Skiing with JBotti the last two days gave me the opportunity to ski the Blossom "Whiteout" ski. I had previously skied the GS skis in Europe and they were horrible. So you could see my hesitation about the Blossoms. I was and so was Diana, pleasantly surprised at what we found. We skied it everywhere and on all conditions, the ski performed extremely well. In fact, it was so good we are looking into carrying it at our shop for PMTS skiers.
I'll give an objective evaluation of the Whiteout's characteristics. Coming from a ski like an iSpeed you immediately feel the ease at which it begins a turn. This is due to the rocker and the light feel. Easy into the turn doesn't always mean good carving or holding for every ski that does this, but the "WhiteOut" ski surprises you. Tip it further and further with the lower body, (ankles, knees, and legs) basically, the better it holds and carves. This ski is a brushed carve champion at moderate angles and if you really tip and flex the inside leg it arcs a tight radius with a really nice controlled, energetic, rebound. Quick short turns, even on steeps like "Dreamcatcher" are not out of reason.
It is very stable at higher speeds approaching GS turns.
The one thing that will not work on this ski is just dropping the hip inside. The width and the sidecut will not give you what you want with this kind of move. The "Whiteout" needs to be tipped through the whole radius, called "continuous tipping". The ski is too wide and doesn't have the sidecut to pull you through the turn by using hip angles alone. Also, if you are using a hip thrust to start your turn you will overturn it and lose any carving. If you use a push off and have to wait for your hip to drop for angles, it will not ski well.
If you do test the ski and find this is the case; I recommend that you don't give up on the ski, it can teach you. This ski because of its width requires foot tipping to get angles that will make it perform. Learning to make this ski do what you want it to will tell you if you have achieved proper lower body angle development through proper continuous tipping.
What I'm saying is that really good PMTS skiers will appreciate the ski and improve as they learn to get the best out of the design.