Sunday, February 24, 2008


Top Notch Skiing

This weekend was about as close to perfect for skiing as I can imagine. Saturday and Sunday both dawned around –10 or -12C but it warmed to a couple of degrees below zero by the afternoon. The freezing rain we got last Monday proved to be a minor inconvenience and the trails are in just about ideal shape. There was even a full moon this week making for some great night skiing (lunar eclipses aside of course).

I opted for a little roadie out to Murphy’s Point Park to ski their trails on Saturday. I was once a member of the Tay Valley ski club (keepers of the trails) but the couple of years I joined they never had much in the way of snow to actually ski on (a tough reality that probably makes recruiting members a challenge no doubt). This has not been a problem this year. I skied pretty much everything they have to offer all of it in excellent shape. They have some really nice roller coaster terrain – lots of little ups and downs that can be a fun ride if you can keep your momentum going. Much to my surprise – despite it being a beautiful day for skiing – I only came across a half dozen people on the trails – ahhh the country! I’m sure this wasn’t the case on Ridge road!! The grooming conditions were pretty good for this volunteer driven ski area. They even have a short skating loop (I happened to have my skate skis so I gave that a go too – sweet). Made a nice change of scenery for a days ski.


Sunday I decided to brave the Gatineau Park, which I was sure would be pretty crazy with crowds. I drove up to P17 to ski the Wakefield triangle among other things. The lot was pretty much full when I got there at 9:30 but the crowds weren’t a problem at all. The woods just kind of “swallow them up” and I found it to be easy skiing occasionally passing small groups. I used my share of wax today starting with “special blue” wax and working my way through the range (blue, extra blue and finally carrot). As the day progressed, the temperatures climbed and the warm sun glazed up the tracks making for occasional wax stops. In fact I probably could have used another stop for purple (warmer still) by the end of my ski as I had little grip on the last few climbs but I hadn’t carried my full wax box with me (it’s big and metal so it would be awkward to ski with) so I toughed it out. The sun is indeed noticeably gaining strength now. I hate to say it but I fear spring may actually come. I guess it always does but I keep hoping for endless winter. That said, no worries just yet. There are a few good mid winter skiing weeks yet to go and with all the snow we’ve had I’m sure the spring skiing will be good as well.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Loppet Weekend
Well it was Loppet weekend again here in Ottawa.... and of course - for those of you that can't translate - Loppet means "f&**^! cold" weekend. Actually it wasn't as bad as it has been in past years for the newly named (but 30th edition)Gatineau loppet. I made the annual trek up to the park to ski/drive around and catch some of the racing action from various vantage points. Pretty sure this is my 30th year of chasing the ski races so at least I know where I'm going to be in the middle of February.

Saturday was a series of classic races and it dawned with -20C temperatures(not much wind though so that made things feel a bit better). I went to a few spots (mostly driving) to see the classic races. I had scanned the start lists Friday night and was pretty excited to see Lukas Bauers'(CZE) name in the 30k classic race! I suspect (okay I know) it wasn't the Lukas Bauer (current world cup XC ski leader). There was of course a World cup race in Czech the same day. Also, he was listed as starting in the "E" wave here in Ottawa which was probably another clue, but you never know... In the end it was pretty cold standing around waiting for Lukas so I didn't take in the full race. Instead I decided to head off to get in a ski myself. By then (~noon) it had warmed up nicely to -12C under perfect blue skies. I made a tour of some of my favourite backcountry trails enjoying some of the great powder we've had over the last few days.



Sunday was considerably warmer with -11C at the start of the skate race. I made the full tour skiing to the start line and the 5k point before driving and skiing higher up in the park to see the race develop. Ivan Babikov was here and he seemed to control the race pulling a small trio away on the Penguin hill and holding a good gap the rest of the way through. In the end he beat Robin McKeever by a few seconds at the finish line. Being high up in the park I couldn't beat them back to the finish line but I suspect it was a "no mas" sprint.

By lunch time, with a fair amount of skiing under my belt and a Texas low filled with freezing rain descending rapidly on Ottawa I opted to head home and watch the Daytona 500 from the warmth of my living room. We got a fair amount of freezing rain but nothing too severe and (as I write this) its switched to light rain so we shouldn't lose too much snow. Of course this means all the loose fluffy powder we had is now toast. I'll venture up to the Park tomorrow to see what the damage is.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

CSM '08
This past weekend was Canadian Ski Marathon time again. I hadn’t really planned to go in it again this year but last years experience with the “low snow, revised route” (while perfectly understandable given the snow we got last year) was not quite the experience I was looking for. Going in a big circle two days in a row was not quite the overland, cross-country tour I was hoping for… so I came back again to get a better sense of the traditional (regular snow) routing.

I didn’t really get enough long classic skis in this year to seriously plan on skiing the whole route but with ample checkpoints along the trails I opted to tour it figuring I would go out and ski what I felt like, enjoy the day and then jump on the provided bus when I felt I had enough. In the end I skied 3 sections a day for a little less than 100km on the weekend.


Saturday dawned early and shaped up to be a perfect day (albeit somewhat overcast) with –5C weather warming up to –1C and occasional light snow falling. I drove to Papineauville and then hopped on the bus for the ride back to the starting checkpoint in Buckingham. Our bus arrived first at the start line and I had 20 minutes to kill before they unleashed us. After testing the wax I got into the starting pen and somehow ended up on the front line of our wave of skiers …and before I could decide this was a bad idea (starting in front of 3-400 over eager skiers headed very quickly for just 2 sets of tracks) the count down was on. Fortunately, on “GO”, a guy two or three places over from me promptly fell over. This effectively blocked most of the herd allowing a couple of us to shoot off for the first tracks and we enjoyed the front of the pack for a few kms. I settled into a comfortable pace and started to enjoy the day.

The snow was great and the trail was in good shape although, with all the snow we’ve had in the last few weeks, the base was a little soft which meant some of the steep downhills had rutted out with the earlier waves of skiers on them. This made a few spots a little tricky. On one steep downhill with a sharp left hand curve at the bottom I skied the turn only to hear a giant Waahoooo!! coming from behind me. Looking back I saw the person behind me miss the curve and launch off into a giant cloud of powder… took him a while to dig himself out but it looked like fun. The k’s clicked along and after the 3rd section I decided, while I could probably ski another leg, it might be better to call it a day and therefore insure I could have another good ski on Sunday.

Sunday was a very different day. We got 4 or 5 cms of fresh snow overnight and the temperature stayed up near –1C. This made for some tricky waxing, too cold = no grip, too warm=clumping and icing. I started with orange (a bit slippery) and then switched to purple wax but it was no go – snow iced immediately giving me huge clumps of ice under my feet. The real savior came from a box of “correction wax” that I haphazardly threw in my pack before leaving home. My Dad bought a few blocks of this stuff at a sports store closing (a real deal!) some 30 years ago (never seen it anywhere since). We’ve used them maybe 2x’s in those 30 years… but Sunday it was pure magic allowing my purple/orange combo wax to grip but keep it (to some extent) from icing up on the climbs. In the end, after steep climbs, I still got a bit of ice build up on the bases of my skis but a quick kick of the skis cleaned off the bases and got me gliding again.

With the fresh snow it meant some trail breaking was required. I had my track skis with me and they are perhaps not the best for this condition. The result was a slower pace and made it a little tougher to pass slower skiers with (at times) only one track broken out but it was still fun. Again I skied 3 sections including the “expert” section. I wanted to see what "expert" means but Sunday it was perhaps not at its “expert” best (or maybe I was?). The fresh snow made for some fun descents which I’m told are a lot more tricky when icier conditions prevail. Again the kms clicked along and before I knew it I was heading down the last stretch. In the final few kms a cold front started to move in and the temperature started to drop. (We had –20C weather Sunday night). This drop in temperature meant my wax was finally working exactly as designed (no more icing up)… and then I was done. (drat!)

Overall this was much more the overland experience I was looking for. Some parts of the trail are great while others a little less inspiring but you defiantly pass over some significantly changing beautiful countryside – rugged Canadian shield hills, rolling farmland, cottage country, carefully landscaped golf courses then suburbs and finally arriving in the city.


Things I learned this year:

· Several handfuls of cookies are an excellent source of motivation/energy to get you going down the trail… unfortunately they don’t last as fuel for more than the first few climbs… therefore carry more cookies with you (preferably enough to get you 70k down the trail).
· No matter how much of a “healthy living“ event you think you are participating in, you are still likely to see someone taking a smoke break mid trail… not sure what the lesson is here… except maybe it takes all kinds?
· Every farm in Quebec has a 40-year-old bulldozer parked near the barn. Of course I didn’t actually see every farm in Quebec but I think I saw enough of a cross section of farms (all with bulldozers) to feel safe in making this a rule.
. Some folks got on the bus in the morning headed to the starting point of the day (and rode it 40 min+ mind you) before realizing they left their skis back at the car! Lesson - try to remember to have your brain with you when going to an early morning ski event.
· Big “scary” hills are a lot of fun when they are covered with fresh powder (I probably knew this beforehand but this was reinforced).
· I have better skis in my fleet for powder skiing…. I should remember to bring them on my next powder day(and make sure they get onto the bus with me).

Sunday, February 03, 2008

Busy day on Ridge road


Busy day on Ridge road
Originally uploaded by kenmores
Went for a ski in the park today. I was thinking I might head over to Nakkertok to check out the mass start races but the snow was so nice I just kept skiing and eventually it was too late to head over for the races. It was a busy day in the Park today. Tough to get a parking spot but once I got going things thinned out as you skied further from the lots. At one point I was going along Ridge road(pictured). There were predictably a lot of people along there tough easy to ski through the traffic. Nice to see lots of folks out enjoying the warm weather and fresh snow. Today was about -3C with some light snow falling and occasional sunny breaks. The tracks were nicely groomed from Fridays snow. Looks like we're getting some more rain in the middle of the week. We'll see how much we get and to what extent it affects the trails. Fingers crossed.

Saturday, February 02, 2008

Groundhog day...


Powering down
Originally uploaded by kenmores
…and I find myself back at Nakkertok for another day of ski racing. Anyone see Bill Murray skiing the course? Actually this was a whole different set of races this week - Eastern Canadian Championships and I was simply a spectator this time. Quite a few more people this week as well on another stunning day. Mostly sunny with –5C weather although we lost the sun later in the day. We got a dump of snow on Friday afternoon/evening (~ 8-10 inches) so that was probably a headache for the groomers. Fortunately Saturday was sprint racing so they only had to have a 1.2k course up to racing snuff. It looked to be in good shape albeit a little soft but nothing that can be done about that with all the fresh snow.

I took the good camera gear and was armed with some ideas of where to stand to get some good shots based on what I saw last week. There was a pretty good field here. The world junior and U23 championships have been postponed (no snow in Poland) so all the best young Canadian skiers came here instead. Made for some good competitions. I got a handful of good shots, learned a few good photo lessons and enjoyed the ski racing - a good day. Unfortunately I couldn’t stay for the main event – the senior men’s and women’s heats – as I wanted to get a ski in myself before an evening appointment but I’m sure they were well fought. Not sure if I’ll go back tomorrow for the distance races. Tomorrow is Super Sunday and that means I have a lot to do before getting ready for some football. If I do take in the action I’ll post a few pics here as well.

P.S. a collection of rodents said 6 more weeks of winter… or an early spring. Depends which rodent you hold to be most trustworthy as a meteorologist.