
Maybe it’s because a thin snow pack is all we have to work with sometimes in the northeast. Or perhaps it has to do with those “thin cover” signs we’d come across on the ski hill as kids…and the great fun we’d have leaving the adults behind while we jumped dirt patches and straight-lined large swaths of grass. Maybe it has something to do with the unique elements of the fall and springs buy xanax online for cheap seasons, which tend to coincide with a thin snowpack – migrating bird sightings, crowd-free skiing, a bike ride later in the day, etc.. Whatever the reason, there is no denying that there is something really, really fun about skiing on thin cover…
Here’s a snap from our last good day of skiing last season – well after most of the snow in the northeast melted away – way up in Arctic Norway.
-Brian


2 comments
Love this time of year, but it’s always a little sad to see snow cover go thin, November or April. Losing the snow trail is not good skiing. But this time of year we have the whole winter before us. Yeah!
Passed out in the corner
There is plenty of snow
She makes it every day
Ski it while you can