| SUMMER SKIING IN PENNSYLVANIA IN JUNE |
10 June 2004 |
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The nearest snow to me is on Mt Washington in the Presidential range in New Hampshire, some 430 long miles away. After a long drive, not wanting to hike for three hours to ski Tuckerman's Ravine as I did last year, I opted for the lazy drive up the 'auto road'. Built in the late 1850's this is an impressive road by anyone's standards, clinging to the mountainside over a climb of some 4000 ft. On my way up I spied a snow patch on neighboring Mt Jefferson. But nearing the summit I noticed snow patches in some of the gullies of the 'Great Gulf' My first conquest of the day Back at the top my attention turned to the snow patch over on Jefferson. Looking at the hills, the distance to the next peak would be a long way in the Alps, but in north Wales it would be half an hour or so. These mountains look like Snowdonia, just a little bigger, so off I headed. An hour and a half later I was stood on the shoulder and the snow patch must have been 200ft beyond some low bushes; another hour later I staggered out onto the snow. The toughest bush bashing I've ever done - clothes torn, clips on my boots bent and my poles and my ice axe dropped somewhere! The snow patch itself wasn't that long but at lest it was wide enough for a few sweeping carves. Last turns for a while Report
from Tom
Greenall - Natives Resort Reporter
in Chamonix Mail
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