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canada general moosling snow

My favourite lake

Ok, so we went skiing up to Chester Lake again. There was a lot of fresh snow though, and the weather was great, the company was great, and the Moosling had an absolute blast (spoilers).

We met up with Maria and Neil at the trailhead. We got the Moosling into his alpine skis, and hooked him up with a harness – from there, Alex and I took it in turns to tow him up to the lake. It’s far easier than towing a Chariot or pulk, that’s for sure. Although I’m wondering if we should try and get a towing system with a little more give…

We headed up to Elephant Rocks, and I realised the last time I’d made it up to here was when I was around 10 weeks pregnant, and Brendan was busy dislocating his shoulder and having us put it back in (thankfully, otherwise it would have been a long and painful journey back to Canmore to get it done).

At Elephant Rocks, there was a lot of exciting holes to be dug, and food to be eaten. We watched ski-mo guys cruising about getting in lots of elevation.

And then, it was time for the descent! And by that, I mean it was time to take skins off and pretend we were going downhill, where in reality we were trying to tow the Moosling across flat and sometimes uphill sections of trail while having no grip at all because we took our skins off.

On the plus side, the Moosling was having a ball hitting clumps of snow off the trees.

But eventually things did start heading downhill. And all the time on the hill has really helped improve Moosling skiing skills, as he easily cruised down, having a blast on the tight treed trail.

The snow was soft, the sky was blue, the mountains were snow-capped. We had a pretty great run down.

By the time we got back down to the carpark, Finn was pretty keen to ski back up so he could do the run again.

We decided to head back home though. And he fell asleep in the car – big day!

Distance: 9.5km
Elevation gain: 350m
Moving time: 2hr15min

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canada general snow trip reports

The Loppet

With my knee being injured still, I can’t skate ski. As a result, I’ve turned to classic skiing in desperation. And it’s not all bad. But with all the classic skiing I’ve been doing, I decided to sign up for the Lake Louise Banff Loppet, which is (for 61 of it’s 72km at least) a classic ski.

Starting on Lake Louise before sunrise, you spend the first couple of legs skiing into the dawn, and it’s amazing. I started off right towards the back of the pack, and gradually picked my way forwards as we cruised downhill into the sunrise on lovely easy tracks. We popped out above Lake Louise, all lit up in the darkness, the sky gradually lightening. The terrain flattened after that, and I was overtaken by people older than my parents, who ski with immaculate technique.

On the first leg as I was coming down from Morant’s curve I skied over gravel and gouged my skis – my precious skis! :( Overall, leg 1 (at 21km) felt relatively easy, and with a good chunk of downhill on good tracks, it’s not as hard as some of the shorter legs that come later in the day.

Leg 2 (10km) was cruisy, easy tracks, mostly easy skiing, over in no time. Leg 3 (13km) was challenging. I started to bonk after 30km, having trouble eating enough. I found it hard to eat with poles on; having food shoved in my waist belt didn’t really help me, as I never wanted to slow down to get it. I was constantly back and forthing with teams, and with most of the course being singletrack, overtaking seemed to require considerable thought and effort. There was some challenging terrain on this leg, and worgly hills where I crashed at least once, and nearly crashed a few more times.

A magical support angel gave me a gel at the end of the third leg though, and it acted like rocket fuel for the short (6.6km) fourth leg; up and over the Hillsdale road split, from Johnston Canyon campground to Sawback picnic area. I hadn’t bothered to re-wax, so things were a bit slippy on the ascent. The descent was a spicy balance on an off-camber bank of ploughed snow – and just as well I hadn’t put new wax on as I would have lost it all anyway. Double poling to the Sawback checkpoint took some effort, with soft deep snow, very little grip wax left, and tired, tired arms and legs.

I’d borrowed someone else’s support crew, plus with a couple of other teams filled with people I knew, I ended up with a reasonable little cheer squad to keep my morale up as I struggled onwards, leg after leg. The first 30km isn’t so bad. And even the next 20km after that is kind of reasonable. But after that my legs started to fade.

So now I was at 50km. I had my longest pit stop, breaking to quickly put a couple more coats of 45 on, then headed off. Hard work at this point, my arms seizing up, and my legs too. Slowing down. I started to have trouble convincing myself to hold speed. I dreamed of having some music to listen to, but couldn’t be bothered taking the necessary break to set up my headphones. Some rough skiing on leg 5 (10km), but some of my favourite moments on the course. Through aspens, along the Bow River, and across the swamps. Beautiful blue skies, snow-capped mountains, amazing. Hard skiing, hard to balance with tired legs. It was a warm day, but with beautiful clear blue skies that made up for the slow warm snow.

Then it was skis off to hike up to the final checkpoint, and on to the last leg (11.4km). Marching across the Sunshine overpass, eating a granola bar, shaking my fist at the relay skiers running across like little ski-boot-clad gazelles. Some of the solo skiers had skate skis and boots stashed at this point. I didn’t, as I wasn’t planning to skate, as it hurt my knee. But I was so sore and tired that I resorted to skating with my classic skis, on the grounds that all of me was going to be sore anyway so my knee may as well join the party. It felt so obnoxiously slow to classic ski at this point, and I was aching to use some different muscles. (Like being faced with a messy floor, and opting to use a nice mop instead of licking it clean).

It’s really hard to be able to balance well enough to ski on challenging terrain once you have 30km+ on your legs. I crashed once because I just could not balance, and came really close to crashing a few more times.

But then, finally, I was on the Bow River. And there were families out and about. I was in the outskirts of Banff. I could smell the finish line. And then I could see it. And then I skied through it, and people cheered. None of my crew were around though, and so I huddled and ate until they made it over the finish line too. Joy, I could sit down!

Then drive up to the Banff Centre for the presentations. A hot shower that felt amazing. Then as much meat, cheese, wine and carrots as I could eat. Awards were handed out, which I missed out on by a long margin, and then failed to get a draw prize too. I stretch, and have interesting exhaustion-fuelled conversations. This was a good day.

Also – I waxed perfectly, all on my own! (A couple coats 45, then some 40, then some 45, then a few more 40).

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canada general moosling snow

Baker Creek ski trails

We thought we’d get out and ski some trails we hadn’t skied before, and so headed out along the Bow Valley Parkway to Baker Creek. Alex had actually skied them during the Lake Louise Banff loppet, but they were new to me!

It’s only three or four kilometres of trail, but good for a short and easy explore somewhere new. I was curious too, as I was due to be doing the loppet myself the following week.

As is standard, skiing with a small person involves equal parts skiing, and flopping about in the snow.

And then it was off to Banff for blue icecream and a visit to the ice train. The Moosling thought it was the coolest thing ever.

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canada general snow trip reports

Skiing to Skoki

Skoki Lodge is another of those wonderful places that I still hadn’t gotten around to visiting, either in summer or winter. It’s mostly a place to stay overnight (Kate and William stayed there on their royal honeymoon), but they do serve up afternoon tea.

We planned to leave Canmore at a fairly civilised time, after making some calculations based on other ski in times we’d seen, and the fact we wanted to catch afternoon tea at the lodge if possible. But we were skiing up there from the lower parking lot, which magically added another 4km or so, and suddenly our calculations weren’t looking so good.

Also – it was kind of cold! Which was actually fine, as it kept us moving.

On Ptarmigan Lake we started to run into other groups of skiers. A couple of guys had their kit for kite skiing – we didn’t realise how windy it was until we started the return journey.

And then we ran into this unicorn who was also out ski touring. Those guys get around, don’t believe the hype.

Heading up Deception Pass, it had settled into a glorious blue sky kind of day.

But at the top of the pass we had some decision making to do. Thanks to the extra distance, we didn’t have a lot of time ahead of us before sunset. But it was still conceivable we could get back down to the Lake Louise ski area by sunset, and maybe have to only do the last little bit of skiing in the dark. And we did have headlamps.

I was definitely struggling to keep up with the others. Being semi-injured for the last 7 months or so hadn’t been great for my fitness, and then having 3 weeks or so of couch time thanks to a cold hadn’t really helped either. Plus I’d decided to wear new boots, and they were definitely rubbing. So at this point I was feeling a little humbled, rather than strong and fit. But we were so close! And I’d never been to Skoki before!

So of course we decided to go for it.

In the end we made it to the lodge only 15 minutes or so after the quoted time for afternoon tea started anyway. Perfect timing!

We had afternoon tea, dealt with blisters, relaxed, drank tea from thermoses, and then re-skinned our skis for an assault of Deception Pass from the other side.

And by the time we got there – well, the sun was still up in the sky at least. Lots of time!

The scuttle back across Ptarmigan Lake was slow and windy. With my telemark skis I managed ok with no skins, but was counting down the marker posts until I’d closed the final gap. And then we were at the final pass, skins off, nothing but descending ahead of us.

And such ridiculously beautiful dusk light that I very nearly skied into a tree on several occasions.

From this point on though, it was fairly fast going. There was some double poling as we drew closer to Lake Louise ski hill, but there was a lot of cruising through snow singletrack through the trees, and for a while there I felt like I was on my mountain bike.

And then the sky started to turn pink, and then pink didn’t even come close to describing it any more.

And we skied down the ski out back to the car, staring at the fading light of the sunset, and made it just before the dusk became too dark for comfortably hurtling downhill at high speed. A very excellent ski day.

Distance: 28.3km
Elevation gain: 1082m

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bikes canada general moosling snow

Family fat biking

We got out on Saturday morning to wander about on the north end of the High Rockies trail, which basically means exploring a few convenient little loops of snowshoe trails, sled dog trails, and the heavily travelled east end of the Goat Creek trail.

The High Rockies trail travels along the western side of the sled dog loop. We did well on the portion that had been travelled by snowshoes, but once we hit the less packed surfaces, we started to have issues with the skinny tyre on the trail-a-bike. It just doesn’t have the float that the fat bikes do. We either need to attach a ski, or find a way to rig a fatter tyre.

We turned back without having got terribly far. Still a fun wander, and it’s great beginner fat biking territory out there. And the scenery is pretty nice too.