Can't wait until Extreme Tractor Tire tubing arrives....
They will have to make some of the trails wider for that & carrying them up will be a B', I guess you could try rolling them up in front of you. (Man slips and runs himself over, women are too smart to do this...
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Since winter hiking generally is detrimental to summer hiking as the monorail from all that winter use melts last.... We're probably best following the hike your own hike rule.
Aren't sledders just extreme glissaders who don't want to ruin their G-Tex pants? Is it my imagination or do Everest climbers not wear snowshoes? (So if you can't afford snowshoes or training for Everest, snowshoes are not part of the gear list.)
In the ADK's the State decides how deep the snow is before everyone must wear them. 6 - 8 inches of snow is not hard to walk in without snowshoes, it might be if you're short. (On the other hand my son was 9 last year when we did Pierce, about 70 pounds with 8.5 boots. That's probably a better weight dispersion ratio than me in MSR's at my weight, with gear about 4X. It was a Sunday & neither of us wore them due to all the Saturday traffic. Don't think I sank in more than four inches, he floated over the top. )
Postholer's help break up the monorail. The summer hikers love them. This board’s membership makes up what, 1% of all the hikers, generously speaking probably....
That said, I prefer being in control & rarely slide & even less frequently wear G-Tex pants. Field must be the premier sledding hill, several long steep straights, below Avalon, it's almost banked turns.
It seems like an oxymoron to go out and brave the winter elements on the highest peaks in the northeast & then whine because someone else was out there just like you but with different gear. In most cases, we start with bigger dreams than gear lists.
I just recently re-told my December trip when a friend & I crossed paths with Darren & his new snowshoes. Since we had bare ground at C-Notch, we left our snowshoes in the truck. As we climbed it got deeper until there was a couple of feet. At about the 2' level Darren passed us. I did not know it was him but when I got back, he mentioned us in his report, 'two guys without snowshoes, moving okay, they probably made it.' By the time we got to the junction at treeline, we were done. The Webster Cliff Trail had one 3-4 foot drift at the beginning. We saw a hiker with snowshoes go over it & we decided that without snowshoes or views, the trail sign was the end. Even in clear conditions, you would have had to drag us up the last 100 yards.
Who's at fault in a sledder Vs. hiker accident? It's the sledder unless you're on a hill meant for sledding. On hiking trails, it would be akin to the rear end accident, the back car is at fault over 99 44/100% of the time. (Maybe if you convince the officer, your drunk friend loves giving brake test & his brake lights don't work...or the guy in front is part of a fraud ring)