Anyone have any experience with these?
Backcountry Alpine Trekkers
This is my idea.
1) go out and buy these: K2 Shuks Anne Skis because they look awesome and are on sale. And because I like K2s.
2) buy the Trekker bindings
3) strap in my mountaineering boots
i'm not going to jump cliffs, go super fast, or drop into a 50 degree slope. looking for a cheap thrill and to get me the away from those snowshoes I hate wearing. thinking it would be sweet to use these for the long approaches in the Adirondacks.. depending how light they are and how much of a pain in the butt it would be to haul around on my back.
basically, i want to spend as little money as possible and get the most versatility out of the gear. i imagine using mountaineering boots to try to ski down a gully might be asking a little too much (?) but i don't want to buy cross-country gear just for approaches. i'd love to get into the skin-up, clip in, ski down with no lift-serv in sight.
Backcountry Alpine Trekkers
This is my idea.
1) go out and buy these: K2 Shuks Anne Skis because they look awesome and are on sale. And because I like K2s.
2) buy the Trekker bindings
3) strap in my mountaineering boots
i'm not going to jump cliffs, go super fast, or drop into a 50 degree slope. looking for a cheap thrill and to get me the away from those snowshoes I hate wearing. thinking it would be sweet to use these for the long approaches in the Adirondacks.. depending how light they are and how much of a pain in the butt it would be to haul around on my back.
basically, i want to spend as little money as possible and get the most versatility out of the gear. i imagine using mountaineering boots to try to ski down a gully might be asking a little too much (?) but i don't want to buy cross-country gear just for approaches. i'd love to get into the skin-up, clip in, ski down with no lift-serv in sight.