Imagine if the Internet had been around when Sherpa Snowshoes hit the Market!
Yawn...MSR-type snowshoes DO NOT create a perfect surface for all others who follow.
...Back in the "good old days" when I started winter hiking there were a lot fewer people out there and we had to expect to break out the trails.
Back in the "good old days" when I started winter hiking there were a lot fewer people out there and we had to expect to break out the trails.
It is still uphill both ways...At least you didn't say it was uphill both ways ...
I didn't say that because none of it was true (except maybe the beautiful part). They were made by Snowcraft (of Norway, Maine), stayed on well and didn't flop around because I used a properly-adjusted modified Howe binding, and had crampons mounted on them. (Wooden frame, neoprene and nylon decking and bindings.)What you didn't mention was those beautiful old Tubbs didn't stay on very well, flopped around, and had no crampons so going uphill was challenging.
IIRC, the modified Howes were the only bindings I ever used on the snowshoes. (One bought the snowshoes, the bindings, and crampons separately back then. There were purpose-built crampons available or one could use a half boot crampon.)I upgraded the bindings also, but as I was new to winter hiking, didn't know what to get, so those replacements weren't much better.
Back in the "good old days" when I started winter hiking there were a lot fewer people out there and we had to expect to break out the trails.
Yawn...
There is no reason to single out MSRs--most snowshoes on the market these days are narrow. The reason that hikers can get away with small low-flotation snowshoes is the high traffic results in the vast majority of trails being broken out and packed before one gets there. And smaller snowshoes are lighter...
Back in the "good old days" when I started winter hiking there were a lot fewer people out there and we had to expect to break out the trails. Larger snowshoes were more efficient and we had to hike in groups to have enough manpower to do the job. FWIW, I have a perfectly good pair of 13x28 flat bearpaws that I haven't used in a while.
So blame the narrow-trench trails on winter hiking being too popular and hikers wanting lighter-weight gear.
Doug
Yep! The modern gear (particularly in the modern conditions) has certainly made winter hiking easier and reduced the required skill level. But somehow we managed to do the same hikes without it...I think us "older" guys can laugh at alot of these debates. I still have my wooden modified bearpaws, which I used to break out alot of 4ks and for traverses up high on the ridgelines. I actually had someone who I asked to hike this year, reply " I cant hike until I get my new MSR'S" they now own Tubs with the crampon binding, but feel they cant hike with them. Man we used to edge and crawl our way up all kinds of steep terrain with nothing but rawhide and wood stapped to out feet, crampon bindings, no such thing, you had to constantly switch from snowshoes to crampons. Those where the days.
I think us "older" guys can laugh at alot of these debates. I still have my wooden modified bearpaws, which I used to break out alot of 4ks and for traverses up high on the ridgelines. I actually had someone who I asked to hike this year, reply " I cant hike until I get my new MSR'S" they now own Tubs with the crampon binding, but feel they cant hike with them. Man we used to edge and crawl our way up all kinds of steep terrain with nothing but rawhide and wood stapped to out feet, crampon bindings, no such thing, you had to constantly switch from snowshoes to crampons. Those where the days.
At the end of the day, I don't think it's any easier today than in the "good ol' days". With today's gear you can go alot farther in the same period of time which may actually increase the risk.
Yawn.Hiking in any season is every bit as tough now as it was then. Thanks to high tech gear I get more done but I still put out as much hard work.
Yawn.
This is simple conservation of difficulty--modern equipment makes each unit of hiking easier, so we do more units to preserve the overall difficulty. I doubt that the capacity of the human animal has changed much.
Doug
Yawn.
This is simple conservation of difficulty--modern equipment makes each unit of hiking easier, so we do more units to preserve the overall difficulty. I doubt that the capacity of the human animal has changed much.
Doug
....I think the commen denominator in succesfull winter hikers is drive and ambition, which in the end overcomes any gear issues. There are some guys and gals out here who hike alot and far, to be honest, I think thier success has less to do with equipment and more to do with grit.
Enter your email address to join: