Thursday, December 18, 2008
BOOOOO!
These has been almost nothing going on in my area as far as winter sports are concerned for the past few days. We has a great base, and then some rain and 40deg. temps came through for a day and washed it all away...better news and more reports soon...
Friday, December 12, 2008
SKiing at Barkhausen
I'm always on the quest for new trails to explore, so I've been on Skinny Ski a lot lately looking for cool places nearby. Yesterday I had to go to Green Bay anyway, so I decided to check out Barkhausen Waterfowl Preserve. According to Skinny Ski, Barkhausen is groomed 15k for skate and classic. I arrived to find the trails in great shape, and groomed exclusively for classic. As I was looking for a 2-2.5 hour diagonal day, this worked out really well. The trails were very well groomed with pretty minimal trail debris, and were groomed double-wide with perfect tracks. In my 2h20m on the trail, I saw only two other skiers, both within the first 15 mins.
These trails are pancake flat, but in very good condition, and with some great scenery through the woods and along the shorelines of some small ponds and inlets. I would highly reccommend the area to anyone heading that direction.
These trails are pancake flat, but in very good condition, and with some great scenery through the woods and along the shorelines of some small ponds and inlets. I would highly reccommend the area to anyone heading that direction.
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
First Snowshoe Day!
The snow has been coming down in Northeast Wisconsin since last night, hitting Door County right around 6:15pm. Since I didn't have to work until 11 this morning, I thought I'd get out and explore the woods surroundng my home. I live on the campus of a folk art school called The Clearing, but I have never explored the grounds so I figured that there is never a better time than right now. I started out off-trail, but pretty quickly ran into one. I hiked around for about 45 minutes on and off-trail, and it is really a great place. Campus is closed in the summer, but in the winter, when there are no students, it is available fo use all day every day.
I tried out some Crescent Moon Gold 15s for the first time today...sweet snowshoes. The 15s are technically in the women's series, but I fall well within the weight limit, so I figured why lug around the heavier Gold 9s. The binding on these shoes is really simple, just a ratchet for the heel and a loop that pulls across the toe and midfoot area with a real secure fit. The Redfeathers that I used last season have a hinge on the binding so the shoe is always dragging in the snow behind you, but on the Crescent Moon shoe, the binding is mounted directly to the decking so it remains closer to your foot and remains a little bit more nimble. Also, the teardrop-shape fram is easier to walk in that the traditional ovals...I didn't step on myself once. My only complaint about the Crescent Moons is that the binding seemed to splay a little bit when I put my size 11.5 boots in, but I really didn't notice any slop once they were tightened down.
Crescent Moon Gold 15 Snowshoes - Women's
There is at least 8-12" of snow on the ground, but it seems like a lot more in the woods; snow seems to have drifed and made some pretty big pockets, and since it's light and powdery its SOOPER fun to jump into.
I tried out some Crescent Moon Gold 15s for the first time today...sweet snowshoes. The 15s are technically in the women's series, but I fall well within the weight limit, so I figured why lug around the heavier Gold 9s. The binding on these shoes is really simple, just a ratchet for the heel and a loop that pulls across the toe and midfoot area with a real secure fit. The Redfeathers that I used last season have a hinge on the binding so the shoe is always dragging in the snow behind you, but on the Crescent Moon shoe, the binding is mounted directly to the decking so it remains closer to your foot and remains a little bit more nimble. Also, the teardrop-shape fram is easier to walk in that the traditional ovals...I didn't step on myself once. My only complaint about the Crescent Moons is that the binding seemed to splay a little bit when I put my size 11.5 boots in, but I really didn't notice any slop once they were tightened down.
Crescent Moon Gold 15 Snowshoes - Women's
Saturday, December 6, 2008
First Day of Waxing and XC Skiing
We have snow here in the Door! Plenty of places have groomed trails for skiing including Cherry Hills Nordic Center, Crossroads at Big Creek, Whitefish Dunes State Park, and Peninsula State Park, particularly on the roads. No word yet on Potawatami State Park. The skating at Cherry Hills is pretty money; I was there Thursday and it was great, and I'm sure the roads at Pen Park are as well. Thursday night the volunteers at Peninsula State Park rolled a base on the classic trails which was not real ski-able, but we plan to set track Sunday night and Monday. WOOHOO!
As for me, I have two days in on the trail, on skating at Cherry Hills, and one classic on the ungroomed trails at Peninsula State Park. I have two new sets of classic skis - Rossignol Delta waxable, and some Rossi Zynex AR's which I plan to train on. Since these planks have no wax in them, I've been skiing on some Rossignol EVO Active ARs from our rental fleet. THough they're slow, they are really pretty decent for a mid-level rec waxless ski.
I have four layers of soft wax in the Zynex's and should finish prepping them tomorrow, then I will start on the Deltas.
I will expound briefly upon my ski prep methods: First I brushed the base with a copper brush to open the pores of the p-tex. Next one layer of Toko base prep (gray). I am now on the fourth of five layers of Toko HC Yellow (warm) then two layers of Toko HC Blue (coldest), a layer of Toko HC Red (medium temps), then a layer of Start Green or Rex blue - wax of the day, followed by a good copper brushing and a plastic brush ing. It's pretty basic and will probably take about four days since I'm doing it in free time at work - my home shop is terrible - and hopefully it will all be nice and smooth in the end. I am not the most experienced wax tech in the world, but I am definitely improving...there have been a few clean-and-tune jobs a t work already so I am def. getting more real-world experience.
I have been drinking a lot of Three Winds Pinot Noir go get some. No, don't waste your time like me! Get out and go ski!
Rossignol Evo Action Positrack NIS Cross-Country Skis
As for me, I have two days in on the trail, on skating at Cherry Hills, and one classic on the ungroomed trails at Peninsula State Park. I have two new sets of classic skis - Rossignol Delta waxable, and some Rossi Zynex AR's which I plan to train on. Since these planks have no wax in them, I've been skiing on some Rossignol EVO Active ARs from our rental fleet. THough they're slow, they are really pretty decent for a mid-level rec waxless ski.
I have four layers of soft wax in the Zynex's and should finish prepping them tomorrow, then I will start on the Deltas.
I will expound briefly upon my ski prep methods: First I brushed the base with a copper brush to open the pores of the p-tex. Next one layer of Toko base prep (gray). I am now on the fourth of five layers of Toko HC Yellow (warm) then two layers of Toko HC Blue (coldest), a layer of Toko HC Red (medium temps), then a layer of Start Green or Rex blue - wax of the day, followed by a good copper brushing and a plastic brush ing. It's pretty basic and will probably take about four days since I'm doing it in free time at work - my home shop is terrible - and hopefully it will all be nice and smooth in the end. I am not the most experienced wax tech in the world, but I am definitely improving...there have been a few clean-and-tune jobs a t work already so I am def. getting more real-world experience.
I have been drinking a lot of Three Winds Pinot Noir go get some. No, don't waste your time like me! Get out and go ski!
Rossignol Evo Action Positrack NIS Cross-Country Skis
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Thanksgiving Ride Indiana-Style
The past few days I've been back home in southern Indiana...quite a change from the great white north. Here 20s and snowy. There upper 40s and sunny. I got in two days of riding. One at Brown County State Park the day after Thanksgiving, then Saturday at Wapehani MTB park in Bloomington.
Friday morning was pretty chilly; probably min-30s at the start, then rising to lower 40s by the end of our ride. The trails at Brown County have become some of my favorite. Excellent climbing variety, fast descents, and nice flowy singletrack make these trails a blast to ride. I've never ridden them on a single speed before, and it wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. There are a few spots on the "advanced" segment where I didn't have enough momentum to clear some obstacles, but with more experience I don't think this will be a problem at all. The ladder bridge on the Hesitation Point spur is kinda fun, but is much easier on the way up than back down because of a few little bumps on the way back down that seem to kill momentum...I definitely came to a dead stop on the top of the bridge, and looked real cool. MmmmHmmmm. Other than that, the trails were moderately muddy, but it was nothing un-rideable or dangerous to the trails. The only actual gripe about the trail and Wapehani, too is that the trail isn't blown. It may seem silly kind of like Dan said: "You want to know why someone isn't raking the trails for you?" but it is more of a safety issue than anything. Washing out on wet, slippery leaves is easy to do and I have seen one guy break his collarbone riding into a leaf-covered hole and flying over the bars.
Wapehani was a pretty surprising ride on Saturday. I was in B-town visiting a buddy and thought I'd get a short ride in before I headed back to my folks. I used to live down the street from the Wap and rode their a few times a week before I moved, so I know the area pretty well. Wapehani's trail system consisnts mainly of five or six long, snaking climbs up a ridge, all connected by a trail along the top of the ridge. Unfortunately there is now a cell phone tower on top of the ridge which has wiped out the connector trail, so there is no flow to the network. ride up the hill, look for another trial, or just ride back down. It is now much less fun than it used to be, but hey, it's still mountain biking. There are a few quite new-looking stunts there, too. one nice ladder bridge about 15' off a creekbed, and ladder bridge drop-off with a nice landing and run-out, and a half-assed stunt of some sort that just looked dangerous to ride. Again the trails were covered by leaves; if I lived in the area I'd get out there and blow 'em myself but, alas, I do not. Someone else has to step up and do this for both the fun factor and safety's sake.
Riding back in Indiana makes me hate the 15' wide ski trails I ride up here and long for the hills I no longer have. *SIGH* I'm just never quite happy with where I am.
Friday morning was pretty chilly; probably min-30s at the start, then rising to lower 40s by the end of our ride. The trails at Brown County have become some of my favorite. Excellent climbing variety, fast descents, and nice flowy singletrack make these trails a blast to ride. I've never ridden them on a single speed before, and it wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. There are a few spots on the "advanced" segment where I didn't have enough momentum to clear some obstacles, but with more experience I don't think this will be a problem at all. The ladder bridge on the Hesitation Point spur is kinda fun, but is much easier on the way up than back down because of a few little bumps on the way back down that seem to kill momentum...I definitely came to a dead stop on the top of the bridge, and looked real cool. MmmmHmmmm. Other than that, the trails were moderately muddy, but it was nothing un-rideable or dangerous to the trails. The only actual gripe about the trail and Wapehani, too is that the trail isn't blown. It may seem silly kind of like Dan said: "You want to know why someone isn't raking the trails for you?" but it is more of a safety issue than anything. Washing out on wet, slippery leaves is easy to do and I have seen one guy break his collarbone riding into a leaf-covered hole and flying over the bars.
Wapehani was a pretty surprising ride on Saturday. I was in B-town visiting a buddy and thought I'd get a short ride in before I headed back to my folks. I used to live down the street from the Wap and rode their a few times a week before I moved, so I know the area pretty well. Wapehani's trail system consisnts mainly of five or six long, snaking climbs up a ridge, all connected by a trail along the top of the ridge. Unfortunately there is now a cell phone tower on top of the ridge which has wiped out the connector trail, so there is no flow to the network. ride up the hill, look for another trial, or just ride back down. It is now much less fun than it used to be, but hey, it's still mountain biking. There are a few quite new-looking stunts there, too. one nice ladder bridge about 15' off a creekbed, and ladder bridge drop-off with a nice landing and run-out, and a half-assed stunt of some sort that just looked dangerous to ride. Again the trails were covered by leaves; if I lived in the area I'd get out there and blow 'em myself but, alas, I do not. Someone else has to step up and do this for both the fun factor and safety's sake.
Riding back in Indiana makes me hate the 15' wide ski trails I ride up here and long for the hills I no longer have. *SIGH* I'm just never quite happy with where I am.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)