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    <title>Outdoor Japan</title>
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	      <title>Myoko Backcountry Ski School</title>
		  <desciption><![CDATA[<p>Myoko Backcountry Ski School (MBSS) began with a bunch of locals who  simply liked going into the mountains. It is now in its 22nd year after  being the first accredited &ldquo;freeheel&rdquo; ski school in Japan.</p>
<p><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue26/Myoko_Backcountry_Ski_School_1.jpg" />&ldquo;Most  of us owned pensions, so we had free time each spring,&rdquo; says Tatsuo  Ogasawara, owner of pension Yours Inn and the main man behind MBSS  today. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s still a lot of snow here in the mountains in spring, and  we wanted to get up there and ski it.&rdquo;<br />
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Some tried cross country  skis, then a magazine article turned them on to telemark skis. &ldquo;We  bought leather boots and skinny skis&mdash;and we had absolutely no idea of  how to use them,&rdquo; Ogasawara says.<br />
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So with much patience&mdash;including  liberal referencing of the early instructional book Cross Country  Downhill by Steve Barnett&mdash;they slowly became adept at the bent-knee  style of skiing and got into the backcountry as soon as they could. <br />
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<img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue26/Myoko_Backcountry_Ski_School_2.jpg" />They became good enough, in fact, that the group worked with the young  Telemark Association of Japan (TAJ), just six years older than MBSS, to  establish the first telemark school. &ldquo;We keep the tradition today,&rdquo;  Ogasawara says. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re still passionate about the beauty and elegance of  the telemark turn, and we still go up the hills around here as often as  we can.&rdquo;<br />
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Lessons are based on 40-minute sessions with students able to take as  many sessions, at whatever skill level, they like. Myoko&rsquo;s heavy snow  means instruction for skiing powder is available on the ski runs. Just  wait a few hours, and the morning groomed corduroy can be knee-high in  fresh snow. Head instructor for on-piste lessons is Ogasawara&rsquo;s son,  Hisataka, a former World Cup racer, along with former head instructor  Masahiko Motomiya.<br />
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&ldquo;Myoko has great backcountry terrain,&rdquo; Ogasawara adds. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re really  lucky to have places we can bring people just gaining confidence, as  well as some challenging terrain and long runs. Our philosophy hasn&rsquo;t  changed; we don&rsquo;t just head into the backcountry. We look at the  conditions, the people, their interests and skills, and then decide if  we stick to plans or change the destination. We don&rsquo;t take chances when  we&rsquo;re touring.&rdquo;</p>
<p><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue26/Myoko_Backcountry_Ski_School_3.jpg" />He knows a bit about this. A serious climber, Ogasawara will be missing  part of the season for a springtime attempt at Mt. Everest, his sixth of  the Seven Summits. Both he and head guide Bill Ross are official  mountain guides for Myoko City; all the guides have advanced avalanche,  first aid and rescue training. <br />
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&ldquo;We really know the mountains here,&rdquo; he says. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s easy to get lost in  all the valleys and hills, especially in the fog that&rsquo;s common here. We  know where to go.&rdquo;</p>
<p><strong><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue26/Myoko_Backcountry_Ski_School_4.jpg" />ESSENTIALS</strong><br />
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MBSS telemark lessons are &yen;3,000 per session. Backcountry tours available every Saturday and Sunday. Most tours involve riding lifts to about 1,500 meters, then roughly a two-hour hike to lunch at the peak before skiing down. One-day tours start at &yen;15,000 per person, with discounts from two persons. Multi-day spring tours or private tours are available to Mt. Hiuchi, Tateyama, Oze and other destinations. While MBSS is a telemark school, tours are open to alpine skiers and boarders as well.<br />
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<strong>Myoko Backcountry Ski School</strong><br />
E-mail: mbss@Myokokogen.org<br />
Web: <a target="_blank" href="http://www.myokokogen.org/mbss">www.myokokogen.org/mbss</a><br />
Tel: (Japanese) (0255) 87-2392; English: 090-1433-1247<br />
Fax: (0255) 87-2975<br />
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	      <pubDate>Mon, 19 Jul 2010 10:48:25 +0000</pubDate>
	      <link>http://www.outdoorjapan.com/magazine/column_rss/85</link>
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