Good Skiing Today, and Boiling Some Maple Syrup

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Showing tracks, variable conditions, different left to right.

Open, 23º at 7am. At 7am there are a few clouds and sun. Forecast high 29º, mostly cloudy and a few flurries. The past two days have been far warmer and sunnier than forecast…so who knows?

Good spring skiing. Variable snow conditions, powder up high and corn down low or anywhere that gets any sun after about 10am. Waxless skis are great right now; waxing is still almost impossible. Decent classic tracks in most places. Faster loose granular in the mornings, hardens and speeds up again late in the day. Slower when the sun hits it or the temperature goes high enough. I will keep talking about fast afternoons until I don’t hear from skiers how fast the downhill was in the later in the day.

Ian gathered sap on Friday afternoon. We ended up with just over 200 gallons, plus what runs into the tank from the tubing behind the sugar house. Enough to boil today and get 5 or 6 gallons of syrup. Make the sugar house one of your stops today. It is very interesting. They will start boiling after the grooming is done. So late morning. Kids are welcome in the sugar house, as long as they are accompanied by an adult, most things in the sugar house are very hot.

Fire up the evaporator and let’s make some syrup.

 

We Love This Guy, and Yes, the Skiing is Great Spring Skiing.

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This is Dick. An official at Wild Wings!

Open, 23º at 7am. Forecast high 35º and a few flurries. Right this minute, the sun rise is beautiful and the sky is blue. Really nice spring skiing. Faster in the morning and slower as the temperature rises and the sun hits the snow. Faster again at the end of the day. Ian is on the Chickadee with the snow cat early this morning, it will be great!

Dick is a fixture at Wild Wings, and has been for quite a few years. He started skiing and adopted Chuck’s parents and us soon after. Between working on the trails in the fall, to shoveling snow onto the trails in the winter, Dick is, has been, and always will be a great part of Wild Wings. When you see Dick on the trails be sure to say thanks!!!

This was early on, the poster was for Bromley Outing Club Casino Night, so, early 80’s. This is before Dick started his racing career, notice the gaiters. Dick takes to posing naturally from many years of being photographed from his famous pitching and quarterback careers. He went on to be drafted by the Red Sox and is the only person I know to get kicked off the field by Ted Williams after developing a mental block and not being able to throw a strike.

The next step in Dick’s ski career was to take on ski racing. He trained and trained. In those days he was driving a passenger bus for a living, and training to ski race became his passion. He was driving a bus whose final stop was in Providence, RI. He would change into ski boots and roller ski around Providence. Change back into bus driver attire and drive the folks safely north. He put in 1000s of kilometers on the roller skis. And 1000 km a winter on skis. He bought better skis. Found boots that wouldn’t give him blisters, has a great friend, Rob, to wax his good race skis and went to many races. Some of his favorites were the Keskinada in Ottawa, the Craftsbury Marathon, Lake Placid Loppet, and he even did the Great Glen to Bretton Woods. Dick often made the local paper after a race, it was the mustache icicle that got him the cover.

The famous Dicksicle.

Dick somewhere along the line started working on ski trails. Always willing and able to lend a hand. Pulling out beaver ponds, building bridges, weed eating trails flat, cutting trees out with his chain saw, shoveling snow, or cutting back the sides of the trails. He lays corduroy in wet spots and covers it with branches and snow.

We are so very grateful Dick has adopted us. My goal is to go on to ski as well and as long as he has. Last Sunday, at the end of a quite a few good ski days, Dick came in looking very tired. “Not a bad day,” he said,  “Skied the Chickadee, 3 Loons, a couple of Upper Blue Jays, Middle and Lower Blue Jay and all the lower trails.”

Good Skiing Thru the Weekend.

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Nice double pole action on wonderful tracks!

Open, 28º and cloudy. Forecast high 34º, some sun this afternoon. 

Another nice day for a ski. Good skiing thru the weekend (at least). The road is not really muddy at this point. But, there are quite a few pot holes. Drive slow, better for your car and everyone else on the road.

There are animal tracks out there. Keep looking around. Animals have been spotted too. Look for mink, deer and raccoon tracks on the Middle Blue Jay. Otter slides on the Upper Blue Jay and down along the brook on the Woodcock and Snow Goose. Coyote, bobcat and snowshoe hare winding thru the woods, look in the newer forests with the younger trees. I have seen deer tracks around. Let me know what you see. The snow plopping out of the trees has made some interesting tracks, one that looked like a Sasquatch. And the short trees on the Upper Blue Jay looked like trolls in hiding.

Trolls in hiding.

 

Home From World Cup Skiing For a Great Ski HERE!

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Sophie is home!

Open, 15º at 7am and cloudy. 34º is the forecast high and cloudy with a chance of snow. The skiing is so wonderful. A nice packed powder base with really good tracks.

Sophie flew in on Monday after finishing 3rd in the overall World Cup Sprint standings . Lilly and Sophie had a great ski on Tuesday. Sophie and her team mates gets another day off at home today, and then she heads off to Craftsbury for Spring Series. Living out of a suitcase and in hotels for 4 months has to get old. Must be nice to have your own bed, your own pillow. Even the familiar smells of your own space. No matter how wonderful life is when you go away, coming home is great!

 

The Flood Brook JISP kids skied again on Tuesday. Lorri took the picture, while Austin, 7, chatted at the squirrel in squirrel talk. Stop and look around while you are skiing. You never know what you are missing.

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