Monday, December 23, 2013

Worst December skiing in Washington?

One powder day at Stevens on December 21st. That's been it so far, folks. Rain, crust, wet slides, bare ground. Long skins on the highway. Bare ground in the Methow Valley. Maybe winter will come, but not for a bit at least. As one friend put it, ski season is now cookie and book season. 

But on a positive note, there is good trail running and mountain biking to be had, and maybe even some winter hikes, as Yodelin barely has a foot at 4,000 feet. And Snoqualmie is nearly bare, so you can have many more happy days without skiing in the rain on a Friday night. Your unused season pass may be burning some holes in your new goretex bibs, but maybe they'll give you a free day at Crystal.

So here's to a 2013/2014 early winter season of extra pre-season conditioning, trail running, interstate or intercontinental snow-chase, and rock skis. Get your gopro out, capture whatever is normally coated in snow, and most importantly, have fun. 






Friday, December 20, 2013

Five last-minute christmas adventure presents

A little something for someone special in a city on your list, who you've procrastinated in buying presents for. Airfare amounts should reasonably be doubled to account for the fact that solo international travel is not the most attractive gift. 

If your recipient is in SEATTLE, send them to New Zealand in August. 17 hours travel through Hawaii, for a little over 1200 a person. Throw in some new skis, and let them head to Wanaka for some South Island fun.

If your recipient is in CHICAGO, send them to Geneva (and Chamonix) in February by way of Istanbul, for a little over 700 a person. They'll get a night in Istanbul both ways to explore the city, and a week or more of mountain and city exploration, skiing, and french food. 

If your recipient is in HOUSTON, send them to Sao Paulo in February (under $1250 a person) for a break from the cold temperatures that seem to grasp Houston every once in a while. Take some time to find a perfect beach, and send a bathing suit along with the ticket.

If your recipient is in SAN FRANCISCO, send them to Sochi for some olympic action. Even the Russians may not know where they're staying, but almost anyone can fly into Sochi on Aeroflot, one of Russia's ITA airlines, for under under $1000 US. 

If your recipient is in NEW YORK, send them to Dubrovnik, Croatia for a little pre-holiday vacation in November. They'll be escaping the cold, partying with Europe's finest in accommodations ranging from downright swank to website-less inns. Keep whatever's left over after $850 airfare for fresh fish. 

From the Methow to Seattle: Same Snow

Sometimes I travel for snow. And normally that means going to somewhere with more. But the past two weeks, I've had nearly the same amount of snow everywhere I've been. Three inches in Williamstown on the golf course, 5-6 inches in places in the Methow Valley, and now 1-3 on the golf course down the street from my house in Seattle.
Yet I am not disappointed. The golf course in Williamstown got boring after a few days, but the frozen fog and fast skating (and limited classic skiing) made up for it. Then snow in Seattle is always a treat, never to be dismissed. Hopefully more is on its way. 

Monday, December 16, 2013

Holiday gift ideas for your favorite adventurer

You're probably scrambling to find something unique, relatively cheap, and distinguishable. While your local gear store may be the best bet, backcountry and REI have stuff that few other places will keep in stock. Check em for some of the products I recommend below.
backcountry.com for free 2-day shipping
REI.com to find your local branch

Canon G1x or G16 camera, $500.
Everyone has their favorite camera, but is it small, stylish, and good in low light? If not, spring for a G1x or G16, and help make those climbing, skiing, and biking shots into something famous without risking a dSLR or sacrificing image quality with a gopro.

Patagonia Piton Hybrid Hoody, $180.
Want your best friend to look like a Ninja, but still be visible? A brightly colored technical sweatshirt is the answer, with a slightly wind-resistant chest, zip pocket, and high-zip hood.

Saxx black sheep boxers. $40.
Half gimmick, half endless comfort while in the backcountry or in an office chair, but the comfort wins out over the gimmick. These have a pouch for some friends, which works to reduce chaffing and other issues.

Swix LF12 wax. $30.
If you want to make someone a winner, this could be key. Give that little advantage for a Chinese downhill or a long skate ski. A bit of fluoro helps keep the dirt away, and three hardnesses keep skis running in most temps someone would want to ski.

Voile ski straps. $5.
Every shop has their own logo on some twist of the Voile strap, and one person can never have too many ski straps. You'll find em months later strapped to bikes, holding pipes together, or as part of a flower arrangement. Grab a few just in case and hide em amongst a bouquet of orange-stemmed flowers.


Thursday, December 5, 2013

Lift skiing ideas

If you like sitting on a cold plank all day, or just don't feel like skinning up a run or risking uncontrolled terrain, check out some of these tips for cheap lift skiing. Its a good break once in a while.
http://gearjunkie.com/save-money-tips-ski-snowboard?pg=3
Right now though, might be best to invest in a mountain bike or running shoes and a set of weights, as west and east coast ski areas are having a lackluster snow year. 

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Why do cars park where they shouldn't?

Please join me for a presentation on parking patters in North Adams and recommendations for the smallest city in Massachusetts. December 11th, 4:00 pm, City Council Chambers. 

Monday, November 25, 2013

Chasing snow and gravel in the Cascades

My ski coach has given me quite a few memorable quotes, including one about "making lemonade from zest" when there is little or no snow during the start of the race season. Normally the Pacific NW has plenty of snow, but this pre-Thanksgiving weekend saw an extreme warming after a nice dump of powder. So, as any snow bunny is bound to do, I've been chasing snow and trying to avoid the fine line between gravel, ice, and snow that forms in the mountains.
Alpine ski areas rely on snow for business, and are quite apt at managing their snow. So when they close to conserve snow, its a perfect time to link up cat tracks between cabins, skate around terrain park features, and make a nice workout from just a few acres of snow. Intervals are perfect, as are uphill and downhill technique work, variable snow quality training, and slalom turns.
But sometimes an alpine area gets boring. At Stevens Pass, there was plenty of snow at 4,000 feet on November 25th, but dropping to 3000 feet where the nordic center is located yielded a gravel road with bits of snow and ice- not good for skiing or running. Closer to Leavenworth, the Icicle provided better running, with snow-free trails up until the start of thick forest. Poles in hand, scraping against bushes and slipping on trailside puddles turned to ice blocks. 

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Planning, planning, planning. Departing?

Somewhere deep inside I have a love for snow.  As a member of the Nordic ski team at Williams, I have skied thousands of kilometers, but they haven't added up to anything except for a few race results. So last year I decided to ski around the world sometime after graduation, sharing my love of snow and skiing with hundreds of small villages that are otherwise isolated during winter. The plan is to use local overland transportation in the absence of snow, and ski between villages in the prescience. Starting in S America from June until September, then heading to the Caucuses or Himalaya for early skiing and then continuing on through Eurasia. 
The more I have traveled and researched in developing mountain regions, the more the need for sustainable tourism has become apparent. In some places, like the Wakhan of Tajikistan and Afghanistan, tour operators are realizing the limits and un sustainability of jeep tours, and are turning to trekking. But the question of what to do during winter, with poor road conditions but equal beauty, still puzzles many, and drives others to drinking and other social hills. Skiers tend to be a wealthier, adventurous clientele, and developing ski tourism allows a balancing of the load of tourists on the environment, spreads wealth throughout the year, and provides winter employment when agriculture and guiding are not possible.
Two big goals exist: to introduce village to village ski touring as a reliable source of winter income in villages, and create a creative work showcasing winter life in isolated villages which may never be visited by foreigners in winter.

If you'd like to follow the process, just keep up with the blog. To join in on part, make sure your company's gear makes it to ________, or chat, just shoot an email to becorwin@yahoo.com.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Two of my addictions in one picture

Rarely do I complain about food as loudly as I do when there is a banana shortage or an absence of mint chocolate chip ice cream. I just wish I could be back on the boiling streets of Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan eating these delicious banana popsicles. A statement as fake as the flavor and color: they are truly delicious. But some chemical, fat, or texture mates with my tongue and demands more. The perfect combination of unhealthy and delicious, both in moderation of course. 

Normally I experiment with foods when I get bored, and the results are often exciting- whipped cream vinaigrette made at the ice cream  and salad stations, sprite, lemonade, and watermelon syrup. But its hard to mess with a scoop- or five- of slightly soft mint chocolate chip ice cream with a drizzle of chocolate and oreos. Ice cream sandwiches of all types, yes, but if mint chocolate is available, it goes down by itself. For now though, because Driscoll dining hall fails at ice cream selection and banana stocking during dinner, I resort to creativity. My promise to you: one new desert combination, every month, posted to this blog. It will be delicious and creatable using just simple dining hall ingredients. 


Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Is it OK to kill a cyclist?
Why we need things like the vulnerable user laws... This will slowly change once more politicians start riding and getting hit, but until then, ride safe but aggressive, and take out some life insurance. 

Crossing of the Pamirs

Across the Pamirs in a UAZ jeep that kept overheating. But it was cheap, fast, and beautiful. 

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

A creative Svalbard video

What happens when I have 200 seconds, a bunch of footage, and a desire to match transient pictures with text. Let me know what you think. Pacing, mismatch of words and text, voice...

https://vimeo.com/78549423

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

A short writing sample on the dust bowl

Dust Bowl Prevention: Farm Bill Trumps Carbon Reductions
The Great Depression and Dust Bowl were times of suffering for America, and the disaster still has a place in the collective memory of Americans, especially as natural disasters become more common and high temperatures rise. Recent drought conditions in the Midwest, which resulted in a 13% drop in corn yields (Wilson 2012), bring fears of a new “dust bowl” and the loss of American agricultural dominance. Opinions on the prevention of future dust bowls are varied and ideas address the problem through carbon dioxide reductions and soil conservation policies. The issue in our hands is to find the most feasible solution to prevent another dust bowl, and in the process address problems in the agricultural system. After reviewing current climate change research and the factors behind the 1930s Dust Bowl, it appears that the most effective strategy for preventing another dust bowl is to use America’s agricultural infrastructure and the farm bill to implement conservation practices, many of which were in place until a recent jump in commodities prices and land use.
Unfortunately, lobbying forces using the 2012 drought and other recent climactic events as agenda items for carbon reduction programs have hampered progress towards a solution. Joseph Romm, a former energy secretary, tells us that “the only sane response [to preventing a dust bowl] is to reduce carbon pollution sharply” (Romm 2012), yet earlier he cites Solomon et al’s 2009 study which highlights the thousand-year lag in time between emissions cessation and climatic cooling (Solomon et al 2009). Romm isn’t alone- Cynthia Burbank, a former transportation official, shares a similar solution to Romm, of cutting carbon emissions and changing transportation (Burbank 2012)- but such authors need a reality check, especially if Solomon et al’s analysis using AOGCM and EMIC long-term climate models (Solomon et al 2009) is indeed accurate. Solomon presents dry-season precipitation drops, a cause of droughts, as an irreversible consequence of carbon dioxide emissions, and states “the physical climate changes that are due to anthropogenic carbon dioxide already in the atmosphere today are expected to be largely irreversible” (Solomon et al 2009). Carbon reductions, then, will do nothing towards preventing drought in the next thousand years, and will not help the immediate need for preserving soil by preventing wind erosion, which will allow American agriculture to continue in good years and maintain soil stability during droughts.
Climate forcing, or the ways in which certain land, air, and water conditions lead to climate patterns, can be used to analyze the anomalies behind the 1930s Dust Bowl. Cook et al looked at forcing by sea surface temperatures (SST) and two sources of land degradation including reduced vegetative cover and increased aerosols from dust, which resulted in a normal drought pattern, forced by warm SST, being moved northward from the American Southwest, with the dust aerosols leading to decreased precipitation (Cook et al 2009). Because dust bowls tend to be multi-year events that extend beyond the first year of drought, reducing wind-driven soil- and thus aerosols- will not only reduce drought conditions in a dry year, but will prevent aerosol forcing from continuing drought patterns into years where such conditions would not normally occur based on SST.
If we look at how agriculture has changed since the Dust Bowl, it is apparent that something was wrong in the 1930s, and was fixed by the 1950s when similar climatic conditions descended on the region. Hansen and Libecap, in their article “Small Farms, Externalities, and the Dust Bowl of the 1930s,” conclude that land holdings greater than 500 acres allowed internal positive feedback for conservation practices which saved America from other dust bowls during the 1950s and 1970s when drought brought similar temperatures and crop failures (Hansen and Libecap 2004). One of the chief reasons cited for the Dust Bowl is a commons tragedy, where too many people sought to farm wheat, and plowed up too much soil because on small holdings the crop-to-conservation ratio for maximum production was greater than the ideal crop-to-conservation ratio for soil conservation (Hansen and Libecap 2004). Thus when preventative soil conservation measures were needed most, before the Soil Conservation Service was implemented in 1937, few could see the potential gains because most landholdings were too small to internalize the downwind benefits of soil conservation (Hansen and Libecap 2004) as soil conservation for downwind areas depends on continuous stripping, hedge rows, and contours which require large farms or cooperation of multiple landowners. Today we have a corporate farm infrastructure where farm management can see soil conservation benefits and receive economic incentives for taking part in soil conservation measures, and if government payments can once again reflect conservation priorities rather than current perverse biofuels desire, wind-driven soil erosion can be kept at bay.
The good news is that we have the tools, through current government-funded programs, to continue the practices of the 1970s and stop wind-driven soil erosion. The belief that we, and especially the government, have done enough in terms of soil conservation, and don’t need to worry about a dust bowl as “we still have a ways to go before things dry out enough over a long enough period of time” (Grammon-Nielsen 2012) may be an over-exaggeration of the current reality of farming, outdated by a few decades and the rise of biofuels. But the basic principle of using known government funding for conservation techniques still holds. Drought will exist as determined by climatic systems far from our reach, but few of the consequences such as dust bowls will persist if we can once again make soil conservation a priority, and at the same time reduce perverse incentives, such as those for biofuels, that lead to unsustainable and soil-loss-inducing practices.
The best tool we have today for managing such soil conservation is the “Farm Bill”, which is a comprehensive piece of legislation regulating everything from corn subsidies to the Natural Resources Conservation Service or NRCS. Jonathan Foley, an environmental scientist, suggests fundamental changes in our agricultural system, as “other farming systems, with more perennial crops, deep-rooted grasses and trees, could increase resilience to extreme weather” (Foley 2012). Ultimately, this type of agriculture, in combination with a reduction in perverse subsidies for monocultures and biofuels production, would be the best for America’s soil and climate in the future. But in today’s political and climatic environment, the most immediate need is to prevent another dust bowl and the loss of soils that have been accumulating for thousands of years. We can do this through the normal four-year farm bill, especially through the elimination of biofuels subsidies and continuation of NRCS funding. The NRCS performs many of the same functions of the 1937 Soil Conservation Service buy paying farmers to take land out of cultivation for soil conservation purposes and providing financial incentives for other forms of sustainable farming that limit soil loss. Since these conservation programs already exist, all we need is to “pass a farm bill that continues financial support for agricultural practices that prevent soil erosion and that restore land unsuitable for agriculture to grassland, forests and wetlands” (Tercek 2012).
The question of how to prevent another dust bowl has been complicated by anti-carbon ideas, but we know that current carbon reductions won’t be reflected for another thousand years, which is too long to wait and watch soil blow away. The solution is the farm bill, through which soil conservation measures that worked in past droughts can be continued in order to encourage sustainable soil use and reduce wind-driven soil loss. Bigger changes, such as reducing perverse subsidies, may be harder to pass in the next farm bill, but if we use Wes Jackson’s “fifty year farm bill” as a template to address the “triple crisis of soil erosion, extreme weather, and dependence on fossil fuel inputs” (Klein 2011, 6), we can begin to improve the sustainability of all parts of American agriculture. By using such land ethics such as Aldo Leopold’s, which “simply enlarges the boundary of the community to include soils, waters… or collectively: the land” (Leopold 1989, 204), we can move towards sustainable agriculture, which may include perennial production and other resource-conserving ideas put forth by Jackson and others. But for now, lets just pass a four-year farm bill.
Word count: 1319 exclusive of in-text citations.
References
Burbank, Cynthia. 2012. “Reduce Fossil Fuel Use.” New York Times, July 25, Room for Debate.
Cook, Benjamin et al. 2009. “Amplification of the North American “Dust Bowl” drought through human-induced land degradation.” PNAS, 106 (13): 4997-5001.
Foley, Jonathan. “Farming Changes Can Limit Risks.” New York Times, July 25, Room for Debate.
Hansen, Zeynep and Gary Libecap. 2004. “Small Farms, Externalities, and the Dust Bowl of the 1930s.” Journal of Political Economy, 112(3): 655-694.
Klein, Naomi. 2011. “Capitalism Vs. the Climate.” The Nation, November 9.
Leopold, Aldo. 1989. “The Land Ethic.” A Sand County Almanac And Sketches Here and There, Special Commemorative Edition. Oxford University Press.
Litz, Franz. Guest lecture delivered November 5, 2012 at Williams College.
Nielsen-Grammon, John. 2012. “Too Early for the Worst Fears.” New York Times, July 25, Room for Debate.
Romm, Joseph. 2012. “Without Carbon Controls, We Face a Dust Bowl.” New York Times, July 25, Room for Debate.
Solomon, Susan et al. 2009. “Irreversible climate change due to carbon dioxide emissions”. PNAS, 106 (6): 1704-1709.
Tercek, Mark. “For Starters, Renew the Farm Bill.” New York Times, July 25, Room for Debate.
Wilson, Jeff. 2012. “Corn-Crop Drought Damage Less Than Expected Spurs Price Drop.” September 12, Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-09-12/u-s-corn-crop-estimate-larger-than-expected-after-drought.html

Monday, October 14, 2013

What do you want to see?

As you probably know, I often think tangentially. This is not a blog where you will see a weekly series about dining hall food, or a picture a day of colorful leaves. Or reviews for 20 different fleeces. I want to write and keep almost anyone interested.
So tell me what you'd like a taste of in comments below, and I'll give it a go. The crazier, the better. 

Monday, September 30, 2013

Check it: Another picture to contemplate

Are you supposed to photograph another photographer? Every place has its own signature, which often includes people. And if everyone stops in the same place to photograph the same family of [insert alpine animal name], does the photographer become part of the photoscape as well, evidence of human impact, collected stories, and changing weather, snowpack, rock, or recreation? 

September Sundays in Vermont


Just thought I'd share a little pic of my workout on Sunday. If you've never been to New England in fall, you are missing out on at least a little bit. Few things rival a long bike ride, short run, and the view of Barber Pond with no wind, warm water, and a dusting of cloud. 

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Adventure Collections and New Blog

Hi-
I'm trying to organize a lot of the stuff on here, and will be introducing new content and curating stories and gear. Check out www.fatterskier.com for new content and organized material, or just follow here if you just want the freshest content and want an insight into my mind and chronological ordering.

Plus, a picture to contemplate, 2013-2014 school year #1.
What killed this poor reindeer (or lucky, depending on how you look at it)? Snow, fur, or something else on the rocks. Does it matter what the material is, except that the color is white and it blends with the skeleton. Pixelated because ????

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Things that go back in my duffel every time

There are a few items that make it with me on all bike and ski trips, and travel around the country quite a bit.

So here go the bare essentials for a bike tour:

A pump. Get a decent one- not your football pump from grade 8- but not too fancy. No need for anything but a mini crank brothers one. Your tires will survive (and handle better) at 70 PSI. I like it to fit in my bag, not on my bike, so its not stolen.

A few zip ties. When things get out of place or fall off, a zip tie can often become a permanent fix. Fender stays, cable housing, and panniers have all been held on at one point or another, often for weeks.

Spare cables. Rare for one to fail, but a tour-ending possibility, and a pain in the butt to not have. Certainly bring brake cables.

Lube. Maybe you think you'll find a bike shop or something along the way, but a loaded bike develops squeaks a lot faster than one thats just ridden around town. And your favorite lube gives lots of mental security. I recommend pro link or pedros.

A thick lock, like the Kryptonite 1565 combo. Large enough to need bolt cutters to cut. Normally you'll be sleeping with your bike, but for extra protection, and if you're touring alone, to feel comfortable running into the store. No keys. I love freedom from keys on most bike tours, and a lock can kill that feeling.

Socks. They get horribly uncomfortable, and your feet sweat but don't breathe so well. Light merino wool works well. If you ride in your nice shoes without socks, well, you will no longer have nice shoes.

A buff. Around your neck. Nobody likes sunburn or bug bites, especially while riding. And sunscreen leaves an oily mess when combined with sweat and can't be used to wipe off sweat or goobers.

Chocolate, or another high energy treat. Riding your bike is no time to worry about health foods, and an ample supply or chocolate or gummies can bring those extra miles you need. Gummies are better in jersey pockets, but chocolate has more unique flavors. Plus Hersheys is cheaper than Clif bars and has more calories.






Saturday, August 3, 2013

A sub 48 hour crossing of Jotenheimen in Norway from Memurubu to Turtagro

Plenty of high lakes, sheep, and turistforening hytte along the way. A day sleeping out in the rain, a four course dinner, and one massive rainbow. A few people. Two awesome mountain lodges separated by a hundred years. A now 16 year old who didn't get a car for his birthday.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

A first few days in Longyearbyen and around

Started off another trip to Svalbard a few days ago with 40 hours of flying. Not sure if it was a good idea to arrive with no sleep to somewhere with endless sun, but after a few hours at a deck party I sacked out for 15 hours. Since then I've made plenty of 3k runs from Nybyrn where I'm staying in the barracks down to the town center and general store, UNIS, and Freune, the decent new coffee shop that rightfully calls itself the furthest north coffee bar in the world. Runs for training have been limited a bit by the polar bear safe zone (there probably aren't bears super close to town but the fine isn't so nice if I don't have a rifle on me when off the main roads), but I now have a decent 8k zigzag worked out. Most Norwegians are gone for vacation but there are still big 1000+ person cruise ships- ending next year with a crude oil ban- and plenty of people crucial to the tourism industry in town. Seen some wildlife; they can be found among the pictures below.

Monday, July 15, 2013

The midnight sun. Doesn't mean you can see it.

Finally in Svalbard, and one of the worlds most northernmost towns, Longyearbyen. Their is daylight 24 hours per day, but for the next week I'm not expecting to see too much sun.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Saying goodbye to my bike; wishing her good travels in the Pamir

I want my bikes to go to a good home. After thousands of kilometers getting me between villages where no cars travel in Central Asia, she's had some wear to the tires and chain and frame. But the components are still good for many thousands of kilometers, and the bike rides herding paths like nothing else.

So obviously, she deserved a nice new caretaker. I'd like to announce her caretaker with a photo. He's a single Pamiri cartographer and GIS programmer from Rushan village, now living in Dushanbe. His co worker, Hussein, is an accomplished bike tourist from Kenya and most recently Canada. The two are planning a bike trip through the Pamirs in August, and if successful my bikes new caretaker will likely be one of the first Pamiris to ride through the Pamir. A good partnership for a bike designed for the Pamir and a man born in the heart of the Pamir.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Oh, the signs of modern democracy- In Dushanbe, Tajikistan

I had part of the day today to spend exploring the grand city of Dushanbe. Most everything- which is a lot compared to Khorog but very little even compared to Almaty- is within a few steps of the main Rudaki street, including state museums, parks, and Wi-Fi and western expresso at Segafredo Cafe. Dushanbe is the capital city, and has lots of gorgeous trees and some parks and lots of government buildings. Unfortunately there isn't too much else going on: business, intelligentsia, and arts are slim or elsewhere in the country. Maybe it's Ramadan, but most people here are non-practicing Sunnis so the town is probably like this the rest of the year.

Tomorrow I'll explore more and meet some more locals and try to sell my trusty Schwinn mountain bike and do all the other things one must do before leaving a big city among villages.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Ways of travel in Central Asia






Views from the Khorog- Dushanbe flight and some thoughts on Yaks

Somehow, I had to get to Dushanbe this week for a flight out of Tajikistan (sad, I know) on Friday. I heard rumors of an awesome flight from Khorog that ran during perfect weather, so I asked around and figured out that my bike would be allowed on as excess baggage for $10. I didn't really expect to make it through the ticketing process- involving dropping off a passport copy several days early and bugging the ticketing ladies a few times- but the alternative was a two day jeep ride on shit roads, so I pulled out all stops to get on the plane. And made it on the plane first after getting to disassemble and load my bike. A bike box certainly would not fit, so I had to get creative with a wrench, stuffing seatpost and bars and such in between Chinese duffels. Tajik Air hand wrote the tickets, and overfilled the flight, but I don't think we were too heavy, and the takeoff was smooth with no unbuckled kids or adults flying too far. The plane flight truly was one of the most spectacular I've had- endless views of mountains changing to rocky cliffs and finally farmland. Plus some snow, wind, rain, and narrow pass crossings with only a few meters room for error.