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#1
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Best of the Year? TR (Long)
The snow around north central Wisconsin is old and worn. We've been
without new snow for a couple of weeks and the intervening period has seen more than its fair share of above freezing days. On the plus side all the substantial snows we've had this year have been very wet. This means the snow that is onb the ground and the few days of rain we've had have only consolidated the snow pack more. An hour or so north there is still good to excellent track skiing but around here the ski areas that are open are pretty much limited to skating. So lately I've been skiing in the ungroomed city parks. And it hasn't been bad. In a way its been like being 12 again. I've been skiing through areas that resemble the cow pastures and river banks of my well spent youth. I've seen plenty of rabbits and a few days ago I had a fox run across the unused snowmobile trial that I had appropriated. Its been fun. But today I decided that at least a short road trip was in order. So I loaded my 8 year old son Mason, my 6 month old Jack Russell Terrier Cosmo and a backpack and our skis into the Taurus Wagon and drove the 7 miles north of the town to the City of Merrill Memorial Forest. This is a piece of wild land that was established after WWII to honor the returning Vets. It is well used by hunters and has a snowmobile trail (still closed) running through it, seldom visited by others. But its main road, used by loggers in the summer, is gated and only foot traffic is allowed afterthe bough cutters (for Xmas wreaths) are done in early December. We pulled into the driveway and parked near the gate. The boy and dog were freed and the skis unloaded from the Thule box. Mason used his old waxless skis (why wreck his good skis in case the snow was thin) and I brought along my 25 year old yellow Epoke 1000s. I had put on a layer of Holmenkolen purple klister, a nice broad range wax (-4C to +4C). Mason put his skis on by himself (a new thing this year) and I clicked into the NNN BC autos. The backpack with extra clothes and water was slipped on and the camera hung around my neck and we were off. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0133.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0135.jpg The first stretch had been plowed at some point before our last snowfall. The road ran through a swamp. There was an old set of ski tracks and several sets of snowshoe tracks. The coverage was thin, only a couple of inches, but very firm. The few bare spots were easily by-passed. The purple klister, which at first seemed sticky, was, within a hundred yards or so, running very well. Good kick and good glide. We skied through the swamp secton and then came to a long low hill. The road entered the woods here as it climbed and the snow depth also increased. We skied up the hill, listening to a small pack of hounds howling on the trail of something a few hundred yards away. Mason thought that they might be wolves, but I told him it was probably just some rabbit hunters. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0137.jpg We passed an untracked side road and then a few hundred yards passed another. The snow there was pristine. So we kick turned off the plowed road and headed into the hills to the south. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0144.jpg The dog was having the time of his life. Every rabbit and deer track was investigated. Every descent we made was a race to be run (he always won). http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0141.jpg At the top of one hill I had to rest, there haven't been many hills this January and I was carry more extra weight this year than just the few pounds in the pack. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0139.jpg We kept passing other side roads, the unmarked snow beckoning us to turn first left then right. But we stayed straight on. The snow itself was as close to perfect as it can get. The depth in the woods was maybe 8 inches, on the trail 6. But it was hard. My 200 pounds forced my skis less than an inch into its surface. I didn't break through once the entire ski. And despite the rain we've had a couple times in the last month there was no ice. None. It was the kind of skiing you see on cartoons, the skis riding on the snow's very top layer. And it was fast, even with the wide old BC skis.Definitely the best skiing of the year, perhaps, to be honest, the best in quite a few years. Finally we came to the foot a nice sized hill. The road split here, with one fork going straight around the bottom of the hill and the other, right hand fork, going straight up the hill. We went straight up way. At the top of the hill the road ended. There was a No trsspassing sign nailed to a tree at it's terminus. A quick drink of a shared bottle of water and we headed back down. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0144.jpg It had been about an hour and a half getting in and both my son and puppy were looking a little tuckered so we skiied back the way we came. Soon we hit the plowed road and all too soon we were headed down the hill to the swamp section, with only a few run ins with snow snakes. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0149.jpg The ski back to the car was slow, alowing for some time to look over the bogs to the south, lit by the lowering sun. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0153.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0155.jpg And then we were back at the car, loading up and pulling out past the City Forest sign. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0159.jpg A good day in the woods. hth g.c. |
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#2
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George Cleveland wrote:
[big snip] And then we were back at the car, loading up and pulling out past the City Forest sign. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0159.jpg A good day in the woods. Very nice! Terje -- - "almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching" |
#3
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George,
I work in Merrill, and live in Rhinelander. Snow is as you said both places, but further to the north, at the Minoqua Winter Park, it's....best I've seen all year. Washburn trails in Rhinelander are pretty decent, considering the snow or lack thereof. A few more miles north would have been awesome.! Randy George Cleveland wrote: The snow around north central Wisconsin is old and worn. We've been without new snow for a couple of weeks and the intervening period has seen more than its fair share of above freezing days. On the plus side all the substantial snows we've had this year have been very wet. This means the snow that is onb the ground and the few days of rain we've had have only consolidated the snow pack more. An hour or so north there is still good to excellent track skiing but around here the ski areas that are open are pretty much limited to skating. So lately I've been skiing in the ungroomed city parks. And it hasn't been bad. In a way its been like being 12 again. I've been skiing through areas that resemble the cow pastures and river banks of my well spent youth. I've seen plenty of rabbits and a few days ago I had a fox run across the unused snowmobile trial that I had appropriated. Its been fun. But today I decided that at least a short road trip was in order. So I loaded my 8 year old son Mason, my 6 month old Jack Russell Terrier Cosmo and a backpack and our skis into the Taurus Wagon and drove the 7 miles north of the town to the City of Merrill Memorial Forest. This is a piece of wild land that was established after WWII to honor the returning Vets. It is well used by hunters and has a snowmobile trail (still closed) running through it, seldom visited by others. But its main road, used by loggers in the summer, is gated and only foot traffic is allowed afterthe bough cutters (for Xmas wreaths) are done in early December. We pulled into the driveway and parked near the gate. The boy and dog were freed and the skis unloaded from the Thule box. Mason used his old waxless skis (why wreck his good skis in case the snow was thin) and I brought along my 25 year old yellow Epoke 1000s. I had put on a layer of Holmenkolen purple klister, a nice broad range wax (-4C to +4C). Mason put his skis on by himself (a new thing this year) and I clicked into the NNN BC autos. The backpack with extra clothes and water was slipped on and the camera hung around my neck and we were off. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0133.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0135.jpg The first stretch had been plowed at some point before our last snowfall. The road ran through a swamp. There was an old set of ski tracks and several sets of snowshoe tracks. The coverage was thin, only a couple of inches, but very firm. The few bare spots were easily by-passed. The purple klister, which at first seemed sticky, was, within a hundred yards or so, running very well. Good kick and good glide. We skied through the swamp secton and then came to a long low hill. The road entered the woods here as it climbed and the snow depth also increased. We skied up the hill, listening to a small pack of hounds howling on the trail of something a few hundred yards away. Mason thought that they might be wolves, but I told him it was probably just some rabbit hunters. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0137.jpg We passed an untracked side road and then a few hundred yards passed another. The snow there was pristine. So we kick turned off the plowed road and headed into the hills to the south. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0144.jpg The dog was having the time of his life. Every rabbit and deer track was investigated. Every descent we made was a race to be run (he always won). http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0141.jpg At the top of one hill I had to rest, there haven't been many hills this January and I was carry more extra weight this year than just the few pounds in the pack. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0139.jpg We kept passing other side roads, the unmarked snow beckoning us to turn first left then right. But we stayed straight on. The snow itself was as close to perfect as it can get. The depth in the woods was maybe 8 inches, on the trail 6. But it was hard. My 200 pounds forced my skis less than an inch into its surface. I didn't break through once the entire ski. And despite the rain we've had a couple times in the last month there was no ice. None. It was the kind of skiing you see on cartoons, the skis riding on the snow's very top layer. And it was fast, even with the wide old BC skis.Definitely the best skiing of the year, perhaps, to be honest, the best in quite a few years. Finally we came to the foot a nice sized hill. The road split here, with one fork going straight around the bottom of the hill and the other, right hand fork, going straight up the hill. We went straight up way. At the top of the hill the road ended. There was a No trsspassing sign nailed to a tree at it's terminus. A quick drink of a shared bottle of water and we headed back down. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0144.jpg It had been about an hour and a half getting in and both my son and puppy were looking a little tuckered so we skiied back the way we came. Soon we hit the plowed road and all too soon we were headed down the hill to the swamp section, with only a few run ins with snow snakes. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0149.jpg The ski back to the car was slow, alowing for some time to look over the bogs to the south, lit by the lowering sun. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0153.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0155.jpg And then we were back at the car, loading up and pulling out past the City Forest sign. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0159.jpg A good day in the woods. hth g.c. |
#4
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George
This is the reason why I stick around this group. A really neat post. Thanks |
#5
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Nice day story and a good way for a child to learn about the variety
of x-c skiing trails. When you got to 1.5 hrs and Mason and the pup looking a little tired, I wondered how well the 8 yr old made it out. The photos make it look like he rode some of the downhills. Gene George Cleveland wrote: The snow around north central Wisconsin is old and worn. We've been without new snow for a couple of weeks and the intervening period has seen more than its fair share of above freezing days. On the plus side all the substantial snows we've had this year have been very wet. This means the snow that is onb the ground and the few days of rain we've had have only consolidated the snow pack more. An hour or so north there is still good to excellent track skiing but around here the ski areas that are open are pretty much limited to skating. So lately I've been skiing in the ungroomed city parks. And it hasn't been bad. In a way its been like being 12 again. I've been skiing through areas that resemble the cow pastures and river banks of my well spent youth. I've seen plenty of rabbits and a few days ago I had a fox run across the unused snowmobile trial that I had appropriated. Its been fun. But today I decided that at least a short road trip was in order. So I loaded my 8 year old son Mason, my 6 month old Jack Russell Terrier Cosmo and a backpack and our skis into the Taurus Wagon and drove the 7 miles north of the town to the City of Merrill Memorial Forest. This is a piece of wild land that was established after WWII to honor the returning Vets. It is well used by hunters and has a snowmobile trail (still closed) running through it, seldom visited by others. But its main road, used by loggers in the summer, is gated and only foot traffic is allowed afterthe bough cutters (for Xmas wreaths) are done in early December. We pulled into the driveway and parked near the gate. The boy and dog were freed and the skis unloaded from the Thule box. Mason used his old waxless skis (why wreck his good skis in case the snow was thin) and I brought along my 25 year old yellow Epoke 1000s. I had put on a layer of Holmenkolen purple klister, a nice broad range wax (-4C to +4C). Mason put his skis on by himself (a new thing this year) and I clicked into the NNN BC autos. The backpack with extra clothes and water was slipped on and the camera hung around my neck and we were off. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0133.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0135.jpg The first stretch had been plowed at some point before our last snowfall. The road ran through a swamp. There was an old set of ski tracks and several sets of snowshoe tracks. The coverage was thin, only a couple of inches, but very firm. The few bare spots were easily by-passed. The purple klister, which at first seemed sticky, was, within a hundred yards or so, running very well. Good kick and good glide. We skied through the swamp secton and then came to a long low hill. The road entered the woods here as it climbed and the snow depth also increased. We skied up the hill, listening to a small pack of hounds howling on the trail of something a few hundred yards away. Mason thought that they might be wolves, but I told him it was probably just some rabbit hunters. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0137.jpg We passed an untracked side road and then a few hundred yards passed another. The snow there was pristine. So we kick turned off the plowed road and headed into the hills to the south. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0144.jpg The dog was having the time of his life. Every rabbit and deer track was investigated. Every descent we made was a race to be run (he always won). http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0141.jpg At the top of one hill I had to rest, there haven't been many hills this January and I was carry more extra weight this year than just the few pounds in the pack. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0139.jpg We kept passing other side roads, the unmarked snow beckoning us to turn first left then right. But we stayed straight on. The snow itself was as close to perfect as it can get. The depth in the woods was maybe 8 inches, on the trail 6. But it was hard. My 200 pounds forced my skis less than an inch into its surface. I didn't break through once the entire ski. And despite the rain we've had a couple times in the last month there was no ice. None. It was the kind of skiing you see on cartoons, the skis riding on the snow's very top layer. And it was fast, even with the wide old BC skis.Definitely the best skiing of the year, perhaps, to be honest, the best in quite a few years. Finally we came to the foot a nice sized hill. The road split here, with one fork going straight around the bottom of the hill and the other, right hand fork, going straight up the hill. We went straight up way. At the top of the hill the road ended. There was a No trsspassing sign nailed to a tree at it's terminus. A quick drink of a shared bottle of water and we headed back down. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0144.jpg It had been about an hour and a half getting in and both my son and puppy were looking a little tuckered so we skiied back the way we came. Soon we hit the plowed road and all too soon we were headed down the hill to the swamp section, with only a few run ins with snow snakes. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0149.jpg The ski back to the car was slow, alowing for some time to look over the bogs to the south, lit by the lowering sun. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0153.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0155.jpg And then we were back at the car, loading up and pulling out past the City Forest sign. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...t/IMG_0159.jpg A good day in the woods. hth g.c. |
#6
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On Mon, 16 Jan 2006 15:51:24 -0600, Gene Goldenfeld
wrote: Nice day story and a good way for a child to learn about the variety of x-c skiing trails. When you got to 1.5 hrs and Mason and the pup looking a little tired, I wondered how well the 8 yr old made it out. The photos make it look like he rode some of the downhills. Gene He actually did fine. One fall on the plowed road. On really steep hills he basically squats all the way down on his skis and that way if he does lose it he's only falling a couple inches. But in general he takes most hills o.k., in a deep crouch. Not having tracks this time meant that he had to do step turns on the shallower hills but again he did fine. He didn't fall asleep on the ride home, which is a good sign that we didn't overdo it. The pup did though and was pretty quiet for a Jack Russell the rest of the evening. g.c. |
#7
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One thing kids really like to do on downhills, if he hasn't tried it, is
to go knee down on the skis and hold the tips. It's also one of those last ditch measures instructors use with adults who are terrified of downhills. Gene George Cleveland wrote: On Mon, 16 Jan 2006 15:51:24 -0600, Gene Goldenfeld wrote: Nice day story and a good way for a child to learn about the variety of x-c skiing trails. When you got to 1.5 hrs and Mason and the pup looking a little tired, I wondered how well the 8 yr old made it out. The photos make it look like he rode some of the downhills. Gene He actually did fine. One fall on the plowed road. On really steep hills he basically squats all the way down on his skis and that way if he does lose it he's only falling a couple inches. But in general he takes most hills o.k., in a deep crouch. Not having tracks this time meant that he had to do step turns on the shallower hills but again he did fine. He didn't fall asleep on the ride home, which is a good sign that we didn't overdo it. The pup did though and was pretty quiet for a Jack Russell the rest of the evening. g.c. |
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