Tag Archive for: seniors skiing

Winter Wx Forecast: La Nina In Charge

What Will This Winter’s La Nina Bring To Snow Country?

In a La Nina year, the jet stream typically gets bent south, bringing cold air to southern Canada/nothern US. Credit: NOAA/NWS

In a La Nina year, the polar jet stream typically gets bent south, bringing cold air to southern Canada/northern US.
Credit: NOAA/NWS

El Nino, the inflow of warm water in the east/central tropical Pacific, has faded away.  The El Nino event which started in March 2015 and lasted until early 2016 was one of the warmest in the past 30 years.  You know the result: Lots of snow in the West, not so much in the East.

This year, the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center is reporting those warm waters off Peru have cooled off.  In fact, the June surface water temperature is even cooler than they were in May this year. So, in El Nino’s place comes La Nina.  She can cause as much mischief with the weather as her brother.

Briefly, La Nina causes the polar jet stream to move southward, bringing colder temperatures than normal to the northern US and most of Canada. On the other hand, temps are typically warmer in the Southwest and southern plains. As for precipitation, La Nina usually brings wet weather to the upper US and Canada and drier weather in a band that goes across the southern half of the US.

Ergo, cold temperatures plus wet weather equal more potential snow in the northern band (including New England, Hallelujah!) and not so much in the southern half.

Remember, this is a prediction and not a forecast.  Don’t book your vacation plans yet.

Stay tuned, we will be watching winter predictions as they develop.

Skiing Eye Candy For Hot Summer Days

Yes, It’s An Ad, But—Wow—Some Awesome Videography.

Okay, okay, this is a video ad for CMH Heli Skiing, but it’ll do for a bit of a visual fix for these mid summer days. (BTW, we weren’t paid to show you this.)

Back in the early 70s, we wrote some captions for high-quality pictures sent into SKIING magazine by Hans Gmoser, the pioneer of heli-skiing in the Canadian Rockies.  We remember those black and white pictures were almost abstracts with spare shapes and ski trails traced on white snow fields. Heli-skiing was pretty simple then: Go to Banff, get on helicopter, go to back country, ski, repeat.

Now, the CMH Heli Skiing organization has morphed into a travel-adventure-year round, experience vacation with lodges and even, gulp, summer activities.  Well, done, Hans.

In any case, the video clip gives you a flavor of what heli skiing is all about.  And a cooling waft of air from the Canadian Rockies for these triple-H summer days.

Heli-Skiing in the Canadian Rockies: A peak skiiing experience. Credit: CMH

Heli-Skiing in the Canadian Rockies: A peak skiiing experience.
Credit: CMH

Skiing In Literature: The Ski Diva’s Double Black

Perfect Summer Book: A Mystery With Vermont Skiing, A Cheating Fiance, A Spunky Ski Bum From Boston, Dead Bodies, Love Affairs and Gemutlichkeit.

DoubleBlackWhen and if you take a break from hiking, cycling, kayaking and all the other activities our frisky senior readership engages in over the summer, you will can look forward to delicious flights of fancy with a Ski Diva mystery.  Yes, our friend The Ski Diva (aka Wendy Clinch) has written a pot boiler involving murder and mayhem in snow country Vermont.  Actually, Double Black was published in 2013, and we’re just catching up with it.

A full review will follow, but meanwhile, if you’re growing tired of reading Ron Chernow’s Hamilton, or the second volume of Proust, time to lighten up with a good, old fashioned murder mystery set among the ski trails of New England. Comfort reading for senior snow sport enthusiasts!

Order on Amazon, download and you can imagine you’re back in February, making some nice tight turns down Chin Clip or Nose Dive, chasing murders.

Woo-hoo!

 

 

 

Maine Island Trail: Kayaking Paradise For Seniors

For Seniors New To Sea Kayaking,  Join The Maine Island Trail Association.

The coast of Maine has hundreds of beautiful islands that can be visited by kayak. MITA can tell you where and how to do it. Credit: Tamsin Venn

The coast of Maine has hundreds of beautiful islands that can be visited by kayak. MITA can tell you where and how to do it.
Credit: Tamsin Venn

If you’re new to sea kayaking, and if you live in the Northeast, one of the best resources for where to paddle is the Maine Island Trail Association (MITA) Guidebook. You know summer has arrived when this annually updated treasure trove arrives in the mail. Or, “digital members” can download new online version from iTunes. For the price of membership, you can get down to some serious paddling adventure planning this summer.

The Maine Island Trail is a 375-mile recreational waterway that spans the entire coast of Maine. It connects more than 200 island and mainland sites open for day visits or overnight camping. The Maine islands are some of the most beautiful spots you can kayak to. Think smooth granite ledges, islands decked with fir trees, clear water colored Caribbean blue from crushed white shells, spectacular sunsets, and friendly visits from porpoises and seals.

Many of the islands are close together, making island hopping eminently doable.

The annual Trail Guide has comprehensive descriptions and usage guidelines for the islands, and offers details on accessing dozens of privately owned sites that are not open to the general public. The online app has photos of the islands so you can put a place to a name on the nautical chart.

The concept of the Maine Island Trail was founded on the simple premise that those who paddled to these islands would also want to engage in their stewardship. That premise has been born out, by the increasing number of private owners who entrust their islands’ care to MITA.

The guidebook always sends me into flights of fancy. Will this be the summer I paddle the entire trail, from Kittery Point to Machias? Or will I revisit a well-loved spot, like the Deer Island Thorofare, or discover a new place, with family and friends?

Note that while the Trail offers enticing journeys, it is a maritime environment with all the vagaries of ocean conditions, including strong afternoon winds. Kayakers who have accidents tend to become debilitated from cold water and hypothermia more than any other cause. Traveling here is not for the uninitiated. It is best to go with a tour operator (there are many good ones in Maine) or get some instruction and safety information under your PFD (personal floatation device). A good place to start is the guidebook.

The guidebook explains the areas that are riskiest for kayakers but also covers the essentials like what to carry for safety measures, wildlife protection and viewing, camping regulations, leave-no-trace ethics, what to do with waste and trash, afternoon winds and weather, and how to tie some sturdy knots. All of it is incredibly useful information, admonitions interspersed with basic know-how.

MITA also offers volunteer island clean-ups and meet-ups, a great way to get to know other senior kayakers.

Summer is not summer without a trip to a Maine island. For the price of membership in MITA, you have all the information you need to make that happen. Go to www.mita.org.

See you on a Maine island this summer!

This is the 25th year Tamsin Venn has been publishing Atlantic Coastal Kayaker Magazine.  For a subscription, go to www.atlanticcoastalkayaker.com

Dick Gilbane (rowing) and Kristen Roos (paddling) pass Little Ram Island in the Sheepscot River. Credit: Tamsin Venn

Dick Gilbane (rowing) and Kristen Roos (paddling) pass Little Ram Island in the Sheepscot River.
Credit: Tamsin Venn

ski team

Happy Independence Day!

Credit: Tufts Ski Team

Credit: Tufts Ski Team

GoPro: Let Me Take You To The Mountain

Heli-Skiing In Chilean Andes With Breathtaking Lines.

Lynsey Dyer high fives the helo on an awesome run in the Andes.

Lynsey Dyer high fives the helo on an awesome run in the Andes.

Yes, it’s summer and the snow is gone.  Not in Chile.  As you may be aware, the resort at Portillo received nine feet of snow earlier in June.  Nine feet!

So, we decided to follow up with an awesome video from GoPro, the versatile mini video camera company that shot this production at 13,000 in the Andes back in 2013.  We follow four pro skiers on a number of exhilarating runs through snow fields in the high country.  Lynsey Dunn, Chris Davenport, John Johnson, and Travis Rice really haul down some truly challenging and dangerous territory.  Scary to us, but obviously, cup of tea to them.

Why/h0w do they do it?  As Lynsey says in the 10-minute video, “You put your time in enough, and these places that a lot of people think are so dangerous become comfortable.”

Indeed.  Fun to watch, though.  Click on any of the pics or here to watch.

Have you heli-skiied? Tell us.

Four pro skiers at the tippy top of somewhere in the Andes. Credit: GoPro

Four pro skiers at the tippy top of somewhere in the Andes.
Credit: GoPro

Woweee. Lynsey Dyer having a blast in a Chilean snowfield. Credit: GoPro

Woweee. Lynsey Dyer having a blast in a Chilean snowfield.
Credit: GoPro

A Western Tradition Bites The Dust

The “Sniagrab” Is Gone Forever.

Ouch. Another major retail chain bites the dust and with it goes the famous "sniagrab" sales. Credit: Harriet Wallis

Ouch. Another major retail chain bites the dust and with it goes the famous “sniagrab” sales.
Credit: Harriet Wallis

“Sniagrab” is the word “bargains” spelled backwards. More than just a catchy name, Sniagrab was the famous Labor Day blowout sale held by sporting goods retailer Sports Authority. Everything –skis, boards, boots, and all gear and clothing – left over from last season was assembled in a warehouse-type setting and sold at rock bottom prices.

People would wait for hours to be the first through the doors to snatch up the hottest deals. And while waiting in line, there often were handouts and give-aways to stoke the fever. Here in Salt Lake City, many of the state’s 14 resorts had booths and sold season passes at the lowest pre-season prices. Sniagrab was a Labor Day addiction.

Sniagrab created a frenzy that heralded the upcoming ski season. When I lived in New England I chomped at the bit to move West and get to a famous Sniagrab sale. But now the 60-year Sniagrab tradition is kaput, never to happen again.

Sports Authority, a nationwide sporting goods retailer, announced bankruptcy in March and now all 450 stores are closing. Will you experience Sniagrab withdrawal symptoms?

Snowbird Video Brings Back Winter Memories

How To Learn Cliff Jumping At Snowbird In The Pow.

On the first day of summer, we celebrate winter with a very cool video from pro skier Giray Dadali who is showing us how to jump the cliffs at Snowbird.

Pro skier Giray Dadli works it at Snowbird. Credit: Teton Gravity Research

Pro skier Giray Dadli works it at Snowbird.
Credit: Teton Gravity Research

So, if you are thinking that summer is too long, here’s a way to get back to those cool days of winter.  Hang in there.

Click for video and chill.

Screen Shot 2016-06-22 at 8.46.07 AM

http://www.tetongravity.com/video/ski/prosbro-and-a-gopro-snowbird-2016-pov

 

 

10 Tips For Kayaking Seniors

Kayaking Expert Tamsin Venn Offers Ideas For Those Who Want To Try Something New.

Kayaking is a perfect non-snow season sport for seniors. Outdoors, exercise, skill, and cool equipment combine to make an attractive sport. Credit: Tamsin Venn

Kayaking is a perfect non-snow season sport for seniors. Outdoors, exercise, skill, and cool equipment combine to make an attractive sport.
Credit: Tamsin Venn

Kayak touring is one of the best recreational activities for seniors. It is low impact. It’s easy to learn. It’s a great way to get together with other seniors and connect. It’s intellectually stimulating involving navigation skills and tide charts.

Here are ten tips to make this sport even more enjoyable.

  • Go light. Lifting a kayak on and off cars or the beach can strain your back. Light kayaks made of carbon fiberglass material can be well worth the investment. More kayak manufacturers, recognizing the needs of the older paddler, are reducing weight using various materials. Aim for a boat 35 pounds or less. Consider a wood kayak, which is light, durable, lively, and lovely to look at.
  • Invest in a good paddle for ease of swing weight. Again carbon light materials can be expensive but well worth the price, and wood is a good option. Consider a Greenland paddle. It has a longer and narrower blade that lessens the upload on your arms and shoulders.
paddle_silo1

Greenland Paddle from Lumpy Paddles. Credit: Lumpy Paddles

  • Lifting your kayak on and off a car, especially as a solo paddler, can be onerous. Thule makes something called a Hullavator, a mobile rack that allows you to load the kayak at waist level on the side of the car, then lifts it onto a rack on top of the car. A strut device eases most of the kayak’s weight.
  • Most kayak accidents happen on land, on rocky shores where you may slip on seaweed. Always step in between the rocks, not on top of them.
  • A kayak cart removes the need to haul on your shoulders. You can even rig up a cart to a bike to get your boat to the water. If you ever go to the Adirondacks, where portaging from one pond to another is de rigeur, you will see seniors everywhere using kayak carts. Strap them to the back of your kayak when not in use, or stow them in the rear hatch. Nothing says portage better than kayak cart.
  • The usual kayak safety planning is even more important as you get older. File a float plan with a family member or friend. That indicates your proposed route, time of return, and a description of your kayak. Other useful (and in some cases mandatory) items: a weather radio to indicate wind force and direction; cell phone in waterproof case or hand-held VHF; a pfd (personal flotation device); whistle; and a wetsuit or drysuit if you are paddling in cold water. Hypothermia from cold water immersion is one of the kayaker’s biggest challenges.
  • Carry a tow rope, so you can tow the grandkids in their kayaks back to shore if they get tired, or so they can tow you! Towing is a remarkably easy way to assist someone back to shore.
  • In the off season, lift light weights to keep shoulders and arms strong.
  • Do yoga to assist in balance and flexibility, especially key for getting in and out of your kayak.
  • As in downhill skiing, it’s best to venture out in less traffic. Avoid busy summer weekends when motorboat and Jet Ski traffic is at its most frantic… and noisy. Go early in the morning, when the world is tranquil, and you’ve got the water to yourself.

Happy Summer Paddling!

For more information on getting started in sea kayaking, subscribe to Atlantic Coastal Kayaker, at www.atlanticcoastalkayaker.com

 

Tamsin Venn is the publisher of Atlantic Coastal Kayaker and a regular contributor to Seniorsskiing.com

Boarders Are Not Bad, Just Different

Senior Boarder Dave Hayes Returns With Exhortation: Try It!

Senior Boarders ride can ride with grandchildren! Cool, Dude. Credit: Dave Hayes

Senior Boarders ride can ride with grandchildren! Cool, Dude.
Credit: Dave Hayes

Readers of this interesting, professional and most discriminating of online magazines may have recently seen an article written in support of older snowboarders (boarders) by a person who is alleged to be named David Hayes. (See “Confessions Of A Senior Snowboarder.”)

That article was universally panned and elements of ski culture have made horrific threats of various natures against the author, the editors, the author’s children, the entire world of snowboarders and have in fact extended their distain all the way to the maker of the paper it was printed on. In point of fact, the person or persons that made allegations about the parentage of the makers of Hammermill paper should be reminded that this is an ELECTRONIC form, not cellulous paper.

Back to the article, be assured that the sanctity of ski culture is not at risk, there is room for both cultures on the mountains, except for Deer Valley and Alta evidently. The Boarders of 10 to 15 years ago have grown up (mostly) and there is a return of civility to the slopes as the maturing of boarders has provided a platform of simple manners, tossing aside the past attitudes expressed in rebellious teens now older and in some cases with children of their own.

Boarders do often seem to wear the image of rebel and adopt the swagger that only the young can carry off. But, truth be known, the more mature Boarders also carry that “devil-may-care”’ attitude with them but it is not from disdain but it is taken from the very fact that boarding is harder and takes a little more of an effort to do well. Notwithstanding the park work and a double McTwist (see Shaun White video) most of us boarders spend most of our boarding on slopes and then sneaking off in the trees and such for deep powder. This kind of thing (check video) is definitely not for us guys.

You will find those adventurous younger types in the snow parks showing how quickly they can either ruin their boards or end up in the emergency room, often both at one time. Those boarders are the ones we all worry about meeting up in the lift or the slope, these are the ones that our mothers warned us about!

The rest of us look for powder and adventure on slopes and in areas off the slopes as to board in deep powder is like looking under the Christmas tree on Christmas.

Boarders are not bad people, just different! Elegance and grace often found in the skiing community is not where the Boarders interest is found, we boarders (use word Dudes here) swoop and carve and generally look to enjoy the sensations that can only be found on a board. I invite you to try it!

“I tried it one time and it was too hard’ is often heard. “I only get a few days of vacation and I don’t have the time to learn to board” is another. But, is it not true that what is maybe different and maybe a bit harder to learn is also a greater reward when you get it? That first connected heel and toe turn. The joy of being able to actually stop without looking like you have to go to the bathroom, right now! (pizza pie stop). The freedom to swagger to the slope without carrying two boards, two poles!

I say find a good instructor, find out if you are a front faller or a back faller (see authors previous article no doubt consigned to the electronic trash can equivalent.) But try it, try to get in the groove of boarding, there are rewards to be found beyond using Dude in a sentence.

Now the season is over and I still find myself stretching my quads and calves in a crouch, waiting for the day, the perfect snow day that is out there just a few months away. Get ready mountains!

About The Author:

David Hayes is an engineer turned contractor living in central Florida but in his mind is in Ogden Valley’s SnowBasin and Powder Mountain, UT.

This Week In SeniorsSkiing.com (June 10)

Skiing Under The Southern Cross, Major Snow, Summer Snow, And Rebalancing Your Body.

Before and After satellite images of Portillo region in Chile captures the magnitude of the storm

Before and After satellite images of Portillo region in Chile captures the magnitude of the storm

While the snow sports season has finally wrapped up in North America, flakes are falling below the equator.  We have two reports from Oz and Chile.  Our new Melbourne-based correspondent Meg Malkin has written a snapshot introduction to what skiing is like Down Under.  And, we have learned of a mega-monster storm in Portillo, Chile. We have pictures that show what nine feet of snow looks like.  That’s nine feet in one storm.  We should be so lucky here in New England next season.

Co-publisher Jon Weisberg has discovered a company that makes snow, real cold, water-based snow that you can ski on…in the summer.  Find out what he’s found out.  It’s another incredible innovation in an industry that seeks full-year ’round activity.

Finally, Tommy Kirchhoff, long-time ski and Tai-Chi instructor, gives you some tips on how to rebalance your body.  Unconsciously, we all tend to favor one hand, foot, hip, over the other.  That creates an out of balance condition, and the other side tries to compensate.  Result: Chronic pain, aches, and pills.  Check out Tommy’s video to see how to get back in line.

Incidentally, we have compiled the results to our Spring Subscriber Survey 2016 and have identified more than 50 SeniorsSkiing.com readers who have “skied their age” last season.  Skiing your age means you spend one day on slopes or trails for every year you’ve been around.  That is an impressive list and the numbers of days are impressive.  Watch for that in the next couple of weeks.

Meanwhile, we are heading into late Spring.  Enjoy your hiking and cycling (the two most popular non-snow season sports, based on survey results) and tell us about your adventures.

And, remember, there are more of us every day, and we aren’t going away.

View from Mount Hotham summit. Credit: Kham Tran

View from Mount Hotham summit.
Credit: Kham Tran

Skiing In Oz: The Season Is Just Beginning

Here’s A Snapshot Of Skiing Down Under.

Popular Mount Hotham's summit is at 6,100 feet (1,862 metres) Credit: Kman Tran

Popular Mount Hotham’s summit is at 6,100 feet (1,862 metres)
Credit: Kman Tran

[Editor Note:  This was written by Melbourne, Australia-based Marg Malkin, a retired ski industry veteran who spends February and March at SilverStar, BC.  She is SeniorsSkiing.com’s first Australian contributor.  We hope to see more news from her.]

Australian seniors only have a very small window to enjoy skiing in Australia given the ski season is a short 14 weeks from the first weekend in June through to the end of September. Historically, the season is a bit “scratchy” when it begins and then the snow comes with a blustery vengeance, often covering the slopes with almost a metre of snow. Given the elevations of ski resorts vary between 1300 and 2000 metres in altitude, a two metre snow-depth season is a good one.

Ozzie ski resorts are clustered in the southeastern states: Victoria and New South Wales Credit: Wikipedia Commons

Ozzie ski resorts are clustered in the southeastern states: Victoria and New South Wales
Credit: Wikipedia Commons

The major ski resorts—Thredbo, Perisher, Mount Hotham, Falls Creek and Mount Buller—are all located in the high country of New South Wales and Victoria, the South Eastern states of Australia. The resorts also serve as summer hiking, mountain bike riding, and bush walking destinations. Only one resort, Mount Buller is an easy day-tripper resort, two-plus hours access from Melbourne.

The other Victorian resorts are three and a half hours away, so therefore overnight destinations. New South Wales ski resorts are a five-hour drive from Sydney, however they are easily accessible from the Australian capital city of Canberra.

Unlike the New Zealand resorts, all these Aussie resorts are accessed by car or bus right into the main resort areas within easy distance from the accommodations.

View from Mount Hotham summit. Credit: Kham Tran

View from Mount Hotham summit.
Credit: Kham Tran

The resorts began with small private lodges (or cabins) built by a few die hard skiers walking in with skins. More private lodges developed in the 50’s and 60’s, and, in the 70’s, commercial investors began developing private condo complexes and licensed taverns, most of which thrive today. Generally most of our “baby boomer” sector began as members of private lodges, these lodges becoming open to the public in the 80’s to cover infrastructural costs.

Majority of the ski fields are surrounded by National Parks, and there is a fair amount of government infrastructural control throughout the ski fields. The Australian ski lift companies make skiing very attractive to our generation, providing over 65-year-olds with 50% discount of lift passes. And if you are inclined to keep skiing after 70, then your ski lift pass is free! However there is a government entry fee per car for the ski season to access the Victorian resorts.

For current ski conditions in Australia, click here.  Looks like the “scratchy” start of the season is here.

For more information about skiing in Australia, click here.

Sunrise on Mount Jagungal. Credit: Jerry Nockles

Sunrise on Mount Jagungal in Kosciuszko National Park, NSW.
Credit: Jerry Nockles

 

Do You Recognize Asymmetry in Your Body?

Are You Right-Handed or Left-Handed?

TaiChi is continuous, slow motion of gentle stretching and breathing practiced by thousands around the world. Credit: Tommy Kirschoff

TaiChi is continuous, slow motion of gentle stretching and breathing practiced by thousands around the world.
Credit: Tommy Kirchoff

[SeniorsSkiing.com welcomes back Tommy Kirchhoff, a long-time ski instructor and a certified Tai Chi master. He has been teaching senior exercises for 12 years. Tai Chi is an ancient martial art that has evolved to slow-moving poses that is practiced all over the world.]

Does one knee hurt more than the other? Are there visible differences in the size and shape of your calf muscles? How about more aches in one shoulder than the other?

When you stand, do you know which foot you typically stand on? When you sit, can you tell which of your butt cheeks takes more of your body weight?

From the time we are born our bodies develop and then degrade asymmetrically. Each of us takes a longer step with one foot than the other. We tend to favor one arm and one leg; and by the time we reach middle age we begin to have asymmetric problems.

Body Asymmetry can lead to chronic soreness. Tai Chi can help re-balance.

Body Asymmetry can lead to chronic soreness. Tai Chi can help re-balance.

One hip or one knee destroys itself. This leads to surgery, and more asymmetry. Eventually the problems make the body sedentary, which leads to problems of the internal organs and the blood.

But asymmetry can be remedied. Not with strength, as doctors and physical therapists all seem to believe. Strength does not solve the problem of joint stiffness.

First, recognize the strengths and weaknesses of your body parts. Take inventory. Think about the differences. Let the left side teach the right side and vice-versa. Then start practicing Tai Chi. You can start anytime, but for older skiers, there’s no time like now to prepare yourself for next season.

The slow “perfect” and balanced movements of Tai Chi allow you mobilize and stretch your ankles and knees and hips in a safe and methodical way.

When you see a photo of someone practicing Tai Chi, you have to always remember that Tai Chi has no static postures. Continuous movement is a principle. So is relaxation.

When you relax and move in a specific way you can work through your stiffness and begin to correct the asymmetry in your body.

Our school has many thousands of students worldwide who enjoy the endless benefits Tai Chi has to offer.

If you want to give the movements a try, this is my Standing Energy Practice video on YouTube:

 

Coming to You Soon? Skiable, Outdoor, Summer Snow.

Finally, Outdoor Summer Snow.

It’s the invention of TechnoAlpin, an Italian manufacturer of snow making equipment. Its Snow Factory addresses warming trends challenging the future of skiing, allowing skiable snow to be made when air temps are warm. It will help areas extend their seasons or operate when nature won’t cooperate.

The first application in North America is at Boreal Mountain Resort  at Donner Pass, not far from Lake Tahoe.

The container-shaped unit is delivered by tractor-trailer. It freezes water using a heat exchanger. No chemicals are added. TechnoAlpin’s site states: “The snow is not snow in its natural form but rather in small dry ice flakes which are completely frozen.” The ice crystals then get sprayed onto the slope where the frozen surface gets groomed or tenderized by the sun. It functions best in temperatures between 28 and 75 degrees.

None of this is inexpensive. The unit costs around $500,000 and uses a lot of power, much higher than the $38,000 cost of a typical snow making machine. But it’s not a water hog. Snow Factory uses less than 20 percent of a typical snow maker’s 100 gallons per minute.

The website describes the technology as “… ideal for making snow to cover relatively small sections in ski resorts or for all kinds of events, such as snowboard events or ski races in big towns, or the lower sections in ski resorts.” The company also identifies low-elevation Nordic centers as a suitable application for its Snow Factory.

This is a far cry from the beginnings of delivering ice in summer. That started around 500 BC in Persia (Iran) where winter harvested ice was stored in large, underground spaces, (perhaps similar to those used by Iran for its nuclear development program).

More than two millennia later, an enterprising New Englander named Frederick Tudor (1783-1864) was harvesting, storing and shipping ice from Walden Pond in Concord, MA, and the surrounding area to as far away as India. Queen Victoria said her favorite ice came from Wenham Lake, near Hamilton, MA, one of SeniorsSkiing.com’s headquarter sites.

Boreal will rely on its Snow Factory to provide surfaces needed for its Woodward Tahoe Action Sports Camps, eight weeks of co-ed residential summer camp for kids (7-19) and a week for adults.

As for the rest of us, look forward to warm weather runs without hiking to a glacier or getting on a plane.

Cannon

Update: Free Senior Skiing at Reinstated In NH House Bill

Now The State Senate Must Approve.

Cannon Mountain is a state-owned area, famous for its aerial tram and free skiing for 65+ seniors. Credit: Cannon Mountain

Cannon Mountain is a state-owned area, famous for its aerial tram and free skiing for 65+ seniors.
Credit: Cannon Mountain

A bill that would have eliminated free skiing for NH seniors has been amended to reinstate the senior benefit and is being sent back to the Senate for approval. The bill would have charged seniors different rates for weekday and weekend skiing and was an attempt to cover the large deficit at state-owned Cannon Mountain. NH residents over 65 had skied for free at the resort for years. According to New England Ski Industry, projections show Cannon nearly $2-million in the red for 2016. Charging seniors was viewed as a way to partially fill the gap.

The challenge to free senior skiing isn’t over. The State Senate has to approve the amended bill.

The change came when senior skiers meet in a forum with state representatives and ski area management. A coalition of Republican and Democratic representatives worked together to strike the provision.

Apparently, senior skiers have a loud voice in New Hampshire.

Representative Leon Rideout raised the elephant-in-the-room question that has hung over Cannon Mountain for years: “Why is the state in the ski business?” So, the spotlight from this controversy is back on the whole concept of state management. Add to that the operational deficit and a tramway evacuation incident last winter that hit the national news, and you have an opportunity for big changes.

We’ll keep you posted on events as they occur.

Diana Nyad: Breathing Primal Life Force at 66

Inspiration Department: Marathon Swimmer Reflects On Staying Vital and Bold.

In 2013, Diana Nyad swam the Florida Straits, 110 miles, without a shark cage in 53 hours. She was 64 years old. Credit: Steven Lippman

In 2013, Diana Nyad swam the Florida Straits, 110 miles, without a shark cage in 53 hours. She was 64 years old. Credit: Steven Lippman

When Diana Nyad attempted to swim from Cuba to Florida when she was 28 years old, she failed.  She was 64 when she finally succeeded.  Her message about defining who we are as we move into aging is uplifting.

They say age is a state of mind. Age is, of course, a state of body as well. It is up to each of us to live bold, vital days, free from subjugation to the mass, limited interpretations of our respective ages.

That’s why she says she is more comfortable in her late 60s than ever before.  “I’m breathing the life force of my primal physical self now…I am more resilient.  My immune system is a stronger fortress. I can summon strength I never had in the day.”

I was a thoroughbred then, more finely tuned but also somewhat fragile. These days I’m more of a Clydesdale, sturdy and stalwart. If you told me I’d be left stranded in the wilderness for many months and could choose at which age I would attempt to survive the ordeal, I’d pick this very age, 66.

Click here for her story in a recent LA Times Op-Ed piece.  If you need a bit of perspective about the passing years and your changing world, this might be helpful.

Here’s her provocative Ted talk on achieving.

Adios, El Nino, Hola, La Nina

Big Changes Are Coming Again To Next Season’s Weather.

View post on imgur.com

The image above shows how the sea surface temperature is changing from warm to cooler, signaling the advent of a La Nina event.

Weather scientists are predicting that the sea surface temperatures in the Eastern Pacific will continue to drop, ending the extraordinary, record-breaking El Nino conditions that drove so much of last winter’s weather. When the sea surface water temps drop below .5 degrees C off the coast of Peru, the new La Nina will be in the wings, bringing yet another set of changes to next ski season’s weather. Some reports predict this La Nina can be as dramatically cold as the fading El Nino was warm.

During the summer coming up, the first impact you’ll see will be more hurricanes in the Atlantic. The hurricane season in the Atlantic starts on June 1 and goes to November 30. The prediction is for more storms because of weaker upper level winds.

For the winter months, a typical La Nina pattern will be cool weather in the Northwest, warm and dry across the southern border, and a wet East.  Click here for an interesting discussion from the Weather Network. 

Fun Fact: La Ninas last longer than El Ninos.  The La Nina event that followed the the 1997/98 El Nino lasted 33 months!

Here’s a more technical discussion from NOAA. 

Stay tuned for more updates as we watch how La Nina takes shape and how it will impact next winter’s weather.

The first La Nina impact could be more frequent Atlantic hurricanes. This year's La Nina is predicted to be as cool as last year's record-breaker El Nino was warm. Credit: NOAA

The first La Nina impact could be more frequent Atlantic hurricanes. This year’s La Nina is predicted to be as cool as last year’s record-breaker El Nino was warm.
Credit: NOAA

 

 

Cycling Series: Rolling Among The Rocks At Arches

Once Past The Crowds, Another World Opens Up.

Landscape arch in the Devils Garden Trail in Arches National Park. Credit: John Nelson

Landscape arch in the Devils Garden Trail in Arches National Park.
Credit: John Nelson

Looking out the window of a car just can’t capture the otherworldly beauty of Arches National Park in Utah.

In this stark and dramatic landscape of towering spires, delicate arches and balanced rocks, I chose to bike and hike on my pathway to discovery.

John Nelson along the Fiery Furnace Trail. Credit: John Nelson

John Nelson along the Fiery Furnace Trail.
Credit: John Nelson

I visited Arches in Fall 2015. I pulled into the nearby town of Moab in the evening and found that things were hopping among a diverse crowd of cyclists, hikers, river-runners, ORV enthusiasts and vacationers, all with plans to recreate in the rugged region.

I decided to start early the next morning to get a jump-start on the crowd.

So much for solitude. My outdoors-loving brethren had the same idea, and we all got stuck in a long backup at the Arches entrance gate. Arches National Park is a popular place with nearly 1.4 million people visiting last year.

Once through the entrance, I parked a couple of miles from the visitor center, climbed aboard my bike, and happily left my car behind. The roads were initially busy, but after a few miles, things calmed down and traffic dispersed, leaving me to pedal among the wide-open vistas.

What I saw over the next few hours was mind-blowing.

The National Park lies atop an underground salt bed. Over millions of years, the salt bed became unstable, eroded and shifted, leaving dramatic rock features carved by wind and weather that remain today.

My ride along the main road passed some of the very best sights in the park to its end at Devils Garden 18.5 miles from the entrance gate. Some side roads take visitors to other arch locations, but I wanted to go as far as I could inside the park and return later to see the other attractions.

The ride to Devils Garden takes place on rolling terrain between elevations of 4,500 and 5,500 feet. Once at Devils Garden, I slipped on hiking shoes to visit some of the park’s most famous arches along a 7.2-mile loop trail.

After a picnic lunch, I climbed back on my bike to head back. In some ways, the return ride was even better than the ride out. The light had changed, giving me a different view of these amazing formations.

Back at the car, I was exhausted from the ride and hike—and utterly satisfied. I had seen the park in way that author Edward Abbey, a former park ranger at Arches, would certainly appreciate.

“A (traveler) on foot, on horseback or on a bicycle will see more, feel more, enjoy more in one mile than the motorized tourists can in a hundred miles,” Abbey wrote in Desert Solitaire.

If you go:

Where to start the ride: Don’t park at the visitor center, which is usually swarming with tourists. Instead, drive 2.5 miles inside the park to the La Sal Mountains Viewpoint parking lot. By doing so, you’ll get out of the high-traffic area, and you’ll also avoid a 1,000 vertical foot climb.

When to visit: Spring and Fall, with more moderate temperatures, are the best times to see Arches. Summer temperatures can soar above 100 degrees.

Fitness concerns: At about 30 miles, the ride is difficult, but has only a couple of climbs. Much of the terrain is rolling and pleasant. Carry ample water, and you can refill at Devils Garden.

Safety: Even with traffic, I never felt unsafe riding at Arches. The roadways have good shoulders, and I found that drivers were mostly courteous and careful.

Food: Arches has no food concession, so pack along anything you want to eat. Moab has a wide array of restaurants and markets where you can stock up.

Highlights: Almost too many to count. The Courthouse Towers Viewpoint, The Great Wall, Balanced Rock, Panorama Point and Fiery Furnace all are along the road. If you have the energy, consider a hike around Devils Garden to see some of the park’s best sights.

Accommodations: Moab is the place. You’ll find a wide selection of condos, motels, resorts and bed and breakfasts.

Camping: The Devils Garden Campground inside the national park has 52 spaces, but these fill up very quickly. Don’t arrive thinking you’ll get lucky. Reserve a spot ahead by clicking here or by calling (877) 444-6777. Outside of Arches, there are several other options, including Willow Flat Campground in Canyonlands National Park and Dead Horse State Park, as well as primitive BLM campsites along the Colorado River. Click here for details.

Click here for maps of the area.

Tower of Babel watches over Arches National Park, UT. Credit: John Nelson

Tower of Babel watches over Arches National Park, UT.
Credit: John Nelson

Fly Fishing: Three Ideas For Getting Started

There Are Parallels Between Skiing And Fly-Fishing.

Skiers are attracted to fly-fishing because of the skills, the outdoors, and the lore. Credit: Jan Brunvand

Skiers are attracted to fly-fishing because of the skills, the outdoors, and the lore.
Credit: Jan Brunvand

Ski season is over; what now? Some turn to hiking, biking, tennis, or pickle ball. For me it’s fly fishing.

The pursuit of wily trout with fake insects has things in common with skiing. Both involve exercising in beautiful places, both are great family activities, and both offer satisfying complications of gear and technique.

The daunting details of fly fishing, however, deter many from trying it. How to navigate the complex world of equipment, casting, fish behavior, and aquatic etymology? The challenges are part of the fun, but they erect a barrier for beginners.

You can sample fly fishing without too much frustration. I offer three suggestions.

First, go with a pro, if you can possibly afford it. Nobody learns to ski from the pal who takes you to the top of a run and says “Follow me.” Similarly, you usually won’t get the best introduction to fly fishing from a friend or partner. Hire a guide for your first time out.

Step One: Hire a guide to show you the basics. Credit: Jan Brunvand

Step One: Hire a guide to show you the basics.
Credit: Jan Brunvand

A guide provides gear, lunch, flies, and coaching. Explain that you are entry-level. Guides know where and when to go, and they want you to catch fish. A day of guided fly fishing is costly, but you’ll get a good start, have fun, and learn if you want to lay out cash on rods, reels, waders, etc.

Even after years of fly fishing, if I’m on new waters or trying a different approach I like to hire a guide the first day.

Second, find a local support system. If there’s a chapter of Trout Unlimited or the Federation of Fly Fishers near you, join. Look for fly fishing classes taught by community colleges or local sports shops. Go fishing and chat up others you meet on the stream.

Third, start to read about the traditions and subtleties of fly fishing. I say “start” because you’ll never finish. For basic information, get The Orvis Fly-Fishing Guide by Tom Rosenbauer. Someday you may acquire top-of-the-line Orvis gear, but for starters buy this affordable paperback.

Even cheaper in its comic-book format is Sheridan Anderson’s The Curtis Creek Manifesto which offers excellent advice in a rib-tickling style. Published in 1976, it’s outdated as to gear, but the fish-catching techniques, including “The Curtis Creek Sneak,” are priceless.

Beyond facts, you want inspiration, so watch the 1992 film A River Runs Through It, and read Norman Maclean’s story that inspired it. Forget about the fancy “Shadow Casting,” though; that’s more Hollywood than realistic.

There’s much wonderful writing about fly fishing, but let’s keep it simple. Google Robert Traver’s “Testament of a Fisherman” and print a copy to ponder. This classic statement consists of one extended sentence less than a page long; it’s packed with emotion, whimsy, and poetry. Traver concludes that he loves the sport, “ . . . not because I regard fishing as being so terribly important but because I suspect that so many of the other concerns of men are equally unimportant—and not nearly so much fun.”

Amen!

Like skiing, there's more to fly fishing than just fishing. Credit: Jan Brunvand

Like skiing, there’s more to fly fishing than just fishing. Traditions, literature and lore abound.
Credit: Jan Brunvand

John Christie, Ski Legend, 1937-2016

Ski Area Operator, Author, Story-Teller, Outdoorsman, and Hardy Mainer.

Credit: Jamie Walter

Credit: Jamie Walter

Maine ski legend John Christie, 79, unexpectedly passed away on Monday, May 9th.  He was a former owner of Saddleback Mountain, former GM of Sugarloaf and Mt. Snow, an inductee to Maine’s Ski Hall of Fame, raconteur and industry veteran.  Click here for the Bangor Daily News story.

SeniorsSkiing.com just published a new article by John about his rediscovery of Nordic skiing and his love of the solitude of winter trails.  He competed in cross-country as a Bowdoin ski team member in the 50s only because it was required as a four-event collegiate racer. After many years away from Nordic skiing, he found the new technology and the peaceful pace to be appealing. “I was struck that without the need to better your competitors, you could actually ski along at a leisurely pace and even enjoy the serenity and the scenery and the exhilarating fun of being out in nature on a crisp winter day,” he wrote.

We were very proud to have John Christie contribute to SeniorsSkiing.com. He will be missed.

 

 

 

This Week In SeniorsSkiing.com (May 6)

Season Finales, Cycle Series Continues, Poll Results, and BC Resort Review.

Boston Globe's Stan Grossfeld reports on May skiing at Sunday River, ME. Credit: Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff

Boston Globe’s Stan Grossfeld reports on May skiing at Sunday River, ME.
Credit: Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff

It’s mud time in New England, and we’ve yet to see one of those beautiful, warm, aromatic May spring days around here. It’s been more like November: chilly, raw, drizzly. Yet spring skiing season still carries on in the West. Our poll results re: who is still out there reflect that. To say it has been an odd snow season is an understatement; El Nino did it to us, didn’t he?  Perhaps his sister, La Nina, who could be coming in this summer, will be different. We will keep you informed about what the weather prediction story is as it emerges.

Nevertheless, we are gearing up for non-snow time.  We will be bringing our readers an array of articles on different kinds of warm weather sports, fitness tips,  product reviews, and curiosities from the world of seniors and snow sports.

Before the season ends, though, we wanted to bring you one last resort review.  Our new Melbourne-based correspondent Marg Malkin tells us about SilverStar, a jewel of a resort in BC, and right-sized for senior skiers.  Thanks to Marg, we will be hearing more about the ski season down under which is getting going right about now.

Regular correspondent Pat McCloskey writes about the Lost Coast Trail in Northern California as another installment of our cycling series.  As our regular readers know, Pat and a group of his senior skiing pals make a Tahoe area ski trip every year.  This year, he went back to ride his bike along the coast.  Since most of our readers view cycling as a prime non-snow sport, we thought you’d be interested.  If you have a cycling story, please let us know.

Finally, we refer you to a Boston Globe report on the final runs at Sunday River, ME, one of the two or three ski resorts still spinning.  It’s interesting to see what conditions die-hards will find skiable.

Our Spring Survey Is Coming

SeniorsSkiing.com has learned so much from our reader survey, information that helps us direct our editorial content and show potential advertisers who our readers are.  Soon, you will be seeing our Spring Survey 2016 coming your way.  We ask you to please take a moment to respond to this.  We promise it will be short and to the point.

Thank you for reading SeniorsSkiing.com.  Remember, there are more of us every day, and we’re not going away.

 

Poll Results: People Are Still Out There

The Odd Snow Season Lingers On.

Screen Shot 2016-05-04 at 4.38.14 PMWe hear from lots of SeniorsSkiing.com readers about places they are currently skiing and intend to ski all the way into Memorial Day. Most are from the West, but, as we have seen in this week’s Boston Globe article, there is a persistent and hardy group of folks in the East as well.  Our mid-April poll results confirm what you’d expect: The West is Best, at least for this year. And there are big deals for seniors right now.

Reader Tom Levak writes, “Timberline (OR) is open through May 31 with free skiing for 71-plus. The three best runs are open: Stormin’ Norman, the Magic Mile and the Palmer Snowfield.  Loads of groomed terrain and lots of parks. I was up there Wednesday, and I’m going back right now. Mt Hood Meadows opens tomorrow for Sat-Sunday only through May 15; free for 75-plus.”

SeniorsSkiing Guide: SilverStar—BC’s Uncrowded And “Happy” Ski Resort

Great Skiing And Social Life Makes SilverStar A Lively Scene For Seniors.

SilverStar Village is a mid-mountain, self-contained resort in itself with restaurants, shops and lodging. Credit: SilverStar

SilverStar Village is a mid-mountain, self-contained resort in itself with restaurants, shops and lodging.
Credit: SilverStar

[Editor Note:  This review was written by Melbourne, Australia-based Marg Malkin, a retired ski industry veteran who spends February and March at SilverStar.  She’s also the informal SilverStar liaison with a group of Ozzie skiers who travel to BC every winter. SeniorsSkiing.com welcomes her as our first Australian contributor.  We hope to see more news from her.]

SilverStar Mountain Resort is a hidden gem, tucked up the northern end of the Okanagan Valley, B.C.  I found this wonderful place 12 years ago and keep coming back to enjoy its magical village, breathtaking views, awesome terrain and uncrowded highways of ever reliable snow.

SilverStar is the third largest ski resort in BC with 131 runs, a 2500-foot vertical and, on average, 23 feet annually of champagne powder.  Twelve lifts service over 3500 acres of skiing as well as 60 miles of Nordic trails, heli-skiing opportunities, and night skiing on Friday and Saturday, too.

Themed after an early 1900’s mining town, the mid-mountain village Main Street with its bakeries, restaurants and shops has real old world charm.

First impression on arrival in the Main Street of this mid-mountain village is that everyone is smiling.  And little wonder; the joy and freedom of wide open, uncrowded slopes makes it a dream come true haven for safe, fast top-to-bottom skiing. It’s where you find long-time residents and local characters who give SilverStar its safe, “homey”, community feel.  Just ask and you’ll find these locals willing to share their secrets that have kept them calling SilverStar home for so long. Tour the mountain with them, and you’ll find they are only too willing to share their knowledge of the best stashes and little known areas of the terrain.

That’s what makes SilverStar so special—a big mountain, a small town feel, with all the terrain you’d expect at a larger resort, without the crowds.

It’s why I keep coming back. The fabulous snow, the welcome by locals and to meet like-minded older skiers to socialize and ski with from all over the globe. I’m in my late 60’s, enjoy excellent health and thanks to my many times at Silver Star have a large network of skier friends with whom I spend six to eight weeks with each Feb and March.  Many of these friends I have “gathered” during my times in the resort, where friendships are easily established because of its small and friendly village community. Hence, I have a real “collection” of like-minded skiers who make the most of their good health and freedom away from the everyday family obligations of home. I’d just like people—particularly single travelers and couples—to know there’s fun to be had at a ski resort without spending too much and having a great social circle.

Hawaiian party in BC? Sure. Social activities are frequent and fun at SilverStar. Credit: Marg Malkin

Hawaiian party in BC? Sure. Social activities are frequent and fun at SilverStar.
Credit: Marg Malkin

We have such a great time.  There’s always someone to ski with or have a coffee or drink with. There’s a variety of ski skills, some diehards who hit the slopes at 8:15 and ski until 2:30 every day of their time there! Others ski out at 10-ish through until 2-ish depending.

We’ve developed “progressive drinks night” social life where people take a turn at hosting a drinks night at their unit—everyone comes with a bottle and a plate to share, making for fun and hilarity.  We also get to enjoy the many restaurants; Paradise Camp Dinner Tours in a Snow Cat, Horseman’s Cabin Snowshoe Dinner Tour are only a couple of night experiences. Tubing, ice skating and snow shoeing are wonderful apres activities, all included in the ski lift pass at Silver Star.  And there’s fat tube biking! Also ten pin bowling! The list goes on.

Getting There:  Fly into Kelowna International Airport, serviced by several US and Canadian air carriers.  Then shuttle north about an hour to SilverStar.

For SilverStar trail maps, click here.

Bottom Line:  Most visitors will take advantage of  a variety of lodging and ski pass packages.  To give you an idea of the value, though, a SilverStar M1Pass, good for three days of free skiing at each of 13 alliance partner ski areas, and which includes Nordic, family discounts, discounts at Whistler Blackcomb and lots of other savings opportunities is only $899 plus tax (2015-16) for seniors 65-plus. An Early Bird Senior Pass will be available after June 1 for $459 plus tax.  That’s a season pass!

SilverStar has four mountain faces for skiing. Uncrowded, friendly, big snow. Credit: SilverStar

SilverStar has four mountain faces for skiing. Uncrowded, friendly, big snow. Plus lots of other snow sports!
Credit: SilverStar

Cycling Series: Finding And Riding The Lost Coast Trail

Senior Skiers Shift To Mountain Bikes To Ride Coast Of California.

Cycling By The Sea, the Lost Coast Trail has spectacular scenery. Credit: Pat McCloskey

Cycling By The Sea, the Lost Coast Trail has spectacular scenery.
Credit: Pat McCloskey

So, my ski buddy Eric says to me, “Patrick, let’s ride the Lost Coast of California”.  The next thing I know I am winging westward to Sacramento with my mountain bike packed securely in my bike box and looking forward to a week of “van camping” with my good friend from Tahoe.  Now when I say van, the vehicle is really a Sportsmobile—a van conversion that is an amazing off road vehicle equipped with everything including a pop up compartment on the roof which was my room for the week. We have used this vehicle for skiing, but it also serves to house two old guys wandering around the Lost Coast which is about 160 miles north of San Francisco.

Fast forward: We have our RV spot right on the ocean in Fort Bragg, CA., and are ready to ride 150 miles of single and double track which is easily accessed from the camp site.  Most of the trails are in the Jackson Demonstration State Forest, Woodlands State Park, and Big River State Park.  We were amazed at the variety of trails which are loamy and smooth and give you a great appreciation for Redwood trees which are ever present and ancient.  You can even ride through an old Redwood which is called “The Drive Through Tree,” a fun diversion from the standard mountain bike trail.

SeniorsSkiing.com correspondent Pat McCloskey switched a mountain bike for his skis and headed out up the Lost Coast Trail. Credit: Pat McCloskey

SeniorsSkiing.com correspondent Pat McCloskey switched a mountain bike for his skis and headed out up the Lost Coast Trail.
Credit: Pat McCloskey

The amazing thing about riding in this area is the lack of riders and general feeling of remoteness.  The only riders we encountered were the original designers of the trail and are the current trail stewards.  They are all in the late 60s and 70s—amazing senior mountain bike riders.  Jack Columbe, a 74-year-old ex fireman and World Senior Games champion and Roo Harris have mapped out, carved out, and maintained this 150 mile network of trails that stretch from Mendocino to Ft. Bragg.  At 48,652 acres, Jackson State Demonstration Forest is one of California’s crown jewels and is maintained by CalFire (California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection).  In speaking with Pam Linstedt, a 24-year veteran of CalFire, we learned that although tourism is replacing some of jobs lost after the 2002 closing of the GP lumber mill in Ft. Bragg, research and logging are still first and foremost priority in the California forests.  With the efforts of the senior cycling community under the guidance of Jack and Roo, mountain biking is becoming an attraction which they hope will once again put Ft. Bragg and Mendocino on the map for riders all over the world.

The amazing advantage of riding in this area is that you have access to the coastal mountains but you can camp or stay right on the ocean in Ft. Bragg or Mendocino.  Lots of available bed and breakfast options as well as an abundance of RV parks which seems to be the preferred way for Californians to see the coast inexpensively.

As we made our way northward, we rode a trail called Paradise Royale near the Lost Cove area in Humboldt County.  The trail is filled with berms and features and one wonders who maintains this nationally known trail literally in the middle of nowhere.  After finishing our time in Lost Cove, we drove our way through the Redwood National Forest which was truly a visual cornucopia of thousand year old gigantic trees.  Camping out under those behemoths really make you understand that you are only passing through life in a very short time period.  These giants have been around for over a thousand years and still flourish today under the California sunshine and coastal mists.

Lot to Trails

From any campsite or Bed and Breakfast on the coast, the access is available by bike in only a matter of a few miles. We rode to the McDonald’s for breakfast in Ft. Bragg and were on the trails in less than 15 minutes.

Terrain

None of the trails in this area are overly technical.  I would rate them intermediate with the exception of the Paradise Royale trail which had a killer of a climb stretching over 4 miles of vertical ascent.

For More Information

Fort Bragg Cyclery (707-964-3509) can provide rentals and accessories like complete maps to the area.  Most of the rides are currently on MTBProject.com

Also, Mendocino Bike Sprite can provide tours at a nominal fee.  707-962-4602.  Ask for Amy.

Not too often can a couple of 62 year olds van camp and ride trails as pristine as these, and the only guys we ran into were older than us.  Senior riders rule!

Remote and beautiful, the Lost Coast Trail had few other cyclists. Credit: Pat McCloskey

Remote and beautiful, the Lost Coast Trail had few other cyclists.
Credit: Pat McCloskey

Final Ski Run In New England

May Skiing In Maine? Who Knew?

Boston Globe's Stan Grossfeld reports on May skiing at Sunday River, ME. Credit: Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff

Boston Globe’s Stan Grossfeld reports on May skiing at Sunday River, ME.
Credit: Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff

The hardcore showed up in the first weekend of May this year to take their last licks on the…ahem…snow.  As we all know, it has been a bad, bad season in the East, but the miracle snowmakers and groomers have managed to salvage a tendril of a season.

Here’s a story from the May 3 Boston Globe by Stan Grossfeld.  He describes how Sunday River, Newry, ME., managed to create a season for its skiers.  We quote:

After having its third-earliest start in history, Sunday River received just 60 inches of natural snow, compared with an average of 167.

But just because this is not Vail, it doesn’t mean that skiing has to fail. Sunday River came out with guns blazing. Snow guns, that is. Its 2,200 guns converted 400 million gallons of water into snow this winter. It even won an award for exceptional snowmaking capabilities in an online vote.

Grossfeld reported that there were spring conditions at the top and mid-sections of the mountain, but there was a “mild meltdown” down by the lifts.  He writes that 600 skiers showed up on May 1, about half of them getting a free ride for the day.  He quotes one visitor, “Considering that it’s May 1, and we didn’t get any snow this year, the snow is really good.”

Once again, kudos to the snowmakers and groomers all over New England.  Oh, and Killington will still have a trail open on weekends until the bitter end.

The Globe reports about 600 skiers showed up for a final fling before Black Fly season. Credit: Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff

The Globe reports about 600 skiers showed up for a final fling before Black Fly season.
Credit: Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff