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SkiPost
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Volume 16 Issue 49: April 2, 2015
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Ask us, We Answer
Do you have a Nordic training, technique, equipment, travel, or event question? Just email us at weanswer@skipost.com
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Favorite Bliz?
What is your favorite pair of Bliz for a Nordic skier but that does not look too racy so I can wear it around town and not look like I am posing?
My favorite Bliz for skiing, running and around town wearing are the Bliz Tracker. Its modular so you can wear it multiple ways and it is still the choice or World Cup champion Martin Johnsrud Sundby for for free Nordic skiing.
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Kick Zone Ski Storage
What does one do to the kick zone for storage!
F
Dear F,
For summer ski storage you can clean your base and just leave it dry. But I like to take it to another level and add a layer of Start Syn Nordic Kick Wax. Syn Nordic is Start's hardest/coldest kick wax which will protect the base throughout the summer and make it easier for other kickers to bond to your base next winter.
Andy at SkiPost
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Ski Storage
Question... I've always appreciated your recommendations/tips for summer storage wax on skis. I recently bought a new pair of skis and they have not yet touched the snow. Do they need to be "summer" waxed too? Anticipating next season!
A
Dear A,
Yes you should apply summer storage wax to your skis even though they are new. If you have an exposed base it is is always better to cover it with wax. Skis have a thin layer of wax applied at the factory but these are very thin so one can still see the base. It is always better to apply more base coverage for summer storage.
Andy at SkiPost
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Summer Ski Storage
Clean the base cover the Base
1) Cleaning: Use wax remover and Fiber wipe to clean the kick zone and also the glide zone.
2) Use the finest Steel brush to clean excess dirt from base.
3) Apply layer of Start Base (or Service or soft non-fluoro glider like SG2) to glide zones.
4) While wax is still soft use scraper with low pressure to "hot wipe" wax and further dirt away.
5) Follow with Fiber wipe and then finest steel brush again to remove dirt while refreshing base further. Repeat steps 4 and 5 as necessary until no more dirt is seen coming from base.
6) If you suspect your skis have any base damage (i.e. base sealing) consider having the skis stoneground to reveal a fresh base in the spring before summer storage. A fresh base is the most import feature in a skis ability to hold wax and to glide. Ski shops in most every ski town offer great stone grinding services.
7) Once you have a clean and refreshed base it is time to saturate the base with a summer storage wax. In the glide zones melt in a thick layer of Start Base (or Service or soft non-fluoro glider like SG2) and let it cool. If all the wax has been absorbed into the base at any point add another layer on to. Let cool leave it on the ski all summer.
8) Skis should be storage in cool, dry place, out of sunlight and not near heating elements nor not near the roof where temperature can rise over 50C degrees. Skis should be stored loosely strapped with no pressure on camber so that there is no risk that heat and pressure can alter any of the skis camber characteristics.
9) Better to do something than nothing. So at the very, very least crayon your softest glide onto your glide zones right now.
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Kick like a mule
I've taught this drill many times, at many different areas, to many different skiers. They hate it!
Why? Because this isn't a drill that you "get" the first time. Instead, you must practice and practice this drill, mastering and refining your timing, balance and glide, until, after many reps, you blend the principles of the drill into actual classic diagonal stride.
Patience Is Half Of Valor
Just getting the drill right takes time and patince, affording many skiers frustration and heartache. When I introduce this drill in a typical clinic format, there isn't enough time to learn, practice and develop mastery. Consequently, the drill often creates frustration.
Getting the drill right is NOT enough. Extracting the subtlety from this drill, translating the drill into your technique, requires that YOU understand the progression of learning. ....More here
| Classic Nordic Skiing, Diagonal Stride: Skipping for Better Grip |
Enjoy and...
Ski Fast!
David Lawrence
XCSkiAcademy.com
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XC Trail Tracker
xctrailtracker.com is a new free website put together by Nordic skiers for Nordic skiers. This is a place where you can post a report of your time on the trails or read other skiers' reports to help decide where where the good snow or good grooming is, if it's worth driving to the trailhead, etc. If your favorite trails are not yet on the map, you can add them. The site can be used for trails anywhere in the world! Obviously, this type of site needs a critical mass to make it effective, so please join in! at www.xctrailtracker.com
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CXC Season Finale Auction is Open!
Start your bidding on unique and one of a kind gear - sure to round out your skiing and training needs. Winning bids and donations directly support CXC Skiing programming and events.
Auction Site: cxc2015
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Kids Grow Up
By Dussault Family
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First Days on Snow
I have found that it takes perhaps a week of skating on snow to recover ones strength. For the first few times on snow I need to stop and rest frequently while climbing. Is there any way to speed up this acclimatization process? Perhaps one should roller ski on very slow wheels prior to the shift to snow.
Thanks
B B
BB,
Yes doing as much ski specific training in the fall will help. Hill bounding, spenst training, running with poles, plyos all will help prepare you. For sure rollerskiing with wheels that simulate skiing speed will help. We like the Swenor Rollerskis for this reason. But you should slow down and enjoy your that first week. Slow down and work on technique. Ski without poles to work on weight transfer. It is OK to take your time.
Andy at SkiPost
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So you've decided to tackle an endurance race-maybe a marathon or half marathon, maybe a triathlon, century ride, all-day hike, or some other multi-hour effort. Of the many tough decisions you'll make that day, one of the first is: What should you eat for breakfast?
There's only one right answer, in a sense, and that is: Whatever you practiced during your training. Race day is not the time to try anything new, because you'll be living with the consequences for several (possibly agonizing) hours. Still, you have to start somewhere, so here are some of the things you'll want to keep in mind to prepare the best breakfasts.
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Ned Preaches Intensity
from Velonews
I turned 59 in 2014, and I have maintained a high level of fitness since I first began endurance racing in the late 1970s. Training with an emphasis on high-intensity intervals has been my preferred method of preparing for events throughout my career, which includes racing mountain bikes, road bikes, cyclocross, and Xterra triathlon. I made a few forays into long-distance events such as the Leadville 100 mountain bike race and the Ironman triathlon, but my preference is racing for one to four hours.
I embrace a higher-intensity/lower-volume regimen partly because I love to suffer but also because of the race results I've achieved with this philosophy. I have a short attention span for training rides. I like the excitement of pushing the pace both on the climbs and descents as opposed to riding at a slower pace for a longer ride. A long ride for me is about three hours, and I rarely do more than one a week.
velonews.competitor.com
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Salomon Carbon?
Jessie Diggins won her World Championship Silver on a pair of Carbons
What is the hype Salomon is putting about their Carbon ski? Don't all ski have Carbon?
DS
Dear DS,
Salomon launched the Salomon Carbon this winter with breakthrough race results from athletes and rave reviews for neutral testers as well. The Salomon Carbon is unique in that the entire wrap is carbon rather then just comprised of some carbon. And while it is incredibly light its most notable attributes are how it glides, feels underfoot, and reacts. All this make it a fast ski. But as I work with Salomon I will let two neutral commentators (Gear West and Caldwell Sport) share some of their thoughts on the ski.
Andy at SkiPost
Gear West - Jan Gunther gearwest.com/blog/salomon-carbon-skate-lab
Jan states "My 28th birke year and I feel I am always learning a little something new about skiing, technique, and skis......the Carbon were my ski of choice for the Birke. ........ My conclusion? There are a lot of really great performing skis in the hi-end race category and now Salomon offers one more. Beyond being unbelievably light, their new Carbon ski offers significant stability in firm snow conditions ( to all skiers who can ride one ski using open field / V2 technique) and a soft tip for floatation in sugar snow given a hard track underneath. Enjoy! read the complete Story here gearwest.com/blog/salomon-carbon-skate-lab
From Caldwell Sport- Zack Caldwell www.facebook.com ...Salomon has just made the next ski that I'm aware of to embrace carbon as a primary structural element, and I think this may be a game-changer. ...I've skied on one pair of these (and been impressed), and have just received four more for grinding. These skis have been showing up all over the World Cup this season.
Read more www.caldwellsportfacebook
Salomon Carbon Ski Video Here
| Salomon Carbon Skate Lab Ski |
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Woodski March Madness Sale!
Start and Finish Sale! The start of dry land training and the end of a great winter! Woodski is celebrating by throwing a huge sale! 20% off every and any item we make or carry! From now until the last day of March! Use the code "marchmadness" to get the discount. Tell your friends that it is time to get the best roller skis on earth or the best wax table on the planet. While supplies last...
www.woodrollerski.com/
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Wax Selector
Andy, I used the Start Wax Chooser app for the Great Bear Chase and my skis were spot on. Wish I had found it earlier as it is simple and intuitive. It picks wax based on only snow type and temp, just as I learned for my beloved coach, Igor Badamshin. Thanks for you helpful insights, GZ |
Start Glider Types
You described how Start has different kick wax types for different snow types. Does this hold true for Start gliders as well?
FS
Yes Start has different glider types for different snow types. But the types are formulated differently than for kick. In kick waxing development you need to have a wax that bends to stick to the snow for kick, yet breaks free to get glide. With glide wax you need snow crystal management, humidity management, moisture management and dirt management.
Start has the S series for "normal" new or older snow with 4 grades (SG, LF, MF, HF)
SG having no Fluor for "no" humidity and no moisture
LF having ~ Fluor for low humidity and low moisture
MF ~10% Fluor for medium humidity and low moisture
HF ~ 20% Fluor for high humidity and low moisture
Start has the BM series for coarse, dirty and artificial snow.
Start has the FHF series for high moisture snow.
The S series is what most people need most of the time. You get the most snow crystal management from the glider hardness so you select a glider color based on snow temp that is just harder than your snow crystals. If you go too hard the crystals do not penetrate the glider which is good but you give up lubrication which is bad. If you go too soft the crystals dig into the glider and you have little to no glide. Always better to go too hard than too soft. You then select the Grade of glider based on the airs relative humidity. The more moisture in the air the more you want Fluor in the glider to manage the thin layer of water between the ski and the snow.
We use the BM series when the snow is extremely dirty and coarse. BM has > 20% Fluor and also Molybdenum which is a dry lubricant for dirt and coarse icy snow.
If you have wet snow and you know that you are manage pure water ( rather than just are humidity) then we go to the FHF series. FHF gliders have >20% spherical nano Fluorocarbon molecules that are super-hydrophobic.
The Finishing waxes follow the same concept with different Series products with different hardnesses for these dufferenbt snow condistions.
Start also has is 100% Fluorocarbon Finishing Waxes under these same series.
S for normal snow- SFR
BM series for coarse, dirty and artificial snow.
FHF for high moisture snow.
Within each series there are different temps of Fluors to match snow crystal hardness.
At the warm Junior Nationals in Truckee CA right now, Evan our Start manager, is using allot of FHF waxes to manage the high moisture conditions.
i could go on but will not at this time..
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World Cup Videos
IBU Last weekend races at
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Select Events & Destinations
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Osceola Tug Hill XC Ski Center
For Sale
Camden NY
www.uxcski.com
Incorporated in December of 1980 and still growing 10-12% a year after almost 35 years. 40k of trails for skate and classic on 225 acres of land. In addition to the ski center we have an adjacent camp that we rent to skiers. Complete financials available. Asking price is $560,000 without the camp and $597,000 with the camp. For more information contact
Hugh Quinn
Osceola Tug Hill XC
uxcski@gmail.com
315 599 7377
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Endurance United
Accepting Applications for Executive Director
ST. PAUL, MN-Endurance United today announced that it is accepting applications to fill the position of
Executive Director. The position is full time and requires a passion for communities, endurance sports and a vision for how to inspire people to be more active and enjoy the outdoors. A candidate must be able to inspire and manage staff, volunteers, members and the community stakeholders.
Position Description: The Executive Director has overall responsibility for the execution of the mission and vision of Endurance United and leads the day-to-day operations under the direction of the Board of Directors. Qualified candidates must have excellent leadership, human relations and organizational skills. An ideal candidate would have skills and experience in coaching, event management, community relations, and fundraising.
About Endurance United:Based in St. Paul, MN, Endurance United is a 501(c)(3) dedicated to the development, support and promotion of endurance sports and related outdoor activities in Minnesota. Endurance United hosts many running, skiing and bike events throughout the year, as well as provides outdoor programming to over 1200 participants. Endurance United also plays an integral role in maintaining the trail system at Battle Creek Park in St. Paul.
This position is based in St. Paul, Minnesota.
How to Apply: A resume and letter of interest that addresses the desired qualifications must be submitted by April 15, 2015 to Mike Brown, President of the Board of Directors of Endurance United.
Email To: Mike Brown at mike.brown@enduranceunited.org
See Description of Responsibilities Below.
Endurance United Executive Director
- Reports to Endurance United Board of Directors. The Executive Director provides monthly updates and recommendations to the Endurance United Board of Directors and attends bi-monthly meetings of the Board.
- Leader. The Executive Director has overall responsibility for the execution of the mission and vision of Endurance United. In support of this duty, the Executive Director:
- develops and implements short and long-term strategies to improve and expand all areas of the organization, and to secure adequate funding to ensure Issue's continued success
- develops and implement plans to market and promote Endurance United, its events and programs, all with the intent of promoting active, outdoor, healthy lifestyle.
- establishes and maintains effective channels of communication between members, participants, community members, sponsors and Board.
- Community Liaison. The Executive Director is the liaison between Endurance United and state/county/city personnel/non-profit organizations/private partners with the goal of encouraging cooperation and support from these entities for Endurance United and its' mission. The Executive Director will monitor state and local governmental and non-governmental activities that may impact the organization. As appropriate, the Executive Director takes action as needed to foster a positive impact for the organization.
- Programming. The Executive Director is accountable for oversight of all programming for Endurance United in concert with the Program Director. The Executive Director mentors, inspires and learns from coaching staff and Program leaders.
- Event Management. The Executive Director provides leadership and direction to event operations and related sponsorship opportunities. This role requires interface and management of staff, volunteers, community personnel and sponsors. Volunteers are critical to Endurance United's success, and the Executive Director must create and implement a plan to obtain volunteers and foster good relations with volunteers.
- Management. The Executive Director is accountable for overall administration of the organization, including development and direction of all programs and events. In partnership with the Board of Directors, the Executive Director:
- creates, implements & maintains an on-going business plan, including short & long term goals for Endurance United.
- develops an annual financial plan for revenues and expenditures.
- manages human resources, capital, physical assets and general operating expenses in a fiscally responsible manner.
- Fund raising. The Executive Director has primary responsibility for Endurance United's efforts to fund its growth through programming, events, sponsorships, grants, donations, user fees, and other fundraising activities. This responsibility includes creating a fund raising strategy in consultation with the Board and implementing the strategy once approved. This also requires some amount of public speaking and meetings on behalf of Endurance United.
- The Executive Director is CREATIVE, PASSIONATE, and LEADS BY EXAMPLE.
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Mansfield Nordic Club
Development Team Leader Position
Mansfield Nordic seeks to hire a Development Team Leader to drive our top youth skiers toward higher level skiing on our Competition Team. This Team Leader will be a high-energy skier with strong communication abilities among individual athletes, groups, parents and volunteers. As a motivating and enthusiastic presence, the person who fills this leadership role will be an individual who is supportive, enthusiastic and ready to make a positive difference in the lives of skiers both on and off the trail.
The ability to motivate athletes and coordinate workouts, games, races and other events is key, as is creativity and adaptability in regards to weather, snow conditions and training venues.
Effective coaching is a key component of this position. Primary responsibilities will include:
- Coaching the MNC Development Team, comprised of 8-12 fast, motivated skiers age 12-16
- Providing motivation, technique development & race savvy in a fun & energetic manner
- Sharing a passion & joy for skiing, as well as encouraging determination & hard work among athletes
- Collaborating directly with the MNC Bill Koch League team & Competition Team
- Providing race support at 4 NENSA Eastern Cup events, BKL events & more (EHSC qualifiers, out-of-region JNQs)
- Designing individual training for athletes, & working with them to develop both long & short-term goals
- Actively communicating & coordinating with parents & other ski team coaches
This position is also rooted deeply in the MNC group as a whole. Secondary responsibilities may include:
- Serving as an assistant coach for the MNC Masters program
- Organizing/leading wax clinics for parents/skiers, & leading & training parental wax teams
- Working to bring "Celebrity Guest Coaches" to team events & practices
- Leading MNC initiatives for social media, website enhancement, event promotion & more
Salary will be commensurate with experience & past coaching success (& influenced by skier enrollment) but will range between $8,000 & $12,000 for leading up to 5 training sessions per week from May through March, as well as providing coaching, waxing and support at 6+ competition weekends during the winter.
About MNC
Mansfield Nordic is one of the largest and most diverse ski clubs in New England, with programs for over 200 skiers ranging in age from 7 to 70+. Our home training facility is the Ethan Allen Biathlon range in Jericho, Vermont. This location features snowmaking, lighted trails, Pisten Bully grooming, challenging terrain, a large lodge and a 5-kilometer paved rollerski system. MNC also trains at Trapp Family Lodge, the Craftsbury Outdoor Center and other top-level facilities around the state. Our members range from recreational skiers to top racers. MNC youth, junior and collegiate racers have recently been on the podium at the NENSA BKL Festival, USSA Junior Nationals, NCAA Championships and Masters National and World Championships.
To inquire about this position, please submit a resume and cover letter to Adam Terko: adamRterko@gmail.com
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About SkiPost
Cross-Country skiing's community lodge. Where knowledge and stories are shared. The goal of SkiPost is to make the sport of Cross-Country skiing easier and more enjoyable for all who choose to participate. If you have questions on Cross-Country Skiing email us weanswer@SkiPost.com and visit SkiPost.com
Enjoy Winter,
Andrew Gerlach Director/Editor- SkiPost
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