Since Poulsen's background included growing up in Norway and later emigrating to the U.S., where he was the winter sports director for the Lake Placid Club, before Erling Strom, I'm guessing his experience would have been with the Adirondacks and the mountains of his original home. I can tell things are getting pretty bare around home at 1500' elevation but just a bit north and closer to 3000' the snow is still incredibly deep. Tad and I went in to see what we could find at Basin Brook on Tuesday. There is still skiing up high in the Hoosac Range for a while yet.
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Poulsen again (as a lead in to the previous statement) but seems appropriate to add it now:"As spring approaches , the snow undergoes a regular routine of change. The snow surface in the open grows soft and sticky as the morning advances and skiing is almost impossible. During midday it is watery and with the temperature above freezing a slow skiing is possible but not much fun. All the while it has been settling, and as cooling takes place with the declining sun, the surface gets harder, until it will just about carry you without your skis breaking through. Night makes it glassy hard, giving a very fast but difficult skiing surface, as it is impossible to execute swings with any assurance. In the earliest morning, as the sun begins to have an effect again, the surface softens but remains firm for a few hours and you have the finest running surface of all. In the woods the going stays hard longer and hardens sooner, with the result that a skier with a forest at hand can obtain really glorious going after the fields are bare."
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