Fantastic report! Thank you!
Interesting- I have been testing Xplore with the Alaska XP vs Alaska BC- my experience is that the XP is more stable-responsive even in straight-ahead backcountry XC skiing due to the solid connection of the boot-binding when my foot is fully extended in stride.
Yesterday afternoon- I too had my first extended steep climb with the heel riser- wonderful to have when you want it!Going up:
The boot performed well, the heel riser of the XPLore binding works great with the boot, even if the feel is kind of bizarre if you are used to climging aid with hardboots.
Interesting- I wonder how the stiffness of the Rossi XP12 compares to the Alaska XP-Sometimes i asked myself if the ski is harder to squash to flatten the ski for grip with the XPlore sole.
I was concerned about this out of the box- but now that my Alaska XP is broken-in, the boot has a superb flex for XC and downhill skiing.
Wow. What ski were you using on this tour with the XP12?Going down:
I felt better on this than on a Garmont Excursion with G3 Targas and old skis...
I too am VERY impressed with the donwhill performance of the XP binding- and, I actually love the stiffer "hard" flexor. I find that the "hard" flexor offers just enough resistance to stiffen up everything to improve stability downhill, but it is not so stiff that it completely inhibits XC skiing and climbing.on the last day we had a really long moderately steep downhill on a skidoo trail, snow was fresh but a few skidoos passed. I tried the hard flexer on this descend. I was able to easily turn inside the tracks and even the traces of the ski do skis didn't put me off trail. I'm really surprised by the stiffness of this boot and i'm looking forward to take them for a day inbound and see how they perform...
I took the hard flexor out for a sustained steep climb yesterday, but otherwise I left the hard flexor in for several hours of glade and trail skiing. LOVE it. It may not be stiff enough for some, but it is ideal for my typical hilly BC touring!