Not Cheap Speed (Buying your way to easier ski touring).
- Have your water easily at hand. Either a Camelbak (very high maintenance in the winter) or a shoulder strap mounted bottle holder. That’s straight rando technology, and you look like a dork, but you’ll stay better hydrated than you’ve ever been before. I don’t have to ever stop to get a drink, I just grab the bottle off my shoulder and take a swig. No need to stop for even 5 seconds. Better yet, combine your hydration and your nutrition. We can only absorb about 200 calories per hour while exercising anyway, so what’s the point of eating a 600 calorie meal sitting in place (maybe getting cold, maybe needing to add/remove layers), when you could just mix some Hammer Fuel or Tailwind, or other 200 cal/hr drink mix into the water you’re already drinking? That’s not to say don’t stop and enjoy where you are (that’s the point of the game after all), but if you save 2 minutes of getting water out of your pack 5 times a tour (or 8-10 times if you’re actually staying well hydrated), and 10 minutes of eating in place, you’re 20 minutes ahead of the game.
- If you regularly do tours that involve bootpacks, get a pack with a rando-race style “hook and loop” ski attachment system. [...]
- This dumb/genius jacket:
http://www.skimolife.com/journal/201...sh-anorak.html
[...]
- Here’s where this gets serious and I commit TGR forum heresy. Lighter, maybe even (gasp!) narrower, shorter skis. [...]
- Light, high range of motion boots with a fast/easy mode change were the second biggest game changer for my own touring. I bought race boots (Scarpa Aliens) thinking they’d only be for racing, and they’ve become the only boots I use. At first they feel pretty weird skiing. I was used to the “crutch” of 4 buckle beef boots. It’s amazing how quickly you adapt, because now I ski just as fast in my “no buckle” boots. That is not the solution for everyone. Some (many?) people like to ski way faster and jump off of way taller things than I do. But if you milk the turns you earned, and largely keep your skis on the ground, you may be pushing too much boot up the hill. The biggest advantage to the high range of motion boot (examples of what I’m talking about - TLT 7, Arc Teryx Procline, Scarpa F1) is the gain in stride length. Not only because you get to push your leading foot further forward during a step, but because most of these type of boot have the rando race style toe pivot placement (4-5mm further back than they’re placed in a boot like a Mastrale). This gains you more stride from the rear foot. How much depends on the angle you’re skinning at (more on a lower angle skin track, way less on a steep one). But at that 14 degree “euro ideal” track as much as an inch per step. Maybe 4” when combined with the cuff rotation. 4” per step x 10,000 steps (which is conservative, but works out to about 5 miles of total distance traveled) = 3300’ feet of “free” distance you’ve gained for literally no extra effort. At that 14 degree skin angle that’s 380’ of extra vert. Throwing 1 lever to tighten the entire boot and go into ski mode saves a lot of time over tightening 3 or 4 buckles. Figure it saves 2 minutes per transition. During our theoretical 3 lap tour, that’s 12 minutes.
[...]
So here’s the rough time savings math on the above for our theoretical 3 lap tour --
Not messing with heel lifters - 14 minutes
Fast, practiced transitions - 15 minutes
Not adding/removing layers - 15 minutes
Pre planning your tour - 10 minutes
Efficient water/Food - 20 minutes
Rando Race Style ski attachment - 4 minutes
Not buckling / unbuckling 4 buckles - 12 minutes
Tip Strip Skins - 3 minutes
Total = 93 minutes saved + 380' of free vert from efficient skinning boots
At the low, casual, pace of 1000’ of skinning per hour that’s over 1800’ of extra vert you just traveled without actually doing the hard work of getting any fitter.
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