As I tell my girls, if you can’t get outside and enjoy our winters, you’re going to be miserable.
Of course, starting this new hobby in my late-30s makes me wish I had started earlier. I did ski a little as a kid, but it was mainly back-country blaze-your-own-trail sort of skiing – not competitive skiing. On Sunday I was all pumped to get in another nice ski in the afternoon. However, when my daughter said she wanted to go to skiing at the county park, I happily traded a solo ski for a father-daughter outing.
Anyway, with all that said, I was bound and determined to get out and exercise this morning. Last night I re-waxed my skis and laid out all my clothes. This included, from bottom to top;
Thin socksWith all this on, -7 degrees with a wind chill of -15 were no match. I was toasty warm.
Toe warmers
Thicker socks
Shoes
Wind briefs
Old running pants cut into half-tights
Thick pants
Thin pants
Long sleeve mock turtleneck
Long sleeve shirt
Thick jacket
Thick vest
3 pairs of thin mitts
Hand warmers
Face mask
Hat
Unfortunately, there were 2 problems when I got ready to ski. 1) I bought some new skis and I couldn’t get the back hook on one of the bindings to snap into place. I had a little problem with them the first time I used them, but eventually got them to work. Today I couldn’t get them to work at all. 2) I tried skiing anyway and there was absolutely no glide. Luckily, as I was leaving the house, I threw in my running shoes and I was able to get in an hour run.
So today’s question for the skiers out there is, how does a wax that claims to work from +10 to -25 degrees not work when it’s -7? Is it a grind issue? I’ve had problems with warm weather waxing too. It’s really going to be a bummer if I can only ski when the temperature is between 5 and 25.
Quote of the Day;
“I wish I learned to ski really early, so I could have taken it further than I was able to take it.” - Jan Guenther
There's good news and bad news.
ReplyDeleteBad news first - skiing when it's cold, especially on fresh snow, is just slow. The ski-snow interface is pretty slippery when there's a layer of melt water in between, but when it's really cold, you don't melt the ice crystals, so it's all jagged edges digging into your ski base. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. The objective for cold waxing is to make your base as smooth and hard as possible. That's why the cold waxes are so hard.
The good news is that it's slow for everyone!
I give you a lot of credit for even trying. I'm waiting for the weekend, wuss that I am.
If you look at the trail reports on skinnyski, you'll see a number of people talking about how slow it was to skate today. You're not alone!
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