Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
- lilcliffy
- Posts: 4147
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 2015 6:20 pm
- Location: Stanley, New Brunswick, Canada
- Ski style: backcountry Nordic ski touring
- Favorite Skis: Asnes Ingstad, Combat Nato, Amundsen, Rabb 68; Altai Kom
- Favorite boots: Alpina Alaska BC; Lundhags Expedition; Alfa Skaget XP; Scarpa T4
- Occupation: Forestry Professional
Instructor at Maritime College of Forest Technology
Husband, father, farmer and logger
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
Oh- yeah I was aware of both models- was wondering whether you are considering getting the waxable based Objective?
Cross-country AND down-hill skiing in the backcountry.
Unashamed to be a "cross-country type" and love skiing down-hill.
Unashamed to be a "cross-country type" and love skiing down-hill.
- Woodserson
- Posts: 2988
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2015 10:25 am
- Location: New Hampshire
- Ski style: Bumps, trees, steeps and long woodsy XC tours
- Occupation: Confused Turn Farmer
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
Yes. I wish it had skinlock, this would be a no brainer.
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
Since you are skiing with an alpiner, keep it simple; you aren't building a nuke here: use the all mountain ski you ski downhill best on, forget the fish scale base skis and throw the skins on when your buddy does. I mean you and your bud are basically getting from one downhill experience to the other together. For a sleeper advantage keep some smear-on Dominator Butter high fluro wax in your pack, with a cork. That will help you hang with him when it counts, avoiding as best you can the snow gremlins that reach from under, grab, and cause us telemarkers to face plant in wetter snow.
- fisheater
- Posts: 2601
- Joined: Fri Feb 19, 2016 8:06 pm
- Location: Oakland County, MI
- Ski style: All my own, and age doesn't help
- Favorite Skis: Gamme 54, Falketind 62, I hope to add a third soon
- Favorite boots: Alpina Alaska, Alico Ski March
- Occupation: Construction Manager
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
Woods, I agree completely in regards to preferring to have skinlock. The other thing that I greatly prefer in the Tind is the much larger turning radius of 22 meters vs 19.5 meters for the Objective. While in a lift served ski I wouldn't think twice, in a touring ski I am leary of wandering ski syndrome on the flats. It is one thing I do not appreciate about the S-112.
I also would prefer a 187 Tind to a 178 Objective.
Good luck Woods, figuring what ski to bring on a ski vacation to the French Alps is a good problem to have!
I also would prefer a 187 Tind to a 178 Objective.
Good luck Woods, figuring what ski to bring on a ski vacation to the French Alps is a good problem to have!
- lilcliffy
- Posts: 4147
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 2015 6:20 pm
- Location: Stanley, New Brunswick, Canada
- Ski style: backcountry Nordic ski touring
- Favorite Skis: Asnes Ingstad, Combat Nato, Amundsen, Rabb 68; Altai Kom
- Favorite boots: Alpina Alaska BC; Lundhags Expedition; Alfa Skaget XP; Scarpa T4
- Occupation: Forestry Professional
Instructor at Maritime College of Forest Technology
Husband, father, farmer and logger
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
Very best.Harris wrote:Since you are skiing with an alpiner, keep it simple; you aren't building a nuke here: use the all mountain ski you ski downhill best on, forget the fish scale base skis and throw the skins on when your buddy does. I mean you and your bud are basically getting from one downhill experience to the other together. For a sleeper advantage keep some smear-on Dominator Butter high fluro wax in your pack, with a cork. That will help you hang with him when it counts, avoiding as best you can the snow gremlins that reach from under, grab, and cause us telemarkers to face plant in wetter snow.
Those snow gremlins are all too real!
Cross-country AND down-hill skiing in the backcountry.
Unashamed to be a "cross-country type" and love skiing down-hill.
Unashamed to be a "cross-country type" and love skiing down-hill.
- lilcliffy
- Posts: 4147
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 2015 6:20 pm
- Location: Stanley, New Brunswick, Canada
- Ski style: backcountry Nordic ski touring
- Favorite Skis: Asnes Ingstad, Combat Nato, Amundsen, Rabb 68; Altai Kom
- Favorite boots: Alpina Alaska BC; Lundhags Expedition; Alfa Skaget XP; Scarpa T4
- Occupation: Forestry Professional
Instructor at Maritime College of Forest Technology
Husband, father, farmer and logger
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
Here you regarding the wandering squirrely syndrome- hate it in fact.fisheater wrote:Woods, I agree completely in regards to preferring to have skinlock. The other thing that I greatly prefer in the Tind is the much larger turning radius of 22 meters vs 19.5 meters for the Objective. While in a lift served ski I wouldn't think twice, in a touring ski I am leary of wandering ski syndrome on the flats. It is one thing I do not appreciate about the S-112.
I also would prefer a 187 Tind to a 178 Objective.
Good luck Woods, figuring what ski to bring on a ski vacation to the French Alps is a good problem to have!
What about camber profile though?
That Tind looks quite banna-ish on the Asnes website:
https://www.en.asnes.com/produkt/asnes- ... komstfell/
Not a fully-rockered banana- but definitely appears to have less camber than the Objective, and definitely has an open tail compared to the Objective:
https://www.en.asnes.com/produkt/asnes- ... komstfell/
The Tind's profile looks more narrowly tuned towards deep soft snow- the Objective's profile looks more versatile- my prediction would be better edge hold on the Objective.
And as far as the wandering XC ski- skis with extreme sidecut certainly want to turn, even when XC skiing- but my experience is that skis that do not have camber (e.g. Tind) will not track at all on a firm base- they feel dead and smeary.
Cross-country AND down-hill skiing in the backcountry.
Unashamed to be a "cross-country type" and love skiing down-hill.
Unashamed to be a "cross-country type" and love skiing down-hill.
- Woodserson
- Posts: 2988
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2015 10:25 am
- Location: New Hampshire
- Ski style: Bumps, trees, steeps and long woodsy XC tours
- Occupation: Confused Turn Farmer
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
It looks like I'm going to pull this goddamm trip off. I can't believe it myself. I THINK, I'm not positive, but I THINK this is going to be my get-up:
178cm, BC, with Frankenstein Hardwires (X2 cartridges)
I pulled the wallet out for these puppies. WOOOOEEEEEE the pain!
Partner is going to be on smooth Vectors or a Salomon Q105-- I will be slower on the flats...
178cm, BC, with Frankenstein Hardwires (X2 cartridges)
I pulled the wallet out for these puppies. WOOOOEEEEEE the pain!
Partner is going to be on smooth Vectors or a Salomon Q105-- I will be slower on the flats...
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
Happy trails!
- lowangle al
- Posts: 2752
- Joined: Sat Jan 11, 2014 3:36 pm
- Location: Pocono Mts / Chugach Mts
- Ski style: BC with focus on downhill perfection
- Favorite Skis: powder skis
- Favorite boots: Scarpa T4
- Occupation: Retired cement mason. Current job is to take my recreation as serious as I did my past employment.
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
That looks like a good choice Woods. They should be good for everything but breakable crust. I guess you have skins for them.
Have fun you lucky bastard!
Have fun you lucky bastard!
- Woodserson
- Posts: 2988
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2015 10:25 am
- Location: New Hampshire
- Ski style: Bumps, trees, steeps and long woodsy XC tours
- Occupation: Confused Turn Farmer
Re: Spring skiing voyaging... which ski to bring?
I do have skins for them, an old pair of 70mm Glidelites I found in the basement. I bought a pair of skis off ebay a few years ago for $100 and he threw in skins, boots (my bro uses these boots now!), poles, a ski bag, I guess he gave it all up. Does anyone remember if the old Glidelites were nylon/mohair? They glide terrible.lowangle al wrote:That looks like a good choice Woods. They should be good for everything but breakable crust. I guess you have skins for them.
Have fun you lucky bastard!
But here's the real question!
Do I NEED skins for these? I have the scales AND I have a pair of ski crampons. Would I need skins? The scales are awesome they climb up anything here at the local humptydump hill as many here can attest to with the Vector BC. If it got too steep beyond this I could put in the crampons... Most climbing is done along old farming roads/hiking trails, and traverses. Are skins even necessary at this point or just extra weight? I'm in debate mode on this. Input welcome.