Wet Michigan Snow Is Not Your Friend, Bro
If you’ve ever ridden Michigan snow on a warm day with an unwaxed board, you already know the feeling. You’re pointing it downhill, gravity’s doing its thing… and somehow you’re still crawling like you forgot how physics works.
That’s wet snow, dude. And it’s absolutely savage on dry, unwaxed bases.
The Slush Is Heavy, and It Shows No Mercy
Wet snow isn’t light and fluffy—it’s dense, sticky, and loaded with moisture. When your base isn’t waxed, that water doesn’t glide—it grabs. Hard. The snow literally suctions itself to your base like it’s trying to steal your speed.
Instead of cruising, you’re mashing one foot and questioning your life choices halfway down a run. Total drag. Total buzzkill.
Michigan Slush = Base Abuse
Here’s the gnarly truth: wet snow strips moisture from your base fast. Ride unwaxed in these conditions and your base dries out, turns chalky, and starts looking like it’s been through a rough breakup.
Once that happens:
- Your board slows way down
- Your base absorbs more water
- Future wax doesn’t last as long
- Everything feels sticky and weird
That’s not “spring riding”—that’s base neglect.
Wax Is Your Speed Shield
A proper wax creates a barrier between your base and all that swampy Michigan snow. It repels water, reduces friction, and lets your board actually do what it’s supposed to do: slide.
With fresh wax, wet snow feels manageable—even fun. Without it? You’re fighting every flat section like it personally offended you.
This isn’t about being fancy. It’s about survival.
Vintage Wisdom Still Holds Up
Back in the day, we learned quick: no wax, no glide. Doesn’t matter if you’re riding park laps, cruising groomers, or just trying to make it back to the lift without skating uphill like a rookie.
Michigan slush will expose lazy setups instantly. The mountain doesn’t care. The snow doesn’t care. But your legs will feel it by run two.
Final Take
Wet snow is inevitable in Michigan. Slow boards don’t have to be.
Keep your base waxed, keep your speed, and keep your dignity intact. Because nothing ruins a good spring session faster than getting passed by skiers on flats while you’re stuck pogo-pushing like it’s day one.
Stay slick. Stay fast. Stay waxed.
