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bikes canada general moosling snow

The February of warmth, melting snow, and suspicion

When we weren’t sitting around eyeing weather forecasts suspiciously (“Surely it’s going to get cold again some time soon?!”), much of February was spent riding bikes from the left of frame towards the right:

The Prospector trail in Exshaw was alarmingly dry… and we spent more time trying to get the boy to pedal his trail-a-bike. And going on random explorations (in-between working on renovations… which are, by the way, a fantastic way to eat up every moment of your spare time).

There was some more skiing, as we gradually came to terms with the fact that there might not be a long nordic ski season this year. At least Moraine Lake Road still had snow!

And the Nordic Centre is always fun, slush and warmth are preferable to -25oC and windy as far as I’m concerned.

Also, jumping is fun.

Winter Carnival in Canmore came and went with a whimper – the pile of snow on the street kept trying to melt, even with extra snow being brought in to shore it up. The toboggan slope was great fun though.

And then the boy’s run bike was passed on to the next generation of biking toddler.

All of which serves to remind me that I really need to remember to take my proper camera a little more often, instead of relying on my phone camera.

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canada general snow trip reports

Around Mount Rundle

Mount Rundle is awesome – the massive looming presence between Canmore and Banff, with its many pokey mountain parts of no-doubt highly significant and meaningful geological origin. I’ve read about it on numerous occasions, but fail to remember any of the details. I just know it’s a wonderful mountain.

So, Mount Rundle is wonderful. And we decided to ski around it. Well, someone had mentioned to me the idea of skiing around Mount Rundle last winter. I thought it sounded interesting, mentioned it to another friend, forgot I mentioned it to that friend, then she mentioned it back to me. Clear as mud? Probably.

The summary thus far: Mount Rundle is wonderful, and we wanted to ski around it.

The cast of this adventure was myself, Kat and Sarah. We set out through the Nordic Centre on Sunday morning, glad to be escaping the madding crowds before the races started. Straight out along Banff Ave, slowly slowly on our waxless/fish scale skis.

There had been a couple of centimetres of fresh snow the night before. After setting out onto the Rundle Riverside trail, we soon became incredibly grateful for this extra snow, as the snow cover along Rundle Riverside was incredibly thin in places.

In fact it was so thin that we suspect there was probably bare dirt in some spots on Saturday afternoon. Well, bare dirt, rocks and roots. It’s a good thing I was using rock skis.

On the whole though, the skiing was surprisingly nice. I say that based on the expectation it was going to be a bit horrendous though, so don’t get your hopes up. I think it could be quite pleasant with a little more snow cover though. It’s a nice peaceful section of forest there. Well, aside from the relentless noise from the highway… honestly, it’s mostly quite nice though.

It’s about 5.5km from the daylodge to the end of the Nordic Centre trails, then another 8km along Rundle Riverside before you hit the golf course roads in Banff. That 8km was definitely the slowest of the day, as we started having to alternate skiing and walking.

Eventually though, we did reach the golf course roads, where the marginal amount of fluffy new snow on the roads compacted nicely to be skiable. We cruised along, attempting to accurately identify trees, and pondering what to eat once we got to the Banff Springs. And trying to distract Sarah, whose toe hurt quite a lot after a crash early in the Riverside trail (we found out later that it was broken!).

On reaching Banff Springs, we swung in for soup, coffee, brownies and rehydration. And then Kat and I set out alone up Goat Creek. Which is definitely, and slightly inexplicably, more enjoyable in the uphill/towards Canmore direction.

With actual snow on the trail, and proper trackset tracks to ski in, we made pretty good time, despite the snow starting to stick to my skis like crazy.

We knew it would be windy when we reached the end of Goat Creek, and the weather forecast did not disappoint. Crazy strong gusts and overcast skies. We were intent on at least trying to walk down to Grassi Lakes though, and hopefully skiing down the easy Grassi hiking trail. At least six extremely chivalrous lone males stopped and tried to give us a lift as we walked the few hundred metres to the start of that trail. They mostly seemed to think we were crazy, but we managed to convince them that we had a plan, and didn’t need rescuing honestly.

Once we reached the trail though, we realised our plan would not work today. The trail was covered deeply in blown snow, and looked entirely uninviting. We wouldn’t be closing the loop today. So quickly we got a lift down to the Nordic Centre. Still – a good 40km or so of skiing, and not a bad local adventure.

Distance: ~40km
Elevation gain: ~955m

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bikes canada general moosling snow

Welcome to 2015

At 9am on New Years Day we were picking up a hire bike for me, then driving out to West Bragg Creek. Ideally we would have gotten there a little earlier, but we still made it in time to snag a good parking spot – unlike the hoards who’d slept in a little longer.

We chose poorly, and headed out on the Snowshoe Hare loop. It’s a snowshoe trail. Snowshoers only travel on pretty moderate, friendly, trails don’t they?

Nope. Snowshoe trails incorporate many more ridiculous hills and drops than most of the bike trails at West Bragg.

We had fun getting up and down the hills. Well the boy had fun getting down some of the hills, that’s for sure.

Once we hit the Telephone Loop trail, we headed straight back to the car to warm up toes.

I then headed off for a solo loop of my own on the south side of the trail network.

Riding south on Ranger Summit, the trail was in great shape. I didn’t have studded tyres, and didn’t lament the fact once. There’s not a lot of snow though, with bare patches in spots.

Then it was back on Strange Brew, with flashbacks from Singletrack6 going through my head. The course on the first day finished up on Strange Brew, although it rode a little slower with snow, and without race adrenalin… and with skiers to avoid at the trail crossings.

Once back in Canmore we headed out for a quick lap at the Nordic Centre, just because we may as well, seeing as we both had fat bikes for once.

It was a good start to 2015. Now for the rest of the year I’m just hoping for house renovations to be finished soon, no injuries, minimal illness, optimal fitness for Tour Divide, lots of outdoor adventures with my family, and work to be a good balance of fun and challenging.

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bikes canada general snow

Getting around in the snow

The snow around Canmore has largely been a bit average so far this season. Certainly it’s been a bit of a rubbish cross-country skiing season for the Nordic Centre. But that’s just a good excuse to get out on the bike a little more often.

So here’s an image dump of some of the riding I’ve been doing over the last month or so….

Highline

Horseshoe trails

Horseshoe trails

G8

G8

Along the forebay

Long Road to Ruin, Nordic Centre

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canada general hiking snow trip reports

Winter Solstice sunrise

We did it! The sun is coming back! Huzzah to all Northern Hemispherians, the evil Southern Hemisphere is now bound to return our sun to us.

We left town at 6am, and hiked up to the summit of Ha Ling Peak to arrive just as the sky was starting to lighten, at around 7.45am. On the one hand, it was beautiful. On the other, it was very windy (the forecast was calling for 30km/hr, gusting to 50km/hr). There may have been some huddling.

Poor Lincoln was just about freezing to death.

There was some attempted photography inbetween bouts of huddling.

Then the rest of the crew made a brief stop at the summit.

At which point we all decided it was time to start heading down.

As we reached the saddle below the peak, the pink in the sky started to brighten with the sunrise proper, and we took a few more photos before scarpering back down the hill.

The trail is mostly in good condition at the moment – some ice lower down, but mostly packed snow. Two years in a row (three if you count the time I went up the day after solstice) this is becoming a solstice tradition.