The action figures are below Chair 23. I'm glad you didn't mention Coyote, it's still a secret 😂. A great run where a person can avoid the lines at Mill to stay mid mountaion from 3 to 5. Great narration! You know the mountain well!
You’re welcome! I revised this with the help of @srgskiing and the video parts are all up now. You can check it out on his channel if you want. Thanks for watching!
Yea not sure why he ripped sunshine glades, the winds are everything at mammoth, that area can get extremely epic wind buff, or be blown thin. It’s either or.
Thanks so much! I love your videos. You showcase the best of California (and sometimes Utah). I’m nowhere near as good as you, but I hope I get to your level at some point. I’m going to Squaw for the first time in a few weeks. I’m really excited!
Antelope Butte Ski Area in Wyoming, its where all the edits are from, its a pretty sweet little hill. We find a few good zones here and there haha@@waltysalamander
Besides the Gondola, Chair 9 is the only chair that can get you to any lodge on the mountain. Ironic how it is along the original ski run of Dave’s run back to Eagle Lodge as the original ski run on the mountain.
Nice overview! I'm surprised you mentioned the 9 -> 3 traverse but not the 5 -> 3 traverse to access the west side while avoiding Stump Alley. It's much more direct for anyone coming from the Canyon area. And while I agree with the recommendation to avoid Chair 25 / Sunshine in mid-winter, the picture changes entirely in the spring when that area is usually the first advanced terrain to soften in the morning.
Interesting. Phillipes is very steep, but I’ll have to check it out again. The sustained pitch is probably steeper at the top, but Head Chutes has a big vertical cornice.
@@waltysalamander Yeah, no worries. I don't really count cornice walls in run steepness. For instance, before Chair 23 (lived there 80-81). All the wipeout chutes had about 2+ turns of probably 55+ vertical cornices. Boy I miss that area but I do love the easier access of 23. Those wipeouts were much less skied back then and had maybe 5 feet lopped off of the top for the chair. It's possible they didn't lop off the top and it was just the built up pristine cornices that made it a bit higher. That top area where the lift exit is used to be roundish like the top of a huge ball. One other thing about those wipeout cornices I loved was the cornices terminated vertically at the top a lot and didn't hang over like a classic cornice wave. Probably the wind did that . But anyways, I loved how you could get a few vertical turns that felt freefallish or you could ski off an get 10+ feet of air. Sorry for rambling but I never forget how great that area was before 23. Thanks for the video, gonna it the Heads now, you inspired me. 🙂
@@ding-go That's so cool! I wish I could have snowboarded (well, I guess this was before snowboards) Wipeout and Dropout before 23! I'm glad I inspired you to hit Head Chutes; it's my favorite area on the mountain!
There are plenty of places in town. Close to the mountain St. Anton is probably the best for the price. Bridges is really good for direct ski in-ski out though. They have a boardercross competition in early March usually.
So they're only marked on ski patrol maps, but North and South Dos Pasos, the chute directly under Chair 14 and to the skier's left, exist. South Dos Pasos IMHO is the single gnarliest in-bounds run on the mountain. Also you didn't mention Upper Dry Creek. That's where I take friends who are trying to get comfortable on single blacks. Fun run, not crowded, and easy to lap from Chair 5.
Ha! Funny you should mention Dos Pasos. I actually am rewriting this script for a larger skiing youtuber, SRGSkiing. In that script, which will probably come out as a video in the next month, I do address it. North Dos Pasos isn't too bad, but you are correct that South Dos Pasos is incredibly hard. Super narrow and way steeper+thin cover almost always. By Upper Dry Creek, I'm assuming you mean Dry Creek because Upper Dry Creek is actually a double black and pretty hard.
@@waltysalamander By Upper Dry Creek I mean whatever Dry Creek run is to the right off of Chair 5 between Triangle and Rooster Tail. That's just a single black.
Upper Dry Creek has not been on the trail map since about 2007. Upper Dry creek starts to the left of the upper Gondola Terminal, if you are facing the mountain. You access the run from Climax. Upper Dry Creek to Dry Creek at Chair 5 or Chair 3 down to Lower Dry Creek.
Learning to ski. My itinerary 2024. Before breakfast I do a loading dose of two electrolyte fastchews from salt stick and drink 1000 ml plain water in 250ml chugs. Main lodge has two microwaves in a common area or buy breakfast 7-11 AM. Also, free filtered water refills near microwaves. Then, its chair 11, for ever. After 11 AM = Grilled cheese on sourdough, add tomato, add ham, no fries. I wash it down with FREE hot water 50% and sugar free red bull 50%. If it gets super congested at chair 11, then chair 12 on repeat.
I find that on 9/10 days at mammoth, bouncing between 5 and 23 is the play. Dropout / wipeout chutes seem to get some of the best snow on the hill, the wind blows it all right over the ridge into those runs.
@@SRGSkiing Wow! I am honored by this opportunity! I am, however, in high school and am very busy with school work, swim practice, and being in a band. But I am 100% interested! If the job entails writing something like this video once or every other week, I'd definitely want to do that!
"An Insider's Guide"? Somewhere in there the narrator says "in my 8 seasons of skiing Mammoth". It took me 8 seasons to find my way around without a trail map. I skied Mammoth from 1968 until 1992 when I moved to Idaho. This video makes the mistake of trying to be all things to everybody and winds up being confusing. it would be far better if it were broken down for beginner, intermediate and advanced skiers. The best advice I can give to any advanced skier is "head to the top" if the Gondola is open. Break early for lunch and you can stay one step ahead of even a weekend crowd. It's a fabulous mountain. I've skied all over the West and the only mountain I would place above Mammoth for challenge and terrain is Jackson Hole!
I like that idea of breaking it down for Beginners, Intermediates, and Experts. Also, yes, 8 seasons isn’t THAT much, but I’ve done almost every trail and have memorized most of the map, plus a lot of the unnamed lines (pattons, scooter pie, cowboys, dos pasos, etc.)
Spot on about breaking for lunch at 11 or 11:15 to avoid the lunch crowd and your back on it while the crowd heads for lunch. Busy weekends, head for Chair 12. President Day and Bankers week, head for Chair 12.