mid_gen;30460880 said:Not sure I'll bother with the alps any more tbh. Next year I'm either going cheap or going somewhere with better snow. It's expensive, the snow is increasingly crap, and it's too busy. Even with the poor conditions you were looking at 30 minutes between runs with the queues.
I'm either gonna go to Kopaonik in Serbia again (insanely cheap, good snow, but a bit of a trek on the transfer). Or just suck up the airfare and jetlag and go to Niseko again (expensive, but amazing snow, great food, onsens, and nearly empty slopes with no queues).
beh;30477305 said:It's speculation whether a helmet would have saved her given that information is scarce. Anyway, anecdotes aren't sufficient.
Certainly don't think it couldn't happen to me. Someone collided with me today even and my goggles and beanie were scattered.
Aye Amp34, scariest run of the day always at the end, everyone is tired, focus is elsewhere, hitting the same bottlenecks en masse which are cut up and scraped.
beh;30477465 said:Genuinely, I would love to be convinced because it would make it an easy decision. My reasons for not owning one aren't great, the expense to buy/hire, uncomfortable and frequently too warm to wear, and they're a bulky item to have in luggage. Maybe more modern helmets solve some of these issues?
How fast do you ski? Given the testing standards they don't seem to be intended for typical speeds. Is it a false sense of security that will lead to more risks being taken?
As with cycle helmets it's a interesting subject for research, although I do wear one as they're far less intrusive/inconvenient.
Do tell, "fraction of the cost" and "Switzerland" don't usually go in the same sentence. Bit underwhelmed by Saas-fee currently, although possibly just needing a clear sunny day.D.P.;30483659 said:even in Switzerland I now plenty of great ski destination that are a fraction of the cost of standard French resorts.
Aye, got a black eye from a t bar in Scotland years ago, people blocking the unloading area.D.P.;30483699 said:Plenty of existent research, bottom line is helmets save lives.
And IMO, its is a lot of the innocuous situation where helmets help a lot. Number of people I have seen bashed on the head by a chairlift or retracting t-bar etc. that would be fine with a helmet but had to go to hospital/airlifted out, slipped on ice in the car park due to hard ski boots, lost control on some hard ice even at very slow speeds.
beh;30483858 said:Do tell, "fraction of the cost" and "Switzerland" don't usually go in the same sentence. Bit underwhelmed by Saas-fee currently, although possibly just needing a clear sunny day.
Aye, got a black eye from a t bar in Scotland years ago, people blocking the unloading area.
Will have a look for next time, as much that I'm starting to feel self conscious that everyone seems to be wearing them these days.
I take it that everyone wears back protection too ...
“The helmet does a very good job at protecting against skull lacerations and skull fractures, but it doesn’t seem to have much effect on concussions or T.B.I.’s,” Shealy said, referring to traumatic brain injuries. “Our guess is that this is due to the fact that those injuries are occurring at such a high magnitude of energy that they overwhelm what a helmet can do for you.”
beh;30477465 said:Genuinely, I would love to be convinced because it would make it an easy decision. My reasons for not owning one aren't great, the expense to buy/hire, uncomfortable and frequently too warm to wear, and they're a bulky item to have in luggage. Maybe more modern helmets solve some of these issues?
How fast do you ski? Given the testing standards they don't seem to be intended for typical speeds. Is it a false sense of security that will lead to more risks being taken?
As with cycle helmets it's a interesting subject for research, although I do wear one as they're far less intrusive/inconvenient.
jpaul;30478292 said:Interesting point here I had not considered
but they are selling insurance too;
otherwise the stats they give are unsubstantiated in article, and lack detail.
some more genuine stats etc. the survey's they have done ask the injured parties if they have had alcohol/other recently breath testing on its way ?
For snow boarders wrist protectors+helmet seem recommended.
Lesson I have learned, with own ski's, is not to skimp on edge maintenance, after a few icey encounters in Brevant/G.Montets - accident prevention is better ...
izzop;30488657 said:Possibly a dumb question, but maybe Amp34 can confirm?
What is the North America/Canadian ski season?
Having had a quick look at the Canadian season it appears to start last week in November through to May. How good, or bad are conditions at both the start and end of this period?
I suppose the real question is, when are the best times to consider a skiing trip to Canada?
Thanks