Hyalite wrote: ↑Sun Nov 12, 2023 6:39 pm
Hello, this is my first post on Ttalk, so an intro. Living in Bozeman MT for the past seven years chasing snow after the prior 55 in S.E. Wisconsin. Saddened me to experience the shift in consistent snow coverage at the wonderful Kettle Morraine Forest, so I bailed and now have a nice long ski season here in altitude. My choices of where I ski have changed since arrival, from skate at a “club” atmosphere to solely seeking backcountry solace a few times a week up in Hyalite Canyon. Needless to say the terrain and snow are quite different than dear old Wisco and hence ski needs. Being older, retired, and on fixed income I prefer not to throw away money so I’m reaching out for some advice here.
I’m 63, stand 5’9” and weigh in low 150’s. Cut my teeth on waxable Splitkein “miler” boards but then over the years went the way of skate skiing. Now for the last several years I stick to the less traveled and either rarely groomed or never groomed trails that are rough in nature. I bought a set of 179 E88’s as find they work well for me in so much as I typically have climbing to do right out of the gate to get to where the rolling stuff begins, then a drop back down to the car. The e88’s climb great and glide better than they out to, but it’s more of a shuffle glide and certainly they don’t encourage me to try to get athletic with them due to the weight. Use Rotte 3 pin with Alaska boots.
What advice I’m hoping to garner here from anyone who can relate to this type of terrain and low moisture snow (lots of it) is what Asnes ski choices would compliment the e88’s. Of course ive read about the Gamme and the Nansen and I’m left drooling for a pair of good waxable skis that I can actually kick and truly glide on. Hoping to be able to cover more distance and all the while enjoy myself more for maintaining a decent fitness level year around. Lots of fresh snow, many times daily an inch or two, many times much more. If it gets real deep the e88’s work well on the downhills, but in certain ways it’s a lot to push through the snow, albeit so so stable.
Any thoughts on those two skis or others from Asnes that are waxable. I guess I’d like to stick with the same boot and binding combo, but I also have a new set of NNN-BC bindings and Fischer BC boots I could make use of if the ski would benefit from it.
Thank you all in advance for any sage advice. Brian
This is NOT sage advice. I think you bought to short of Excursion 88's. I did this with my first two XC ski purchases, and immediately turned around and bought larger pairs of each, and was happy. I didn't want a different ski, and I'm not sure that you do either in your environment. Length= float and glide, going up, down and on the flat. No other variable will give you both of those things. Your happy with the downhill performance of the E88, your underwhelmed with its float and glide, which is due to length. Asnes skis are made for Norwegian conditions, they're all narrower and will sink like a rock. Fischer has a made a XC ski for your area, and you already own it.
The only IF here is if there are prexisting tracks or you're reusing your own tracks. Then you won't need such a wide ski (but not a regular XC ski, either). Otherwise a wide ski like excursion 88 or the discontinued sbounds 112s, or something like that, and certainly longer, 179 for an sbound and 189 for a E88.
I actually have no experience with skiing in your area. I just now that I've been enjoying the narrower model of Traverse 78s in 8-16 inches of snow and know that the Excursion 88 is the next step up. Its also the widest XC type ski that is widely available, and there's probably a reason for that. None of the things you've said have made me think that you'd want a different type of ski or especially anything made by Asnes.