West Coast USA

Po’ Boy Seeks Thrills: Fastest Used Ski Under $300

With my Line Mavericks in need of a long stint with Dr. Chris in the ski hospital, the time to add a new weapon to my quiver was finally upon me.

After telling the Canyon Lodge Demo Shop staff my sob story of a desperate, broke skier in need of some gear (myself) they were kind enough to pull back the curtain on their secret stash of last years high performance skis they’d apparently sell me for short money.

“I’ll even give you the employee discount on the standard rental rate… take as many out as you want, and let me know what you think,” said Charlie, the shop’s manager.

Hell yeah.

Picking a new set of skis is not a task to be taken lightly.  I had my last pair almost eight years, and put thousands of runs underneath them.  They’ll see duty again too, once they’re back from the shop.

But now that I’ve spent almost two decades on two planks, more than my share of time riding with PSIA cert’s and NASTAR racers, plus this season trying to keep up with my unabashed roommates, the stakes are even higher.

I don’t want to limit myself with a basic, do-everything-with-mediocrity ski.  I need something that’s going to be a challenge to ride, something fierce.  Basically, if I can find its top speed, I’ll leave it on the shelf.

Enough psyching myself up, on to the comparo.

•••

On this day in late January, 2012 I rode four pairs of skis in the following order; the K2 Aftershock 181, the Völkl Unlimited AC50 177, the Salomon Enduro 177 and the Nordica Hot Rod Tempest 178.  They were ex-demo 2011 models, so they all had a few nicks on the topdecks but the bases were all Drake Lake smooth.

Don’t forget, last year was a record for snowfall here in Mammoth, so these demos wouldn’t have seen half the rocks we have to deal with in 2012.

Each ski was run over a wax roller before I took it out, and the DIN on my bindings was always 7.  And for the sake of full disclosure, I was rocking my Salomon Sensi-Fit boots from 2004 complete with structural cracks and very tired buckles.

Yeah, I know.  Well if I could afford new boots I wouldn’t be shopping for skis in the barging basement of the rental shop, would I?

What matters is that each ski was tested with the same shitty boots… so journalistic integrity remains intact.

I did no less than four runs on any one ski and did at least one all-bumps, one all-fastblast, one hoon run and one mixer to get a complete feel for the ski.

I’m also writing these evaluations before purchasing one of the skis, and they were all being offered to me at the same price with bindings.

One more disclaimer; don’t forget I’m looking not looking for a rounded, easy all-mountain ski.  I’ll have that when my Mavericks are fixed.  I’m testing these skis to see which is the scariest, most demanding, Shao Khan-badass on the mountain and which ones couldn’t blow the scarf off a snowman.

Test Metrics

Rider: Scrawny but strong 6 foot, 155-pound male.  Competent skier on all terrain.

Dateline: Mammoth Mountain, California.  Late January 2012.

Conditions: Heavy, well packed snow.  Some pockets of thin powder, some pockets of thick, wet “Sierra Cement.”  Good-not-great snow coverage all around.  Excellent visibility.  Agreeable temperature.  Resort was not crowded.

 

4th: Salomon Enduro (177)

Kickass

• Lightweight

• Easy to bump n’ jump

Scheiße

• A little too light… feels flimsy

• Couldn’t really get handling dialed in

• Not particularly stable at high speed

Coming in least-beastliest is the Salomon Enduro.  I wanted to ride this ski because what I really wanted was a 2012 Salomon Shogun, and for some reason I thought this would be similar.  I also liked the plain-black design and how light it was to pick up.

It felt so flexy and playful I started with a hoon run, pulling 360’s and big snow-throws with the tail.  I’m not sure if this particular pair had dull edges or if I just wasn’t vibing with the sidecut, but I was actually having a lot more trouble spinning these skis than I thought I should.

On my fastblast run, they ran alright up to about 35 MPH but started acting skittish when pushed.  Carving was adequate, just.

The Enduros came into their own in the bumps.  In fact, I reckon they out-shone every other ski here in terms of how easy they were to hop and huck through the heavy moguls under the mid-section of Chair Sixteen.  But this just wasn’t enough to redeem their lack of confidence at speed.  I felt like they were letting me down when I needed real performance and weren’t challenging me enough at low speed.  For that reason, the Enduros are coming up fourth.

3rd: K2 Aftershock (181)

Kickass

• Carved harder than grandpa tearin’ the turkey on Thanksgiving

• Extremely versatile

Scheiße

• Poor balance… I couldn’t get my weight to the right places.

• Clattered like the Tin Man on a Flexible-Flyer

• Dorky Power Rangers paint scheme

I rode the K2 Aftershocks first because of a solid recommendation from Charlie.  He reckoned this ski would give me the speed I was looking for while still being versatile enough to have fun on the whole mountain.  I have to admit, I left the shop with these feeling a little unsure for no other reason than that they’re just so damn cheap looking.  K2 makes great skis, but they are seriously lacking in the design department.  With weird textures and a super-90’s color combo, you certainly won’t be hanging these on your wall when you retire them.

Interestingly enough, it took me the longest to get dialed in on these skis.  I took a few more runs with the K2s than the others for the same reason you sit through a Hugh Grant movie to get to second base… I knew there was something sweet to be had, I just had get comfortable first.

Luckily the K2s and I connected before the credits rolled, and we made sweet giant-slalom symphonies as I wound them out so hard I could have fallen asleep at my lean angle.

Despite having such a long footprint, the turns I was able to lay out with these things were unbelievably fun.  But where that footprint let me down was in the bumps.  The 181 centimeter length was just a little to long for me, and I could never really hustle them around obstacles like I’d need to on the double-blacks off the top of the mountain and in the trees back east.

If you’re about to scroll to the bottom of this post to comment “hey asshole, you can’t claim to review a ski that isn’t sized properly”, save your proverbial breath.  I’ll state again here that I’m reviewing used skis from 2011… and therefore only have the options of what’s on the lot.  The K2s were so popular that they were sold out of all but one pair, the 181s I had a go on.  Since I do feel like the K2s have been shortchanged in this review by being too big for me, I think this is worth mentioning again.

The carves on this ski were so satisfying that I almost bought them despite the Fast & Furious paint scheme and oceanliner length, but the final neg that made me hang them up was an unbearable clatter they produced at just about any speed.  Could have been loose bindings, the front out-extending my weight, or just ski gremlins living between the woodcore, but for some reason these skis just sounded like an old Land Rover full of aluminum cans driving down a cobblestone road every time I got off the chairlift.

2nd: Nordica Hot Rod Tempest (178)

Kickass:

• Good length-to-weight ratio

• Stiffness

• Speed

Scheiße:

• Bindings somewhat lacking… a bit vague

• Durability- long term tests seem to indicate these lack staying power

The Nordica Hot Rod Tempest was a ski I hadn’t heard of until I saw it sitting on the demo rack.  But a quick search on my smartphone indicated these things had a solid reputation as a high-speed all-mountain expert-level snow weapon.

With cool graphics and a viable length, I had to have a go.

These were the last skis I rode of the day, and I had to bat my eyelashes a little to get the demo shop to fit and wax them for me forty minutes before lift closing.  But they did, and it was on.

After coming off the lift I pumped out a few meters of skating and headed straight into a fastblast run.  The skis exploded with acceleration and held good stability all the way up to just shy of 60 MPH, a speed I was mostly limited to by traffic.

In the bumps the Noridcas required a little effort to negotiate, but the experience was rewarding.  As far as hooning it up, I didn’t get into it much because of how icy the snow was at this point in the day.  But based on how easy it was to jump on these things and fly I reckoned the Hot Rods could live up to their name with little practice and confidence.

I caught last chair up Twenty Two and headed down the double-black Face Runs.  These skis were the only ones I had the privilege of testing on terrain this steep, and the feedback was pretty solid.  I really had to pay attention to keep them from getting away from me, and my legs were absolutely burning by the end of the run, but these things got me through some very steep, very icy, tree-splattered bumps in a low-light situation.

A really solid ski for the money, and the second meanest in this day’s test.

1st: Völkl Unlimited AC50 (177)

Kickass:

• Fast, fast, fast.

• Stiffer than a Buckingham Palace guard when Kate Middleton goes out for a swim in her royal bikini.

• Beautiful topdeck.

Scheiße:

• Too heavy for the timid

• Difficult to hustle through the backcountry

 

The Völkl AC50s were that chammak challo you spot when you walk into a party.  All your friends tell you to stay away, but you’ve heard that before haven’t you?  You know you’ve gotta make a pass before you bounce, just need a little liquid courage first.

“You won’t like those, they’re too stiff.  That’s an extremely aggressive ski,” said Charlie in his worldly sounding British accent as I ran my finger down the titanium-and-woodcore spine.

But the length was perfect, the topdeck was finished in a jaw-droppingly sexy stained wood design, and it didn’t hurt that they were made auf Deutschland.

After a little deliberation the Völk’s were waxed and ready.

I swung them over my right shoulder, they were too heavy to rest on my dented left, I clipped in and skated up Chair Sixteen.

I took my time dialing in on these skis.  When I got off the lift I started with a gentle cruise, getting a feel for the sidecut and weight.  Charlie was right; these were some aggressive-ass planks and frankly I’d be able to do a lot more with them if I had a little girth on my bones.

But as I skated around and got in tune with the heft, I started hustling them and beginning the real test.

The fastblast was first.  Coming in hot off the top of Chair Five I was met with a dangerously enticing combination of a traffic-free face run and the Vishal-Shekhar playlist on my headset.

Seeya later.

I skated out two hard pumps and aired in off the drop, hitting the ground with about twice as much speed as I had expected.  In an attempt to stay in control I carved out to the right, hard to the left, then back right so hard I felt like I could have skied back to the drop-in.

Leaning forward as hard as I could, I struggled to keep my paltry mass over the front of the skis before they had their way with me and fed me a faceful of granular hardpack.

Carrying speed through carves was almost too easy… I had to throw snow a few times just to keep my velocity within a maintainable range.

After a dramatic hockey stop at the bottom of the lift, I was left out of breath and completely out of energy.  My legs were on fire and I was thankful Chair Five had some of the best padding of any on the mountain.

Next up were the bumps.  Heading the other way off the chair this time I aired in to Dry Creek, a naturally occurring halfpipe loaded with moguls and rocks the size of Woolly.

With the snow coverage as skimpy as it is these days, this run makes you feel like Luke Skywalker hustling down that back-door alley on his way to blow up Death Star.  Just swap aluminum trussing for rocks and TIE fighters for lost gapers struggling to falling-leaf their way to safety.

The skis responsiveness was clutch ripping around the first few obstacles, but their weight took their tool on me quickly and I was gasping for breath by the fifth turn.

Control was being quickly exchanged for speed in a devil’s transaction that all skiers and boarders have known at some point.

I fought to stay on top but now gravity was running the show and the skis were playing second fiddle- I was just some idiot in the back strumming a piccolo.

I caught air off a particularly icy mogul and landed hard on top of another… tore through that and started blazing my own b-line through two more little bumps as I came crashing into a flat section seeking salvation.

Not being able to remember the last time I had had to stop mid-run to catch my breath, I decided then and there that the Völkl AC50 would be my next ski.

Fast, durable and obviously difficult to master, these wood-and-titanium monsters forged in hell’s own ski factory (actually located in Straubing, Bavaria) would help take me to the next level as a skier and be sure to offer up enough near death experiences to keep me interested in the sport for the foreseeable future.

Lassen Sie uns dies tun!


Death of the Drought: First Powder Day of 2012

The first lines of “Gimme Shelter” grew louder- my phone alarm was hassling me to initiate go-mode for another day.

I rolled off my bed and onto the floor, where I got through my morning ritual of three minutes of planking followed by a hundred push-ups.

You know, for when I come out of the shower and our hot neighbors are over. …I mean, endurance on the slopes.

Pathetic excuse for a workout completed, I b-line it for the coffee machine.  My roommates and I had just ordered four pounds of ultra-premium coffee from a shop in Lanton’s hometown of Fresno.  He’s our resident caffeine connoisseur, so I was keen to sample our new stash.

But before I could scratch my ass I passed Chris in the hallway, who was grinning like he had either just got laid or setup a hilarious prank on one of our cohabitants.  Either way, I wanted details.

His response indicated something I hadn’t considered.

“Have you looked out your window?”

I always slept with the blinds down, in case employees from a rival resort were plotting a drive-by, so my answer was no.

“Dude, go open the door!” yelled Stephan from his bedroom.
I complied, and quickly identified the source of my roommates jubilation.

I was looking through a whitewashed winterscape where our dusty front lawn had been just twenty-four hours prior.

Roads were impassible, cars were buried beyond recognition, and I pitied the dog who had to take a leak.

“Oh, it’s on.”

It was a Monday, I had the day off, and we had a shitload of snow with flakes still falling out the sky as god sneezed inch after inch of powdery goodness on our previously-dry mountain.

Satisfied with my assessment of the situation I turned around and yelled an open inquiry as to which of my fellow Apartment Five residents were free to ride.

Chris and Stephan replied in the affirmative and commenced whipping up a beast breakfast of eggs, sausage, and high octane coffee.

The Samurai was loaded and moving half an hour later.  We rocked up at Canyon Lodge before quarter-past-eight.
Suited and booted shortly after, I dialed back the DIN on my bindings to allow for easier ejection.

The snow that falls in our region is known as “Sierra Cement” for a reason- it’s a thick, wet, heavy surface that can grab a ski and tear an ACL quicker than you can say “Dude, watch this!”

I knew my Line Mavericks were going to have trouble in this stuff, but I was hoping the massive flex factor and twin-tip design would compensate for the skinny footprint.  I was wrong.  The slim all-mountain park skis that kicked ass on hardpack were struggling to stay afloat in powder, and I was taking dives left and right.

And since it was still snowing, visibility was an absolute joke.  This picture isn’t a new Photoshop canvas- it’s Chris and everything else you can see.  Taken from the top of Chair Five, you can usually see endless mountain peaks from this position.  Not on this day.

My luck changed a bit in the early afternoon, when Chris had to duck into his office and offered to let me have a go on his pontoon-sized Blizzard One’s.

It felt like stepping out of a Triumph TR-6 and into a Nissan GT-R.  The fat powder ski absolutely massacred the terrain, and I went from zero to hero in one run.  Still took a few spills, but he way the Blizzards were floating over the snow made them so easy to manage that I felt like I could have done another eight hours on them.

Just look at the picture, wider is better!

We chased the liftline of the infamous Chair Twenty Two where Stephan and I swapped leads as we hucked wind lips and rubbed shoulders with trees.

Legs pumping like pistons I blasted over and around massive moguls.  Fun as hell, but quickly fatiguing.  I sought refuge in a flat piece of snow, and slid out of the bumps as soon as I had eyes on a steep fastblast section I was running parallel to.

Picking up another twenty kilometers an hour at least I straightlined it for a huge lip, bent my knees and limbered out for lift.

But when I made contact with the snow again, I realized my landing zone was softer than a pillow made of baby bunnies- as I somersaulted through the powder and righted, stunned, covered in snow, to cheers and laughs from the chairlift overhead.

With a salute to the crowd and a double head-shake to myself I got up and headed for Mammoth’s central lodge- The Mill.  Pulled pork nachos were needed to repower for the last couple hours of ridetime.

Next time you’re skiing Mammoth, go to The Mill and get the pulled pork nachos.  It’s a beastly three passenger meal that could psych you through even the gnarliest of conditions.  Tell them I sent you and they probably won’t spit in it.

Just kidding.

By the time we broke lunch we had added two people to our entourage; our neighbor Krista and Stephan’s friend Birdie.

Krista’s skis looked like they had just been unearthed at an archaeological dig.  With a ridiculously skinny profile and what looked like the first interpretation of parabolic shaping I estimated their origin at the mid 1990′s.  When I made my observation known, she told me she had borrowed them from a friends mom before coming out here.

Props.  I had been too much of a pussy to bring my dad’s Kneissl 200‘s out west, a decision I was regretting now that this sheila was about to chase us through waist deep powder on skis only slightly more advanced.

Krista gave the pow a fair effort, but she was working her tail off in conditions that had stifled my 2005 all-mountain skis and was knackered after just a few runs.

I tried to show her some moves but mostly ended up looking like a jerk- there was no way her ancient Dynastars could replicate the lines I could rip effortlessly on Chris’ brand new Blizzards.  She split and we headed back toward Chair Twenty Two to end the day with a guaranteed near death experience.  Birdie stuck with us as we rode the speedy lift over cliffs, thick trees and avalanche chutes.  With the light getting low and fatigue rearing its ugly head, it occurred to me that this was probably not the best chair to be on fifteen minutes before closing.

Of course there was always the Blue bail-out run, but everyone knows that’s for pussies.

So we dropped in to the face and gave it hell.  The surface was brutal; the thick snow was starting to get an icy covering that made the moguls rock-hard and therefore a massive pain in the ass to negotiate.

We had all come off more than a few times before we were halfway down.

I emerged from the trees first, and glanced back just in time to see Stephan stack it over a lip.  He barely had time to set himself up for recovery when Birdie came down on him and stamped him a foot down into the snow.

She laughed and pulled herself out, but Stephan was buried in the Sierra Cement and was too tired to extract himself completely.  The poor bastard dragged himself and his new Burton Mr. Nice Guy through forty meters of thick, wet snow before getting back to the hardpack where he could stand up and ride.

But we made it to the employee dinner at Canyon Lodge with all of our gear and limbs intact, so I’ll chalk it up to one hell of a season opener.


Skiing Elephant Races Man With No Legs

As an employee of Mammoth Mountain’s Host Department, I work closely with our skiing mascot Woolly the mammoth.  As such, I get the insider information on his antics and will occasionally share them here, that is when they’re appropriate to print (Woolly’s been known to drop a filthy strip club story in the locker room when he gets back from a weekend in Reno).

After the big snow of mid-January, the 24th was the first real bluebird groomer day.  The ‘cats had had their chance to comb most of the runs, there wasn’t a cloud in the sky, and wind was low- conditions were perfect for Woolly to put on a clinic and have a ripper of a day.

He started off with two cups of Café Corazon coffee; a special blend infused with something aptly named the Mad Man bean- packing triple potency and carrying a warning not to be drunk straight.

By the time he was riding the gondola to his dressing cave at Canyon Lodge, his heart was already pumping nearly twice resting rate and his giant pupils were dilating to the size of tires.

The gondola swayed to a halt and Woolly squeezed out of the tiny door.  He took the long way to his cave, stopping by the rental shop and then photography office to hit on the girls working there and there respectively.  For an anthropomorphic animal who can’t talk, that guy sure does have swagger.

Down in the host office Woolly learned he’d be riding with Rick, a fast skier from Ohio and one of his favorite guides.  They suited and booted, made their way through the mob of kids and tourists clamoring with photos of the famous pachyderm and headed for Chair Sixteen.

But making it up the first lift ahead of schedule, Rick asked Woolly where he wanted to go.

“Wind doesn’t look bad on Chair Five… think you could get down Solitude?”

Woolly reckoned he could.

At the top of Five the wind was howling.  Woolly held his ears to avoid getting shot down a precipice while he posed for pictures.  When the crowd died Rick pointed down the hill and yelled through the bluster;

“HEAD FOR CHAIR TWO!  LET’S GO!”

Woolly hung his skis over the run and waited for wind.

Nothing…

Nothing…

Then after a five-second eternity a beastly gust blew Woolly’s body forward and his fur back.  He took off like a shot, guzzling air and calories to accelerate harder.  Tucking down to assemble some semblance of aerodynamics he pressed his shins against the front of his boots to hold a carve.

Woolly was amassing speed like a runaway locomotive.  Giant ears pinned back, eyes starting to tear, he stared unblinking as he searched for bumps in the snow to unweight and turn on.

BANG!  Woolly caught a lip and was airborne and twisting, re-arranging his skis to shoot off at a forty-degree angle.

He landed and connected, leaning into the next carve like it was a cute chick sitting next to him in the back of his roommate’s tiny SUV.

Behind him, a faint but familiar voice screamed in desperation;

“WOOLLY!  LEFT!  LEFT!  LEFT!”

Woolly had half a second to decide if that meant to go left or that there was an obstacle to the left.  Unable to move his massive head for fear of wind resistance overcoming his weight and throwing him to the ground he went with Option C and straightlined it.

A hundred meters later the warning became clear- he was to turn left at the intersection he was bearing down on at full noise.

Woolly re-weighted again and leaned into a long, satisfying carve that would have impressed a GS racer.  He was riding a pair of Line Mavericks- too skinny for powder but plenty grippy for a groomer day like this.

At the bottom of Chair Two Woolly was out of breath, and had to lean on the seven year old getting their picture taken with him to keep from falling.

Woolly rode up Two and danced around for his scheduled photo appearance.  But he had only been there a few minutes when the East Sierra Disabled Sports team stopped by with a group of Wounded Warriors- U.S. Military veterans who had sustained injuries in combat, but were beastly enough to have a go at skiing anyway.

One in particular got a kick out of Woolly and fancied a race.  Sitting in a basket with a ski mounted to the bottom, this man may have lost his legs but he most certainly had not lost his badass disposition.

“He’s only been on that thing four days,” said one of his companions as he rocked from side to side in preparation for what Woolly knew was about to be one hell of a show.

“Woolly, can we ride together?  Let’s race Stump Alley!”

One of the attendants leaned over to Rick and his mammoth.

“We were going to head back to Two, can Woolly make it down there?  ‘Cause we’ve had some Woollys who were good and some, uh, a bit shaky.”

Woolly, unable to talk of course, just made the brush-off-own-shoulder expression to respond that he did not belong to the latter category.

Rick laughed to himself as he imagined Woolly’s anger at his skills being questioned.

“Oh, I think he’ll make it just fine.”

Now twice-motivated Woolly took off riding switch (backwards) and beckoned the entourage to chase him with a big, exaggerated wave.

The adaptive-skier followed suit and upped the ante, ripping a 360 in his basket and tossing snow on Woolly’s fur.  Worse yet, Woolly caught somebody taping the action with a GoPro.

Everyone knows a camera to a mammoth is a red rag to a bull… shit was about to go down.

The ad-ski took off and Woolly pulled downhill with a quick spin.

They were flat-out now, laying down crisscrossed carves and overtaking gapers who were left living up to their name in speechless paralysis.

But once they got into the straights, Woolly’s crippling air-brake ears held him back from matching the ad-ski’s tuck.  The legless skier took off and picked up ten, twenty kilometers an hour on the mammoth and skidded to a halt in a tsunami of clumpy snow.

Woolly was coming in hot close behind, and it occurred to him to roost the seated skier- but thinking it unwise to potentially insult an American hero he opted for a 720 spin-stop followed by an exaggerated bow, to the cheers of lifties and five-year-olds in the lift line.


Doom & Demo Day

This morning was a hard starter for Apartment Five.  Chris could barely stand with a torn ACL, Stephan was flat-out MIA, and I came to the realization that the damage to my Line Maverick 170s was indeed not a dream.

At some point during my shift yesterday I managed to tear the delaminate right in half, making my right ski look like some kind of rusty banana.

Chris was convinced it was fixable, but everyone agreed the skis would nigh perform as well as they once did.

Those skis have been with me since at least 2005, and kicking them off the roster as the go-to-guy was a pretty emotional experience.

With a ton of flex, manageable length and two front-ends, the Line Maverick is (was) undeniably one of the most versatile and fun skis I’ve ever ridden.

How could I forget all the carves, crashes, and pig-suit wearing ski days?

Pretty sure this was taken junior year of high school… I still use that jacket also.  Christ, I’m poor.

But on this day I was determined to turn my frown upside-down.  Mammoth wasn’t willing to give me a free pair of skis, even though I asked really nicely, but they did show me their secret stash of high performance ex-demo skis from last year.  After learning of my plight they let me have a go on four models.  So today I rode:

K2 Aftershock 181

Völkl AC50 177

Salomon Enduro 177

Nordica Hot Rod Tempest 178

I got no less than three runs on any one of them, and gave each a full workout complete with lumps, bumps, fastblasts, spins and plenty of roosting gapers parked on the hill (just kidding).

And yes, I did pick a favorite that will soon become a member of my toy box.

Full write-up of each and comparison to follow.


Sierra Hot Springs

The Sierra region of California and Nevada  is chock full of natural hot springs, ranging in size from two-person motel tubs to full-on mini pools.

Some have even been cultivated by industrious humans with poured concrete benches, recirculation valves and stepping platforms.

Having been given the opportunity to use an N50 Xterra the other night, we decided to round up the neighbors and head for the desert, following directions from a Falcon Guide book.  If you’re trying to find the springs but too lazy or poor to order the book, try this abbreviated online guide.

Whichever map you use to sojourn into the desert, make sure it’s a good one because the ride out to most natural springs is pretty lonely.

We found ourselves making turn after turn as the road deteriorated from highway, to single-lane, to dirt, and finally to about two kilometers of deeply-rutted track.

You do miss the dramatic mountain horizon by heading into the bush by night, but when the headlights have been out for a few minutes the starfield that makes itself known overhead is nothing short of spectacular.  Enjoy that view from a pool of clear, 105˚ water with the muted song of wind blowing over your beer bottle and you’ve got yourself the perfect setting to get to know your friends a little better.


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