(JUNE 08) WARREN SMITH AND LAWRENCE DALLAGLIO TO CYCLE 933KMS FOR CHARITY After Lawrence received 3 days of coaching from Warren this season, he wanted to return the favour!
Warren starts training in July for the challenge and has just set up his charity fundraising page with Justgiving (www.justgiving.com/warrensmith1). Please take the time to look through the cycle challenge in detail by clicking on this link and please give generously on Warren's Just Giving page. Warren will keep you updated with his training regime over the summer in person in Saas-Fee and on our Academy news pages.
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POWDER SKIING IN HOKKAIDO, JAPAN Warren and I visited Japan in February 2008 to do some research on the area in preparation for the course next year. We didn’t really know much about skiing in Japan, except that the powder was deep and that Sushi would be available on the menu at most restaurants. These two pieces of information were good enough to convince us to go to Japan alone!
05/02/08 We flew from London Heathrow on Japanese Airlines (JAL) to Osaka Kansai which was an 11 hour flight. Aparently the flights are always half full, so we had plenty of space to sprawl out and sleep. I was also surprised at the quality of in-flight meal. Warren actually asked for seconds! Once we arrived in Osaka in Japan we hopped on a short 1 ½ hour flight to Chitose Sapporo. The final stage of the journey was a 1 ½ hour transfer bus to Niseko where we would spend our first few days. The journey was long, but luckily very comfortable. It was certainly worth it for what we were about to experience. 07/02/08 Niseko
Niseko is made up of 3 main areas Niseko Village (formerly Niseko Higashiyama), Hirafu and Annupuri. We stayed at the Niseko Prince Hotel in Higashiyama which has now been taken over by the Hilton group and will be transformed into only the second ski in, ski out Hilton hotels in the world, the first being Whistler. There is also an impressive view of the dormant volcano Mt Yōtei.
Niseko has almost 50km of piste and unlike many of the other resorts in Japan, has an abundance of accessible and permissible access to some beautiful off piste terrain. The top lies at 1,309m, the base being at 300m, with an elevation of 300m. With an average of 40ft of snow in a season, there are no rocks and plenty of days of powder! It is practically guaranteed each day! There are 38 lifts and 59 pistes, so the on piste is plentiful also.
Apparently this was a bad winter. With a 40ft base, it was still however, the best snow we had ever skied, so we didn’t complain! 08/02/08 Furano
There was a little shop in the corridor towards the exit with a whole wall of colourful vending machines. I was tickled by the hot coffee in a coke style can. There wasn’t a drink you couldn’t order in a tin. On the opposite wall was a weight machine, a stamp machine and a ‘Heart Start’ machine, I guess just in case you were to pass out and your heart stopped after drinking the hot coffee from a tin.
We had the private room in the back booked which fitted 12 people around the table sitting on the floor. Shoes had to be taken off on entry which I thought very hygienic until the waitress, obviously part of the family who run the restaurant, put down our tray of Sake while sighing, then take out a tissue from her pocket, blow her nose in it and then continue to dab the sweat off her head with it. I wasn’t very impressed, however quite amused by her nonchalance and obvious lack of care.
However, the food was delectable. With a deliciously grilled selection of fish and vegetables, my palette was watering. Unfortunately the helpings were not so great, and I was a little put off by the Cod Sperm! I allowed myself a sneak round the corner into the kitchen to take a couple of quick and non-distracting pictures. The chef looked round at me with a big smile with a cigarette hanging out of his mounth, happy to be in the picture. He grabbed who I guess must have been his wife into the picture with him, until the nose blowing mother came into the kitchen none to happy at the scene before here. I took off without glancing in her less than happy direction.
09/02/08 Saturday was to be our day of filming on the mountain. We had heard of the strict rules of the off piste skiing in Furano, and were adamant not to get into trouble with the locals, especially as we wanted to take our clients here next year. We headed up with local guides Nobu and Osamuka. They took us around the pistes for a while before we started to get itchy feet. Eventually we took off on our own. We were looking at an area at the top of the resort that looked like it had numerous special lines coming down through the trees. There were snowboarders lapping the area tempting us to chance it. At the top of the lift we bumped into the snowboarders who turned out to be locals. We followed them under the barrier and over the side of the hill. It was a short 10 minute hike and then we set off. We got a couple of good runs in and filmed some nice lines. So we headed up for another. This time, on the run out, we knew we had been busted. The mountain security were there waiting for us, and they confiscated our passes. Apparently we could have been arrested! They were pretty decent though, and when we asked them if we could do one more run, they escorted us to the lift and made sure the lift operator let us up for one more run.
That night we were to eat at the Furano Hiroba where we would be entertained by a Japanese cultural performance. A local family dressed up in traditional Japanese clothing and sang an array of traditional style songs and did some flower arranging and artistic Japanese writing. With a room full of Aussies behind, there were almost embarrassing moments where I thought they may start cracking jokes about the performance. However, the male of the Japanese family casually asked a couple of the young Aussies to come on stage and sing with him and his family, to the delight of the crowd.
10/02/08 Asahidake
It was a special place and was very pretty with the silver birch higher up and then sinking into the thick winter pine trees on the descent down. We lapped the cable car a few times, moving further and further along the ridge we were skiing each time. The photos were taken against the deep blue backdrop of the sky with the clean white bark of the Silver Birch standing timeless. It was very picturesque.
We dropped into visit the Takasao Sake Brewery on our way home. We sampled a few different kinds, including the left over's from the making of Sake, which is a thick sweet porridge like rice substance left over from the process. Not personally to my liking. Although I have definitely acquired a taste for Sake! 12/02/08 Furano
That day we followed the correct channels and went to the police to apply for permission to ride off piste. We filled in the documents which even went as far as to ask you to fill in every piece of emergency food you have. Once up the mountain, the patrol escorted us right up the final lift and then opened the barrier to the areas off piste. It was like opening the doors to heaven. There was not one track in sight, and with at least 60cm of fresh powder, we were delighted! The patrol kept his eye on us for a while and made sure he stayed there long enough for anyone not to follow us.
Warren and I looked at each other in disbelief. This was truly the best! We joyfully bounced about in the lightest powder I had ever experienced, quite often not being able to see where we were going as it was so deep and gasping for breath on each turn. It was a good feeling to be skiing with the confidence that it was the safest off piste terrain we had ever skied. Again we were skiing through Silver Birch trees. It was still overcast and snowing, but with all that powder puffing up in the air all around us, there was no way you could tell what the weather was like in the photos. We got what we came for.
There was line after line to choose from. Eventually when we didn’t have any more height, we started to traverse through the forest by a stream. Without a person in sight or any evidence of anyone ever being there, it was a truly special day. We arrived back at the resort with smiles on our faces and happy to hang up the skis for the day.
13/02/08 The next day we got up nice and early and got on a bus to Niseko. We had to change at Sapporo Airport, but the system in place on the buses is extremely efficient and the ride more than comfortable. The journey took 7 hours in total because it was a public bus and stopped everywhere, however it was a sightseeing trip in itself and I took advantage of every photo opportunity. 14/02/08 Niseko
15/02/08 We headed up on the workers lift on the following morning to get fresh tracks. It was still snowing! Once at the top, we traversed over to the next ski area named Hirafu, which is the centre and main town of Niseko. It was insane!! So much powder! There was no work involved in finding a line; every piece of the mountain was the line. We got a few runs in before the hoards of powder hungry Aussies hit the slopes. We were surprised at the amount of Australians in Hirafu. Everyone I spoke to was from Sydney. It was a playground that day. We headed up into the trees again, and saw many people doing the same thing, yet, because the snow was so deep, you didn’t notice the tracks by any previous person. It was heaven.
The Japanese are keen on their night skiing. The whole ski area is lit up with pretty lights leading down the line of the pistes into the resort. Warren and I decided to try out the night skiing in Hirafu again as we had had such a good day there. There is a free shuttle bus which drives you around as the top lift is not open at night to connect the different resorts. The bus ride was no longer than 20 minutes.
Once there, we were blown away by the fact that not only one or two pistes were open, but pretty much the whole ski area was open and floodlit. The night time off piste and tree skiing was spectacular. The silhouette and shadows created by the nearby lights on the pistes created an almost space like montage. The darkness seemed to create an almost tranquil mountain with feeling of being on another planet. It was extraordinary. By 9pm when the lifts were closing the weakness of hunger set in. I melted into the bus seat on the way back to the hotel! I was finished!
It did brighten up as the day went on however, so back to work. But once again, what a day it turned out to be.
17/02/08 Last Day The next day we took the transfer bus to Chitose in Sapporo and flew to Osaka where we spent the night at an airport hotel, which was about 5 minutes walk from the gate. We ate well, slept well and went to sleep with a real feeling of satisfaction.
The flight back was beautiful and the view out of the window was spectacular. We were also bumped up to business class and were the only 2 people in the business class cabin, so Scott our air host was our man the whole flight. We ate and drank loads, watched some great movies and left the powder behind. Roll on February 2009. Come and join us! |
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THE VERBIER RIDE 05 |
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