面白山 More Boarding

Got up around 7 this morning with the intention of going to Sendai Highland – a ski resort that’s about 35 minutes by train from here, and whose website makes no mention of skiing or snowboarding.

The site I use to get all such information (http://snowjapan.com), said that they are in fact a resort, and gives me all this information, including that they are 5 minutes from the nearest train station (八ツ森駅). The price is right, and it’s not a 2-hour trek like the last place I went to. (To which I went, I suppose.)

8:10 – Hop on train. ~35 minute ride ahead
8:50 – We haven’t stopped, but everyone carrying a snowboard (about half the people on the train) is still on, so hopes are up. Internet information is sometimes wrong, after all.
9:00 – All the boarders get off the train, at a station whose name I don’t recognize. There is no one to take your train ticket (they use the honor system a lot here, and don’t make a fuss if you’re dishonest. Especially if you’re a stupid 外人 – lit. foreigner, more along the lines of “white devil”.) I walk about 10 meters, following the other people, and I find myself at a ski lift. I may have my ski trip after all.

I had been planning on using the ATM in the town I was planning on visiting, but this town doesn’t have one. None of the businesses I’ve come across in Japan take credit cards, and ATMs close at about 6:00 PM, and don’t open until about 9:00 AM. (I thought the point of an ATM was that it doesn’t need to go home and eat dinner with its family. I can understand them being closed if there are a lot of muggings, but this is Japan.) I’m told the nearest ATM is two towns (and train stops back the way I came), so I keep my ticket, and just hop on the next train back.

I get back to the resort Omosiri-yama (面白山) with money around 10:00, get a rental, a coin locker, and I’m on a lift by 10:10.

I fell a lot on my first run, but after that, I fell maybe 30 times the rest of the day. I played it pretty easy at first, getting warmed up, and then I decided to try and hit the powder (of which there was A LOT). There were these little hills I guess you’d call them, lining the runs, and just stacked with powder, so monkey see other boarders doing this, monkey try. They’d get up the velocity and either try to go up and jump to the other side, or just come back down with a huge velocity. A lot of crashing, but to my surprise, it’s soft and cushy! There is no pain – only cold powder spraying your face and getting in your coat.

I spent most of the rest of the day on the intermediate and advanced runs where I got a lot of powder experience. The speeds and slopes I can handle are really really picking up, and I felt really good on a lot of the runs.

Biggest achievements:

  1. Improved speed and balance.
  2. Standing up parallel to the course instead of standing up, stalling, and then turning the board.
  3. No yard sales.

Next weekend I’m taking some friends back, because it’s super close, and really affordable, and great slopes and snow.

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上山 Yardsale!

I have spent a good amount of time the last couple of days either eating powder or tumbling down the mountain, and the excitement had to be measured on a logarithmic scale.

Wednesday I talked to Keith and he said that he was going skiing with a bunch of friends Thursday through Friday, and I was welcome to tag along, and so I called Collin (a kid I know from Wyoming) to see if he was interested. Keith was planning to go to the town, spend the night, ski, sleep, ski and come back, but Collin and I decided we’d try to get there in time to hit the slopes, and then spend the night, go again, and then come back. Unfortunately, it was about 1:00 AM when we got everything together, and had to catch a 6:30 train.

Little sleep that night – too excited, and no sleep on the train. We get there around 10, get everything in order, get geared up and go for it. The night before I read an online “tutorial” on snowboarding, but that can only “prepare” you so much. I (admittedly a little recklessly) ignored the tutorials suggestion, and just jumped on the beginner course. A lot of wipe-outs, goggles and hat flying everywhere, but I figured the best way to learn is try it, do your best, and get my hindquarters handed to me by the mountain.

By the end of the day, I was going down the intermediate run (very slowly and wiping out a lot), but I was enjoying myself. We got some food and checked into the hotel. Speaking of which, the room we got was enormous and way way better than our apartments. Also, very Japanese.

Second day, and lots of Tylenol and Ibuprofen later, we get on the mountain just as they open, and I’m starting to go a lot faster, and catching about 1/8 the number of edges as I was the day before. Go up to the very top (all intermediate runs), and the view is spectacular. Almost as beautiful as the Rockies, but not quite.

We had to stop around 3:30 to get our rentals in and catch the last bus at 4. We get home around 7, and I stuffed my face, went to bed, and then when I woke up, all my joints had turned to bone.

Will I do it again? Absolutely. As much and as often as my body can afford.

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上山 Snowboarding

I’ve been saying all break that I was going to go skiing/snowboarding, but I’m actually going to be going tomorrow. Around 4:00 PM this afternoon, I called a friend and we made plans to spend the next couple of days in 山形 (Yamagata) skiing/snowboarding.

It’s about $150 US for transportation, a day of snowboarding with rentals, a hotel, another day of snowboarding, and then transportation back. I don’t think that’s too bad relative to the JASSO scholarship.

I feel like a total nerd, but I actually went online and read a tutorial on snowboarding before packing my backpack and getting some shut-eye. We leave for the train station in about four and a half hours, and we should be on the mountain by 9:30 or so. Exciting!

If I’m still alive, I will post pictures.

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松島 Christmas

I guess it was two days ago I was talking to my friend Keith about holiday plans, when he invited me to go to Matsushima with him and some other kids. The plan was to leave at about 3:45 AM that night on bike to see the sunrise on the beach. It sounded like a reasonably fun adventure, and I’ve heard a lot of great things about Matsushima, so I said I’d go. I woke up at noon that day, so I figured I’d just stay up until it was time to leave, but in retrospect, it would have been better to get some sleep.

The downward spiral:

Around midnight, Keith called and told me that we’d be leaving around 2:45 instead, because Kurnia (a friend of ours from Indonesia) would be coming with us. Mind you, Kurnia had just learned to ride a bicycle about a month before. We leave the dorms on time, and everything looked good for the first half-hour or so.

We missed the turn onto the road we had planned on taking for the majority of the journey, but Keith said he was pretty sure he knew a more scenic alternate path, and we had planned for a little bit of padding time-wise. We decide to take a chance.

Around 4:00, we get pulled over by the police. We passed them while they were driving the opposite direction, and they had slowed to a stop, but we just rode past them, thinking they were just letting us by (the road was very narrow). They turned around and caught up with us about 200 meters later, and it was a little interesting trying to explain why four foreigners are up at four in the morning biking to another city in the freezing weather, but we got by. Again I was surprised at how much communication could take place between us and the native Japanese-speakers, and it answered my question about how polite the police are. (It turns out that they use the informal when speaking to us.) They asked for our foreigner and bike registrations, and took down all of our information. About 30 minutes later, they let us go; we never had the impression that we were in trouble and they were really friendly.

The getting lost continues and Kurnia can’t keep up, so we each take turns biking with her behind the others.

Around 7:00 Keith finally realizes where we are, and that we’re about 6 km from where we wanted to be, but seeing as it’s freezing and the sunrise is starting, we watch from the docks.

We ate at a McDonalds (one of the only places open), and got warm. The ride back took about 3 hours, putting us at about 7 hours of being on a bike. I feel bad that Kurnia had such trouble keeping up, but it also would have been nice to be able to go at a regular pace.

All in all, a bit of a Christmas Eve day adventure.

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