March 14, Tour Montana, Lost Trail

Still room in the parking lot.  Lost Trail Montana


Lost Trail.   Do you know where that is?   It's pretty close to Wisdom Montana where we spent the night.   Surprisingly when I talked to other die-hard skiers they actually knew about Lost Trail.   They are only open Thurs-Sun, so when we planned our trip through Montana we made sure to line up Lost Trail for a Thursday.  Our planning paid off!   We showed up on a bluebird twenty degree day, with ten inches of snow from earlier in the week.    It was pretty surreal to get fresh tracks from top to bottom most of the morning.  By the afternoon we were hanging out in the North facing steeps on Chair 1.    Great day, great area, only negative was no bar in the lodge.   Oh well it was great day to tailgate!

Jimmy Weber gets his soft snow

Kristin

Plenty of room for tracks

Lunch stop at the base

Private bar

Kristin and Jimmy hydrate

Francine hydrates as well


bonus pow shots


March 11, Beehive Basin, Ski tour

Our house was at Moonlight Basin, which is just beyond the turn for Beehive Basin road.  It made it an easy decision to do a ski tour.  We had pretty much skied out Big Sky, and it was getting hard to find any powder.   The route up Beehive Basin follows a summer trail and is pretty easy to navigate.  Head up basin until you enter National Forest then head up to the ridgeline and choose from North or South facing slopes.   Area was very nice and it would be fun to have all day and a partner to get out further.













March 10, Big Sky, North Summit Snowfield

Kevin, Maddie, and Jack waiting for the tram

After another day skiing Big Sky with the Weber family, we split off the group to wait in the tram line.  About a 45 minute wait got us onto the tram.   Without first hand knowledge of the Big Couloir conditions, decided to do a repeat of the North Summit Snowfields.  This time with much better visibility albeit not as much fresh powder off the top.  Still a great run with good variety.  4000' elevation drop.


Jack up top
Maddie and Jack outside the patrol check-in for North Slope
Snowfields and  Big Couloir

Waiting  our turn.  Groups are staggered at ten minute intervals


Making our way down from the top entrance

Left to Snowfields, right to Big Couloir

Maddie on Upper Snowfields

Jack on the ridgeline

Not first tracks but still good snow



Maddie picks out her chute

Jack

Kinda steep,  Jack

Looking back at the North Summit Snowfields

Guide for the day, Kevin



March 9, Big Sky day 2



We left the condo at 8:34 am to get to the 6-shooter chair.  Our guide was right, as we did not need to be at the chair earlier than 9am, as the only folks at the chair were the Freeride competitors.  Finally, the nice lifty must have felt sorry for us watching everyone else get on the chair, and let us load about 10 minutes before 9am.  Had a sweet groomer back to the base.  We were basically able to avoid the lines today, on a busy Saturday.  It snowed about 2-3 inches overnight, and it skied great.  Temps started the day around 15-20 degrees, so the snow was real light.

About 3 times, we rode the 6-Shooter Express and Lone Tree Quad so we could ski the Single Jack and Double Jack tree runs, as the first group in with fresh snow in the trees.  Next, we made our way over to the Shedhorn chair, which might have had limited run time yesterday.  Had lunch at the Shedhorn Grill (yurt).  Made our way to the Dakota chair for some fun runs in the trees with 4-6 inches of new snow.  As we were making our way back around the mountain towards home on the Duck-Walk getback route, Kev, Jack & Maddie & I dropped off towards the right, and ended up on the cattrack from H*ll (which took forever) to get back to the main village.

Finally rode the 8 seater Ramcharger Express, so we could use the bathrooms at the top.  Sun was out and snow was warming up, but still skied nice.  Made our way to the top of the Challenger chair and skied down Moonlight to our getback to the condo.  Another fun, tiring day.



March 8, Day 1 Big Sky



Since none of us had to pay for lift tickets, as Francine and Kristin are employees at a sister resort to Big Sky, The Summit at Snoqualmie, we signed on with the First Tracks Half Day Guided private.  We were able to load the chair at 8am, one hour before the general public, and had priority loading on the lifts for 4 hours.  It was an amazing day.  Curt, our guide was great and we had 3-4 totally untracked runs on the groomers.  We started out on Calamity Jane.  Then a tree run off Calamity Jane.  Then another tree run off the skiers right of Calamity Jane.  The 8-Seater Ram Charger Express was having loading issues, and the folks that paid for First Track Breakfast where they only got 1 hour of skiing before the general public on the RamCharger, were doing a lot of standing around.  Luckily our 1/2 day guided private allowed us to ski other chairs, so we lucked out.

At 9am, after the lifts opened for the public, the lines were quite long, as the 8-Seater Ram Charger still wasn't loading and the Swift 4 Express had lines.  So, Curt opted to skirt around the base area, walk, and finally skate down the road to the Thunder Wolf High Speed.  Here, we had the worst run of the day, as the run straight under the lift was sun affected from the warm 40 degrees the previous day.  At least it had 3-4 inches on the firm bumps.

We made our way down Spotted Elk, which was another bump run with a few inches on it.  On to the Tram which holds 15 people.  We got there around 10:10am, and it had just opened 5 minutes earlier.  We had to wait our turn at the "special access" waiting area, as another private group was ahead of us.  They let the private groups in every other tram (blue tram), which cut us in front of the general public.  We go up some back stairs for our priority loading (similar to Jackson Hole, where the lessons & private groups cut the tram line.)  Next, we head for the Patrol Shack to sign in.  We opted for the North Summit Snowfields, instead of the Big Couloir, as only Kevin and Jack were up to  ski the Big.  We signed in at the patrol shack, and waited our turn.  They limit who and when you or your group get to ski either the Big Couloir or the North Snowfields, so groups don't ski on top of each other.  Visibility was poor to start, which probably helped Francine not see how steep is was.  The snow was great, as we were one of the first thru.  We traversed thru to Ripps and Horseshoe Bowl Traverse to Horseshoe Bowl.  Made our way our Lookout Ridge (blue run) to Single Jack a tree run.  Skied all the way to the bottom of the 6 shooter express - 4,000 feet descent.












March 3, N. Slope of Chair Peak

Amazing snow and abundant sunshine brought out lots of people on their touring gear.  Thanks to persistent wind, the slopes had most of yesterday's tracks blown over.  Once we crested the ridge onto the Snow Lake side, felt like we were in a different climate.  Skiing on the backside was wind buffed, but fairly soft.  We did notice one fairly large wind pocket that had pulled out.  Not the day for high marking the backside, despite the fact that three climbers were giving us a show by climbing directly up the face of Chair Peak.   Great day for a classic tour.

Upper Chair Peak Basin

Kelly boots up to the ridgeline

Mountaineering party of 3 ascend the  main face of Chair Peak

On the ridgeline, transitioning to ski down the backside

Lots of snow movement from wind, but skied well

Kelly


Avalanche that pulled out of a wind pocket.  Fairly large chunks
Kelly gets final descent to Snow Lake

On the lake, the apron behind Kelly skied well.  Just need to get home now.