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megatron
| Joined: 11 Dec 2007 |
| Posts: 84 |
| Location: North Creek N.Y. |
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Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 5:05 pm |
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The signs are new, and if you are caught beyond them, you will get your pass pulled. The signs are the direct result of a male ski instructor and his female companion getting lost on the night of 2/16. They were trying to reach another friends home in the Chatiemac Club by skiing off of Chatiemac towards the west. What these people did not take into account, was that it was 3:30 when they left the trail, they had no safety equipment or skins, and bottom line is they had no clue of where they were going!!!
Get this, he must do "public service" education regarding not skiing OB, he was not terminated.

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skiguy14
| Joined: 06 Feb 2007 |
| Posts: 10 |
| Location: Ny |
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Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 10:23 am |
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i was in the chatty glades and saw the sp putting them up....i asked if somebody died or got lost and they said almost.....and that this wasn't the 1st time...
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SKIdds
| Joined: 27 Feb 2006 |
| Posts: 207 |
| Location: Lower Hudson Valley |
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Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 10:44 am |
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| Quote: |
| Also Wed morning I noticed a posting about skiing out of bounds and how it gets cold at night. |
Curious thing about those signs posted in the lodge and elsewhere. It says that Gore has numerous marked glades and three designated backcountry areas. What are those designated backcountry areas? I did see the posted signs in a couple of areas around the mountain indicating it was the ski area boundry. One of those was by the entry to what I'll call the Chatiemac backcountry, which was roped (and was sweet yesterday).
Maybe the designated baccountry areas are something different, but if those designated backcountry areas are places like the OB area off Chatty, it would seem the mountain has made those official in some way (hence the "designated"), and therefore skiable. I suppose they would only be skiable if the rope was down, but will it ever be down? It wasn't yesterday at about 12:30.
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SKIdds
| Joined: 27 Feb 2006 |
| Posts: 207 |
| Location: Lower Hudson Valley |
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Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 12:29 pm |
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OK, but if the signs in the base lodge are also new......they, as of yesterday, indicate that Gore has three designated backcountry areas. If Gore considers all OB backcountry areas as off limits, they certainly shouldn't claim them as designated parts of the resort in posted signs and materials. In fact, you would think that such a sign should indicate that skiing beyond area boundaries was forbidden, rather than claiming to have designated areas. I didn't take a picture of the signs in the base lodge, but I don't believe they indicated that the "three designated backcountry areas" were off limits (but I could be wrong), they just talked about the risks involved (how cold it gets, yad, yada, yada).
I guess I'm a little confused as to whether you can ski something like the Chatiemac backcountry without getting into hot water. No, you can never duck a rope, lest you get your ticket pulled (if you get caught). But if the rope isn't up, the current signs indicating the boundary let's you know you are going outside the posted limits of the resort, but I don't think they say "YOU CAN NOT GO HERE". Which, if they don't say that and Gore currently claims these to be "designated" areas, gets back to the question of whether the rope will ever be dropped, but if you want to claim to have them it would be silly to never have them skied.
But here is what I saw yesterday, and seem to be taking away from the conversation.
1. Gore now has posted, at certain locations on mountain, signs that indicate the ski area boundary. I don't recall that those signs said anything about your ticket being pulled if you went beyond said sign.
2. Gore currently has posted in the base lodge numerous signs that indicate that the resort has three designated backcountry areas, in addition to numerous glades. These signs seem to be intended to highlight the risks of skiing in such areas.
Maybe someone can post a picture of both of these signs to show whether they state that skiing beyond the boundary or in the three designated areas will result in having your ticket pulled. Otherwise, notwithstanding the rope issue, these facts wouldn't support that these areas are strictly off limits.
Actually, I hadn't been to Gore in more than 20 years and we had a blast yesterday. I will be back, and I just want to know where I can ski. I'll post some pics tonight from our day trip.
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megatron
| Joined: 11 Dec 2007 |
| Posts: 84 |
| Location: North Creek N.Y. |
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Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 1:23 pm |
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| SKIdds wrote: |
OK, but if the signs in the base lodge are also new......they, as of yesterday, indicate that Gore has three designated backcountry areas. If Gore considers all OB backcountry areas as off limits, they certainly shouldn't claim them as designated parts of the resort in posted signs and materials. In fact, you would think that such a sign should indicate that skiing beyond area boundaries was forbidden, rather than claiming to have designated areas. I didn't take a picture of the signs in the base lodge, but I don't believe they indicated that the "three designated backcountry areas" were off limits (but I could be wrong), they just talked about the risks involved (how cold it gets, yad, yada, yada).
I guess I'm a little confused as to whether you can ski something like the Chatiemac backcountry without getting into hot water. No, you can never duck a rope, lest you get your ticket pulled (if you get caught). But if the rope isn't up, the current signs indicating the boundary let's you know you are going outside the posted limits of the resort, but I don't think they say "YOU CAN NOT GO HERE". Which, if they don't say that and Gore currently claims these to be "designated" areas, gets back to the question of whether the rope will ever be dropped, but if you want to claim to have them it would be silly to never have them skied.
But here is what I saw yesterday, and seem to be taking away from the conversation.
1. Gore now has posted, at certain locations on mountain, signs that indicate the ski area boundary. I don't recall that those signs said anything about your ticket being pulled if you went beyond said sign.
2. Gore currently has posted in the base lodge numerous signs that indicate that the resort has three designated backcountry areas, in addition to numerous glades. These signs seem to be intended to highlight the risks of skiing in such areas.
Maybe someone can post a picture of both of these signs to show whether they state that skiing beyond the boundary or in the three designated areas will result in having your ticket pulled. Otherwise, notwithstanding the rope issue, these facts wouldn't support that these areas are strictly off limits.
Actually, I hadn't been to Gore in more than 20 years and we had a blast yesterday. I will be back, and I just want to know where I can ski. I'll post some pics tonight from our day trip. |
Call 518-251-2411 and ask to speak with the mountain manager. He would be happy to explain the "new policy" and while your at let him know what a great time you had, where you skied, and most of all all that you will definitely be back
Hope that helps!

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SKIdds
| Joined: 27 Feb 2006 |
| Posts: 207 |
| Location: Lower Hudson Valley |
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Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 2:35 pm |
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| Quote: |
| Call 518-251-2411 and ask to speak with the mountain manager. He would be happy to explain the "new policy" and while your at let him know what a great time you had, where you skied, and most of all all that you will definitely be back. |
Already did that, including the part about telling him where we skied and what a good time we had. Actually, I'm not sure who it was I spoke to but he indicated that backcountry areas were no longer designated on the trail map (did they used to be on the trail map last year?) and that there were no longer designated backcountry areas where skiing was permitted. He said if it isn't on the trail map you shouldn't ski it. He was going to look into the signs that currently hang in the base lodge that address the designated backcountry areas and make sure there was no information in them that conflicted with current policy.
Interesting that he should say "if it isn't on the map you shouldn't ski it". Yesterday we found a couple of well travelled glades and asked some of the people in them which glades they were, and they had a name...........but they must of been unofficial names as they weren't on the map.
While it is difficult for a mountain to maintain, espcially one that is state run, I love the idea of an open boundry policy, and an anything goes (within reason) policy within bounds as well.
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skiguy14
| Joined: 06 Feb 2007 |
| Posts: 10 |
| Location: Ny |
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Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 8:50 pm |
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gore should make a policy similar to the vt mountains.....you can ski anywherre inbounds as long as you enter and exit from an OPEN trail....
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