At Rudy's Flat, Brett is helping Jonah put on mole skin for his emerging blisters. All I could offer was an extra pair of knee-high nylons. Don't laugh, I swear they save me from blisters every day I ski.
Did I tell you Jonah is young and strong and can't feel pain? Well he is, and he can't. So strong in fact he's hiking in full-on Alpine ski boots (no walk mode = zero flex) with Marker Baron bindings, the heaviest touring bindings known to man (or women). Period. Jonah's rig is made for lift skiing, but with a hike mode for short forays into side-country, like hiking over the pass from Gad 2 at Snowbird to Columbine Bowl, a five minute hike at best, rather than the all-day hiking like we did today. His gear is beefy, made for hucking fifty foot cliffs and pounding bumps. All combined, boots+bindings+skis, each foot weighed roughly 10 pounds. When multiplied by 15,000 steps (we hiked 9 miles today), Jonah lifted 150,000 pounds for the day, and all with his feet!! My rig on the other hand weighs about 4 pounds per foot, so I lifted a measly 60,000 pounds today. But don't judge, I'm old, I'm bald, I'm an accountant.
For old men like me, weight, or the lack thereof, makes all the difference. Lightness means speed and less fatigue. It makes a huge difference in the amount of vertical covered, and, therefore, the amount of downhill glisse one can get. Simple math: go light and get more turns.
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