to Mammoth and have a look at the backcountry options. We went, we parked – whiteout. At this point in the day a poor decision was made, only the point and shoot was along for the ride.

90 minutes later, as we neared the small summit of Punta Bardini, things began to look better. Just in time for the skins off & off zippers up, the sun broke through, the wind ceased to roar and we were all smiles. Two laps later we were at the car, wow, maybe the best powder of the Sierra backcountry year – on March 31. Happy happy spring.

Facts & Figures: about 18 inches of powder above the town of Mammoth Lakes. Steeper slopes, >30 degrees, we saw some slabs cut loose, heads up. Everything is super wind affected thanks to the 120+mph winds we had. Powder is out there but get it while you can.

Janine on the cold & grim skin up

Janine encouraged by blue sky and distant views of the Eastern Sierra

Janine further inspired by what she sees

I can't believe I stopped so much to shoot

Janine happy she at least brought the red jacket for the point & shoot photo shoot

Guess who?, lap 2

Janine making her signature "Swiggles"

We came, we skied, we left some graffiti

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Sierra spring skiing with friends

Stuart Wilkinson skiing off the Wheeler Crest

Yesterday was a classic spring day in California’s Sierra Nevada. Even though it was my countless day skiing in conditions like this, I still marvel at these amazing days of warmth, abundant corn snow, and the fact that here one can drop to the car from a wintry landscape and slip on shorts and flip flops. It is a great time of the year. But this may have been the last day like this for awhile, a winter storm is steaming towards us. Here are some photos of friends from yesterday as we did some skiing and even a little USGS work.

With Rock Creek Canyon and the Sierra Crest behind, we’re skinning up to the Wheeler Crest
Mike Calla connecting strips of snow to keep the skis on
The packs were heavy with scientific instruments to measure the height of summits. The good news, the Sierra are rising at the same rate as they are eroding. Don’t worry, they’ll be around for awhile
Janine in classic Eastern Sierra spring skiing weather
Mike Calla descending to the Owen’s Valley
It’s always a game to see how long you can keep your skis on
Flip flops and shorts time

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Mammoth Lakes Ski Randonee Racer

The Lone Randoer

“How do ya’ like that rando stuff? Does it work as good as telemark?”, inquired a stranger at the neighboring table after eyeing Jon’s carbon Dynafit rando race boots.
Perfect I thought, the perfect introduction to this story. Jon’s response would be key.
“I think it’s better”, he said.

Jon Crowley skiing on the Mammoth Crest

Mammoth’s Stellar Brew was packed with skiers; lift skiers, snowboarders, tele skiers, nordic skiers, backcountry skiers but only one local ski rando racer, 29 year old Jon Crowley.

In a town known for athletes, such as Olympic stars Meb Keflezighi and Deena Kastor, it is greatly lacking in ski randonee racers. In fact it isn’t just Mammoth Lakes coming up short, there are probably as many rando racers in California as there are toes on your feet. For Mammoth, Jon is the only show in town.

Early this morning I joined him for a training session on the Mammoth Crest so we could discuss what it’s like to be driven and focused on a sport that virtually no one knows about. No one that is, unless you go to Europe or parts of Colorado and Wyoming.
In Europe the sport is nothing short of massive with numerous full time athletes, TV time, its own magazines, and in some races hundreds lining up to start. In fact where we live in Italy it is likely one can race about four days a week throughout the winter. Meanwhile, in the Eastern Sierra Nevada, the only local race was cancelled due to a lack of interest.

While Jon is frustrated with the less than enthusiastic support of the sport, he does see interest growing.
“I think the gear is going to be what gets people’s attention. It doesn’t matter if you race or not. The gear has a perfect application for the Sierra Nevada where spring conditions would allow skiers to do massive tours. The history of Sierra skiing includes huge spring tours done on nordic gear. This new race stuff is not much heavier and all of a sudden you can really ski corn with a pack on, that while moving really efficiently and quickly.”

Boot packing up a couloir for training

Training for transitions

My own experience in California talking about Euro rando racing has met with some laughs. The very idea has been quickly put into the category of elitist mountain competition, something I am pretty sure turns the stomachs of most backcountry skiers. I asked Jon of his experience.

“I probably get laughed at by 50% of the backcountry skiers, and not in a friendly way. But the other 50% are totally interested and want to know about it. I think many Mammoth skiers succumb to the ski industry marketing hype of bigger, fatter and heavier is better. This idea does not make sense for every skier. Also, Americans have some aversion to sports with lycra.”

“But at the same time, I go to races out in Colorado and Wyoming and only about 1/3 of the people are on real race gear, the rest are using standard backcountry gear. Still, they are having a ton of fun and becoming very interested in what the sport is all about. If they can have fun on the heavy gear, think if they upgrade. And they are, places like Jackson and Crested Butte have already sizeable, and growing, populations of ski rando racers.”

Jon Crowley skiing on the Mammoth Crest

Dan: “I compare the scene with American road racing as I was racing in the US through the early Lance Armstrong years. Pre-Lance, road biking was a bit too Euro as well; lycra, bright colors, and skinny little people made for a sketchy sport. It took a bad ass lycra wearing Texan to change all that and make it mainstream. Now it is mostly acceptable to march into an Eastern Sierra cafe clad in spandex. But a lycra ski suit for the backcountry? Not so sure. Perhaps America needs a hero figure to kick some Euro butt and justify its existence. Or perhaps America can skip the BS this time around and accept what may well be a truly pure mountain sport.”

Jon: “The backcountry is sacred here. The local attitude seems to be that anything having to do with competition in the mountains is wrong. Why? I love the fact that Pete Swenson, the multiple US National Champion is 42 years old and still crushing people. Totally inspiring. It is a great sport for older endurance athletes. For the ski industry, the racing scene has introduced a lot of innovation that trickles down to traditional backcountry skiing.”

Dan: “What are your goals?”

Jon: “To make the US National Team and race in Europe. It would be a treat to race where it all started and to feel the enthusiasm. Ultimately, I want to share my own enthusiasm for the sport and help build a race community right here in Mammoth. My vision is to introduce the sport to people, get a training group going, maybe a weeknight race and even a Junior team like they have for nordic skiing”.

Simple, Light, Effective

Dan: “How do you stay motivated to train when you are all alone?”

Jon: “The potential for both me personally and to grow the sport. Also, I have changed from being a goal oriented skier – let’s go ski that – to focusing more on every aspect of the experience of backcountry skiing.”

Dan: “What is the best way to introduce the sport?”

Jon: “I think it is through the gear. Look what Dynafit is doing with all their products; high performance, superlight, well made gear, all of which can be applied to standard backcountry skiing. People like gear and this sport has some seriously cool, hi-tech gear. For many types of ski touring, light gear equals more skiing.”

And what more can we ask for? Skiing… lots of it. Regardless of whether or not you want to try ski mountaineering races, the sport has both gear and an open minded attitude that benefits the user. Maybe it’s worth a look.

Jon Crowley

Are you interested in Ski Rando Racing and live in the Eastern Sierra Nevada? Mammoth, Crowley, Lee Vining, June Lake, Bishop?

Jon Crowley would love to connect and introduce his developing East Side Ski Running Group.
Jon can be reached at Mammoth Mountaineering where he works on the sales floor and ski shop: 888.395-3951

or email jon@mammothgear.com

Many thanks to the following companies for the support they have offered.

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Skiing California Sierra Nevada Fourteeners

Skiing the Eastern Sierra Nevada Fourteeners

by David Page with photos courtesy Christian Pondella

This article first appeared in EastSide Magazine

From a distance it looked perfect. Perfectly epic. But from the summit, with skis on, looking down at an enormous chockstone wedged into the trap door of a fifty-five degree couloir, nine thousand vertical feet above the trucks, a sliver’s width passage to either side and only the thinnest of early-spring rot to look forward to, the prospect suddenly became, as Pondella would later recall, “frickin’ dicey.”

Chris Davenport approaching the Sierra Nevada's Keeler Needle and Mt. Whitney

Davenport had flown out from Aspen a few days earlier, had rented a car in Reno and driven down to Mammoth to catch Pondella. The plan: to effect a quiet, personal, media-light tour of the highest peaks in California’s High Sierra, to tick off as many fourteeners as time and conditions might allow, to get some sun, some good pics for the sponsors, to camp out in the sagebrush with friends, maybe do some bouldering, etc.—you know, easy, Eastside-style.

Having already bagged every last fourteener in Colorado—climbing and skiing off fifty-four summits in just under twelve months, and publishing a book about it—and having ticked off Rainier and Shasta soon thereafter, this was all that was left: fourteen more wind-battered patches of rock and snow to complete the whole list for the Lower 48.

Although the pace would prove blistering by mortal standards—at least two big mountains for every three days—Davenport didn’t seem in any real hurry to finish. “The idea is just to submerse myself in the range,” he said, like a man beyond last call contemplating the olive at the bottom of his martini. “It’s like meeting a new girlfriend, just kind of figuring her out.” As if to say: Hey, what’s the rush? Let’s put another quarter in that juke box.

In less than a month he’d be back to real business: helicopters, film crews, full entourage—and the pressure of getting it absolutely right down four of the most iconic and difficult lines in the Alps. “It’s brutal,” he would say later, on the phone. “But it’s work. And I have to work.”

Pondella had made an early-season recon flight with Glen Poulsen, just before Christmas, which had shown the southern peaks fairly ready to go. The Palisades, where in a fat year a crew like this might be able to knock out a handful of summits from a single base camp, were all exposed rock and ice. “We weren’t sure about Whitney,” recalled Pondella. “But we could see Langley was in, Split was in, Williamson was in. We weren’t sure about White.”

It seemed natural enough to start with Langley, at the south end, and work north from there. So they slept in the truck at the top of the moraine, right at snowline, and before dawn set out up the Tuttle Creek drainage toward the peak formerly known as Old Mount Whitney.

It was the third week in March and the Sierra Nevada was already deep into premature springtime. Snowpack was barely average. Still, the climb was straightforward and they were able to ski off the true summit on decent winter snow, dropping fast down the southeast couloir and all the way back to camp on fine corn. Up and back they were the only two people in the world. And by the end of the day they were blissfully bedding down in the parking lot at the Whitney Portal, requisite permits on their persons and a modest quotient of Tecate in their veins.

Chris Davenport skiing the Sierra Nevada's Mt. Williamson

From the Mountaineer’s Route they watched dawn splash bold across the east face. They crossed paths with two parties on the way up, the only other humans they would see in the backcountry that week: one, a pair of exceedingly well-encumbered gents, outfitted as if to spend three months besieging Everest (“as if they’d just robbed an REI store,” said Davenport); and later a solitary European fellow who had summited early and though equipped for a few nights out was already on his way back, having forgotten to bring fire for his campstove. For the former party there was nothing to be done; for the latter a spare lighter was produced from Dav’s first aid kit.

Chris Davenport skiing Sierra Nevada's Mt. Whitney

At the ridge they were surprised—and not a little pleased—to discover a thin tongue of perfect chalky snow right to the summit. It was an exciting rock-scramble for the last three hundred vertical feet, and “definitely a no-fall zone coming back down,” but they were able to ski the whole way. And still make the last hour of sun at the Buttermilks.

“It was one of the greatest days you could ever have,” said Pondella. “To climb and ski Whitney, to watch the sunrise on the east face, across some of the most beautiful granite in the Sierras, and five hours later to be climbing up the granite boulders at the Buttermilks—there’s not many places you could have it that good.”

To cap it off they decided to forego the cozy intimacy of the truck in favor of “Jacuzzi, internet and nice beds” at Pondella’s place up the hill. And the next day afforded themselves a break, went down to the Gorge for an afternoon’s fingerwork on welded ash. But by moonrise that evening, having met up with John Morrison from Tahoe, they were back to work—with a good fire going and a plan for taking Williamson.

Morrison dropped in first. “And as he was sidestepping in,” Pondella remembered, “he took all the snow right down to the rock.” Davenport tried the other way, around the right side, sidestepping down three or four feet and hopping into the air. “It was one of the sketchiest turns I’ve ever seen,” said Pondella, “but he stuck it.”

He also scraped the place clean, leaving the poor photographer to undergo what he would later describe as a “mini-epic.”

Down where Davenport had made his hop-turn, Pondella found himself tips and tails on rock. “My skis were doing the bow-and-arrow-thing,” he remembered. “I was sketching.” The only option from there was to point it for five feet—then stop. “And I’m like: I can’t do that—this could be the last—I fuck up that’s it I’m done.” Finally he slid his pack off, ever-so-gingerly, unhitched his crampons, threw his axe into the snow and managed to get one ski off. “Once I got that first crampon on I was fine.”

Hemingway once tried to make the case that bullfighting was “the only art in which the artist is in danger of death.” This in the days before high-powered energy drinks, before fat skis and alpine touring bindings and synthetic climbing skins, before Davenport & Co. The artistry of it, Papa argued, was in the matador’s performance, in the degree to which he was able to control the amount of danger, to run it “exactly as much as he wishes”—without dying. Surely this is also the measure of those few individuals who, with or without specific promises of financial remuneration, choose to leap from the planet’s highest pinnacles on skis.

The line down the southeast face of Split—next on the list—was considerably less hair-raising. Still, it distinguished itself, off the top, with some of the worst so-called snow either man had ever skied. Redemption came swiftly, though, in the form of nearly seven thousand vertical feet of smooth, high-grade corn—enough of the stuff to cover the vertical drop from the high-altitude doughnut counter atop Pike’s Peak to the Dunkin’ Donuts on Colorado Avenue in downtown Colorado Springs. With, in this case, plenty of packaged chocolate mini-donuts waiting at the trucks.

Chris Davenport skiing the Sierra Nevada's Mt. Langley

Then the weather changed. By the following morning, by the time the sun hit the cold backside of White Mountain Peak, there was enough wind sluicing down the canyon that they found themselves shouting at each other.

“It’s nuking up there!” yelled Pondella. Davenport nodded: “You can’t argue with the weather!”

So they turned around, punched their skis back out through the rabbit brush and scrub oak, drove up around Montgomery, took a nice long soak in one of the old tubs at Benton, and headed back down to the Gorge: you know, easy, Eastside-style—with the olive still marinating in the bottom of the glass.

________________________

DolomiteSport is excited to have this contribution by Mammoth Lakes locals David Page and Christian Pondella. David is a superstar writer for clients such as Men’s Journal, the NY & LA Times and even DolomiteSport. Christian Pondella is a combo skier extraordinaire and the go to guy for the best professional skiing photography.

David Page’s site Sierra Survey is a great resource for mountain sports and stories in the Sierra Nevada

Christian Pondella’s Professional Photography, Stories and more are at his blog: Christian Pondella

Chris Davenport is a professional skier and hero of many ski movies

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Sierra Nevada Ski Conditions

This does not suck

A start in the pre-dawn darkness was necessary this morning so we could ski Red Mountain. We headed out with best friend John Dittli who had to be down early. As is usually the case, it was tough to rise but in the end very worth the effort.

Conditions: Perfect powder – certainly some of the best backcountry skiing I have ever done in the Sierra is happening this year. Heads up for instability, we are seeing activity both natural and skier related. Our strategy has been to stick to the trees and on lower angled slopes. There is a lot of snow out there.

Thanks to Leslie who saw us coming and fired up the waffle maker.

-16 celsius before sunrise, that part did kind of suck

Janine doing the Swiss wiggle

Janine, smiling

John Dittli, really smiling

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Backcountry Skiing Punta Bardini

Skinning up Punta Bardini

Sunrise made it look like the freight train of storms that rolled over the top of the Eastern Sierra Nevada this week had passed. A clear, blue sky showed its sunny face, so together with some new friends from Mammoth, we charged to Punta Bardini for a little backcountry skiing.

This little tree shot sits literally right outside town and is a favorite during, or immediately following, big storms. We knew we would be sentenced to some hard labor laying a track in but the idea was embraced after 5 days cabin bound.

As new friends were the company, time flew on the ascent as we got to these Mammoth locals. Andy Bourne, one hell of a strong athlete. Dave Page, a well known writer whom I am getting to know via mutual friends, and Joe & Lorenza Walker who is originally from Cortina d’Ampezzo, very close to our home in the Dolomites. Everyone rotated on trail breaking duty like a good cycling team takes turns pulling in a group.

Unfortunately the storm was stubborn in releasing its grip on us and our blue sky gave way to gray with big snowflakes – no matter, by that time we were on top.

And the descent – in two meters of new snow…? Primarily slow motion but with moments of bliss when it got steeper. Powder, bottomless powder. The East Side is set for quite some time with a healthy snow pack.

Joe Walker skiing Punta Bardini

Andy Bourne skiing powder on Punta Bardini

Andy Bourne skiing powder on Punta Bardini

Andy Bourne, who says the Sierra don't get powder?

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