No blog posts will be forthcoming for the next week or so because I am out exploring California.
This is a place where friends of the UAA Ski Team can check in on the cross-country skiers as they train and race for the University of Alaska, Anchorage.
Thursday, September 28, 2017
Friday, September 22, 2017
Dune
Again, as every year around this time, we found ourselves at the sand dunes of Kincaid Park. This is a miserable workout consisting of multiple sprints up the northern and southern aspects of a seaside sand dune, and it's an annual rite of late September for the UAA Ski Team, both nordic and alpine. Every year somebody pukes. Even the coach has been known to hurl on occasion. We don't take this workout lightly.
Instructions from Andrew at the start of the workout. |
But today, it wasn't just the ski team out there. We had company! The UAA hockey team and men's basketball teams agreed to join us for this workout, and they added a lot to the spirit of the event. No UAA team wants to get shown up by another UAA team, so there was a real effort to show who was the toughest group out there. Personally, I was a little concerned about the hockey team. Their sport consists of a series of 45-second shifts in which they charge as hard as they can up and down the ice only to crawl back over the boards, exhausted, rest a couple minutes, and then do it over and over again for three 20-minute periods. It seemed to me like those boys might be pretty well-suited to these sprints. I was less concerned about the basketball players showing us up. I figured those big, tall guys probably weren't so well suited to a series of fast uphill sprints in the sand.
We started with a bunch of sprints of the north side of the dune. It was steep and deep, just the way we skiers like it. |
That's Marcus on the right. |
Jon & Dom |
The hockey players were charging hard today. |
The second half of the workout was on the south-facing, firmer side of the dune. A greater distance, at higher speed. |
That's Marte in blue, near the front. |
We had a lot of tired student-athletes at the end of this thing. |
The men's basketball team. |
So, how did the skiers stack up against the hockey and basketball players you ask? It seemed to me like it was pretty even. I saw Marcus and Tom winning some of the sprints, but definitely not all of them. I saw a bunch of hockey players winning their sprints. But I also saw basketball players winning some of the heats, too. It didn't seem that any team was truly dominant. But, for the final heat, in which the fastest athletes of the day were pulled out for an "elite" heat of the day's fifteen best, hockey players went 1-2-3. So I don't think you can come to any other conclusion than that the hockey team won the workout. Personally, though, I was pretty impressed by the basketball team. They definitely held their own out there, and they had at least three players spewing their breakfast during the workout. That in itself tells me they were giving everything they had, and they definitely earned my respect!
Thursday, September 21, 2017
Instruction
It's early in the season. But we probably only have about four more weeks before it starts snowing. So there's a lot of work to be done and a short time in which to do it. Part of that work includes developing good skiing technique. This week, we've spent some time working on that.
Jenna working on technique, while Andrew watches Seinfeld reruns on his iPad. |
Jonte |
Hannah |
Tom |
Baron Von Munchausen. Taking flight. |
Tracen |
The ceremonial reading of results. |
Quail |
Rupert Von Hindenberg. The instructions were to go twice around the cone. Nobody said he needed to ski five kilometers in completing the task. |
And then there was that time Zacke went rogue... |
Wednesday, September 20, 2017
Jeff Scott
Jeff Scott |
Jeff Scott died of brain cancer a few weeks ago. There was a memorial service for him the
other day at Kincaid Park and it was packed. Everybody was there. Jeff Scott
was, among other things, the president of the Nordic Skiing Association of
Anchorage. A few years ago, he’d handed
the job of NSAA President over to Lars Spurkland. But Lars died unexpectedly in 2014 and Jeff agreed to retake the role of NSAA President. But of course Jeff was, like Lars, far more
than just the president of the ski club.
Jeff was a pretty extraordinary guy.
He and I didn't really run in the same circle of friends, but every time I saw him, he seemed like
he was having a really fantastic day. He
always had a smile and he was always pretty excited about whatever thing he
happened to be excited about. And it was
always something. There was this one time when my friend Trond Bjorn and I had
a difference of opinion with one of the ski club’s policies, and we told Jeff
our feelings about it. Jeff figured
what needed to happen was we all needed to go downtown to Humpy’s and have a
few beers and talk it out and come up with a solution. As I remember, we didn’t really come up with
any firm resolution to our difference of opinion, but Trond Bjorn and I got to
hear about all the new and exciting programs that the ski club was initiating,
including big plans for ski jumping, and new ways to make skiing fun for kids
and get more elementary school students into skiing. Walking out of Humpy’s at the end of the
evening, Trond Bjorn and I agreed: “This guy Jeff Scott is an awesome guy!”
About a year ago, last August, Jeff sent me an e-mail. He’d heard about my little t-cell lymphoma cancer episode, for which I’d
been going to the hospital for my daily dose of radiation therapy all
summer long. Jeff had recently been diagnosed with brain cancer and had just
been through a couple of major brain surgeries. He contacted me because he
wanted to know if I needed anybody to talk to about my lymphoma situation and
he wanted me to know that I should feel free to contact him if I ever wanted to
talk about it or needed any support. I was at the tail end of my radiation treatment and all
indications were that this t-cell lymphoma thing was coming to a close and I
was in remission and most likely it was behind me for good. So for one thing, I didn’t think my little issue was anything
like the seriousness of what Jeff had just been hit with, so I thought it was
extraordinary that it was Jeff who
was offering me comfort; it seemed it
should have been the other way around.
And at the same time, I felt in no way qualified to give Jeff any advice
or insight about what he was dealing with.
It seemed it would be so presumptuous of me to compare my little t-cell
lymphoma episode (which had been discovered very early, before it spread) to Jeff’s brain cancer,
which involved major surgery and chemotherapy and all the rest, and which seemed to
me like a life-threatening, scary situation.
The thing everybody knows about Jeff is that he liked to
have fun. But lots of people like to have fun, so that’s not so unusual. The thing about Jeff was that he really cared
about others, so he was always trying to include other people in his fun.
All the speakers at Jeff’s memorial service said the same thing about
Jeff: that everyone who met him ended up saying, “This guy Jeff Scott is such an
awesome guy!” So I guess it wasn't only me who felt that way.
Burky and Sally. You probably recognize them. |
The last speaker of the evening encouraged us all (including
the entire UAA volleyball team and coaching staff, who were there because Jeff
and his wife Beth are huge UAA volleyball supporters) to go out and get involved with people and do
something nice for somebody, because that’s the way Jeff lived his life. After
the service I was visiting my friends Burky and Sally, and my friend Deb. We were
discussing airplanes and how it was better not to buy them. And recreational
cabins, and how they required a lot of maintenance so maybe it was better not
to buy them either. Sally and Burky mentioned that they hadn’t made a summer
brush-cutting trip to their cabin near Denali State Park in over ten years
because it was such a slog to hike the six miles through wet, swampy muskeg to
get to the place during the summer. So they only went there during the winter on skis when everything was frozen and covered in snow. They reckoned the alders were probably invading the place. It just so happened that
Wednesday (today) is Sally’s birthday. And Deb, inspired by all the talk about Jeff
Scott’s generosity, and inspired by one of the speaker's requests that we all go out and try
to do something nice for somebody in memory of Jeff, started thinking what a nice birthday
present it might be if she were to go to Burky and Sally’s cabin and cut down
those alders. Problem was, it was such a long, wet slog in to the place, and
she didn’t know if she could find it anyway because there’s not really a trail. I know the way in, and I was interested in cutting some brush, but there still remained the difficulty of getting in there when the muskeg wasn't frozen
and snow-covered.
We've been known to take the whirlybird out for a day of summer skiing from time to time. |
If you've been following this blog (and I know you have) you know that Deb and Keith Essex have been using helicopters to fly skiers up to Eagle Glacier for summer ski training camps since before anyone can remember because they own and operate Alpine Air Alaska. So, as it became clear that we were actually serious about this brush-cutting adventure, it wasn't long before the prospect of avoiding the muskeg hike by flying over it in a helicopter at 120 miles per hour was raised. Rather than spend all day driving the three hours up the road, slogging in for a few more hours, then spending the next day getting back out and home again, we could take a shiny red helicopter and fly up there in the afternoon, get it done lickety-split, and be home by dinnertime! Deb asked me if I was interested and of course I’ll agree to anything that involves
zooming around in helicopters so I was 100% on board.
We had a few laughs on the flight in. |
So after this morning’s UAA ski practice, I
packed up my rubber boots and drove over to the Alpine Air hangar to fly up north with
Deb and pilot Scott to Burky and Sally’s cabin on Dalteli Lake.
It seemed we had plenty of choices. We picked a red one. |
That's the Parks Highway. Getting to Dalteli Lake was a lot quicker the way we did it. |
We found a nice wet swampy bog to land in. |
On a clear day 20,320 foot Denali would be looming large behind Deb in this photo. |
Deb and Scott. You may notice that all our hearing protection has been bedazzled by Deb. We did use those clippers. We didn't use the hand cannon strapped to Scott. |
Yes, that is Big Bird hearing protection I'm wearing. |
The Dalteli cabin, post-brush-cutting. |
All those wires are electrified, to keep the bears out. |
On our way back out, relieved to see the chopper hadn't sunk into the bog. |
It'll freeze over in another month or so. |
Back to Anchorage in the evening, coming in over Knik Arm. |
Home sweet home. |
Happy Birthday, Sally!
Monday, September 18, 2017
It Was The First Time She Had Never Finished A Race
What good is a blog if it doesn't have anonymous sources? This blog has moles planted round the world, providing our editors and research staff the inside information they need to keep you, the reader, abreast of the latest news and gossip surrounding our team. This morning, one of our minions tipped us off to this little morsel from Canada's north country. (Click on the photo below for the full story.)
Natalie Hynes. In New Hampshire. Making adjustments. |
Saturday, September 16, 2017
Birchwood
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