tkarhu wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 1:42 pm
@lilcliffy For sure that is true, too! Do you get big dumps of snowfall where you ski? I have got the impression that you tend to prefer deep snow skis, for example Amundsen and Combat NATO.
For me, the Green Man Gammes (previous model) have worked well in ~30 cm powder.
Yes- we do get big dumps of snow- we get coastal storms, but are far enough inland- and high-enough- that storms that produce heavy wet snow/ice/freezing rain in coastal NB/NS/ME- produce big snow events here. We are also far enough inland that we get western flows as well. It rains or snows almost every day of the year here in the Central Hills- in winter fresh snow almost every day, which consolidates- punctuated by big snow storms.
And I should say that I think the Gamme 54 is a superbly stable in deep snow- the Gamme 54 is a remarkably versatile BC-XC ski. I just think it is important for one to acknoweldge that one needs a lot of open terrain to truly take advantage of the extra sidecut and rocker that the Gamme has over the Amundsen. I do love cranking a wide-open turn on the Gamme when I get a chance (as I do on the Amundsen as well)- but, most of the time I am using step/striding/jump turns with both the Gamme, and the Amundsen.
I use both the Gamme and the Amundsen as distance-oriented trail skis in hlly terrain- constant transitions and steep, twisty descents.
If the snow is good for glade skiing- I take a more downhill-oriented ski.
I think that- at least below treeline- many reach for the Gamme over the Amundsen, because their geometry makes them "easier to turn"- when neither of them are "easy to turn" in steep tight terrain. And the Amundsen is even more stable; a better trail-breaker (especially in crust); and a more efficient XC ski in all conditions. The Amundsen is probably overlooked by some- when it perhaps shouldn't be.
If I was on a distance-oriented tour- above treeline- with loads of room to turn- I would definitely want the Gamme vs the Amundsen.