It’s the perfect dream: you ride up the lift, get a couple of warm-up laps in the resort, and then, when you're ready to find fresher snow, you take the lift to the top of the mountain and then head out the backcountry gate. Now you are at the top of an untouched line, and you didn’t even have to put your skins on.
The ease of sidecountry access means you don’t need a large pack; the Dawn Patrol 15 Backpack stores the essentials for hot laps just beyond the rope. Only 15L, it still has a separate snow safety pocket to store your avalanche gear, and features an insulated shoulder pocket that holds a hydration tube, soft flask, or radio.
In terms of gear, the Impulse Ti skis excel at carving early morning corduroy and then heading out beyond the resort to find fresh turns. If you plan on doing any touring outside the gate, the Traverse ski poles offer some adjustability for skinning but are durable enough to handle day-in, day-out resort laps.
Though you still have access to the après after leaving the resort and the option to hop into the lodge after turning back into the resort, you are still in the backcountry, and that means bringing a few key essentials. An extra puffy in your pack, the Deploy Down 1.0 Hoody is warm and packable, the perfect touring puffy. And a headlamp, like the Astro 300-R, is a reliable light source to have in case you are hitchhiking back to your car in the dark.