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Posted

I got movies today..... closeups of the snow and cross sections of the hardpack to show the JF never ending winter secret recipe for snow.

Mr. Wizard science show later after I edit the videos.

27 degrees at noon....great riding all day under blue skies.

 

JADIP AT JF

Posted
sick. hope it stays like that for tomorrow!

www.weather.com say BLAKESLEE PA will be 23 degrees at 4AM and 38 degrees at noon.

If thats not a snow dream conditions come true then nothing is for the second week in March.

 

FORGET what it looks like in your back yard in Philly.

We are a snow capped peak here with cooler weather and longer winter.

Posted

I did a Mr Wizard type of science show for two years at the

The Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philly until 2001.

 

This video shows a close up of the surface on Exhibition.

Its 3 inches deep of soft snow.

 

Then the video shows a cross section of the snow at one of the pits around a ski lift pole.

Note how the snow is about TWO feet deep and that the top half is very bright white hardpack

and the very bottom layer 6 inches or so is BLUE , or dirty glacier ice.

 

So every day when the groomers reshape that top layer they can do their magic and we get

to ride on powder on cord.

 

Posted
Chalky powder ???????

I wouldn't call it snowcone... or sticky granular.

How would you describe it when its cold enough to be dry and not smear wet on the mitten?

 

Whatever you want to call it.....

It was a great ride all day long.

Posted (edited)
How would you describe it when its cold enough to be dry and not smear wet on the mitten?

 

Frozen granular or sugar (or like some people call it...sweet n low). Chalky powder were refer to freshly blown snow.

Edited by bigdaddyk
Posted
Frozen granular or sugar (or like some people call it...sweet n low). Chalky powder were refer to freshly blown snow.

 

My intent in describing the surface was to make sure everyone could see that

it's been groomed to perfection and that there is no glacier solid blue ice anywhere I was riding.

Which seems almost impossible to believe considering the warm weather we had last week.

So I figured a few simple video closeups of the snow would show what we have to ride on.

 

It would help if SOMEONE ELSE

ANYONE

who actually skies at JF would do a trail report more often besides ME being the only

daily TR.

Posted
I wouldn't call it snowcone... or sticky granular.

How would you describe it when its cold enough to be dry and not smear wet on the mitten?

 

maybe it's the piece of windshield wiper you have sewn into your mitten that squeegeeing off all the wetness :confused

Posted
maybe it's the piece of windshield wiper you have sewn into your mitten that squeegeeing off all the wetness :confused

 

 

 

I love Angry Hugo's posts.

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