Friday, November 30, 2012

Early snow

The North Country has been blessed with a good amount of early-season lake-effect snow. While it seems most other parts of New England woke up to some powder this morning, we have been skiing all week. Star Lake has been prime, and after a day of "skiing it in" we had a track suitable for fast skating intervals. The big treat came yesterday as a good amount of additional snow fell even down in the lower elevations (campus) and combined with cold temps (single-digits this morning). This means that in a few minutes Ethan and I are bringing out the groomer! We'll try Higley first, and perhaps Star Lake. We'll also try to call on some people in the know to figure out of a trip to the VIC at Paul Smiths or Van Ho is worth a trip either tomorrow or Sunday.

The new Big Rig truck was prepared for grooming with our snowmobile this morning

Intervals in a blizzard at Star Lake on Wednesday. Headlamps have become the norm

Check out www.xcearlysnow.com for the latest ski info (or to submit your own report!). It's a great site by some SLU alums. I've already submitted quite a few posts as my job currently connects well with the purpose of the site right now...

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Canada Wrap-


ON SNOW
That camp was legit. After a week of on-snow training at Foret Montmorency the team is getting primed for the season. Each year it seems like this training camp is tweaked more and more, (and not just to account for the dwindling lack of snow each year) with good returns and more productive sessions.
A photo from the nearby tower looking down on the manmade snow loop (Photo: Reed Likly)

Only a few years ago when this camp was as simple as it gets. Ski a lot, eat a lot of anything, and ski again until you are too tired to move. In the space of a few years we’ve gotten more professional, more thorough, and more organized. We meet at night to discuss topics like recovery, race mentality, goals and warm-up routines. We plan meals that will best suit our training, and talk about why we eat what we do. We upload, modify and watch video of technique (sometimes even before we’ve left the lodge).
Video analysis

Skiing around a 1.7k loop can be arduous in some ways, and extremely beneficial in others. Ethan and I can see everyone on the team multiple times, at multiple places. We can ski ourselves, take video, ski some more, pull team members aside, send them off with things to work on, and (my favorite) ski with just about everybody at least once a day. “Let’s take a lap” was probably my most common phrase I said all week, uttered whenever somebody came by with a technical question or if I wanted to get a sense of how someone was skiing.
Erin Perryman is the technique-master of the women's team. She is always thinking and modifying to improve how efficiently she skis


ON RACING
And while technique and easy skiing are the foundation of this camp, a little early season racin’ is usually in the cards. There’s not much at stake with these early TTs, but we competed well. A few of the top guys weren’t too happy with their races for one reason or another, but our women’s team was incredibly impressive. For a group composed entirely of freshmen (with the exception of sophomore Kate, and senior Kelsey who was not present) these girls were in the MIX, stacking the top 10 against much older Colby and Bowdoin teams. The part that keeps impressing me with this group is how similar in ability they are (and it showed here) and how that enables them to keep pushing each other and improving. People have probably been led to believe we’re in a bit of a rebuilding year with such a young team, and even I have been thinking “man, give these girls a year or two together and things are gonna get real fast”. But after seeing this group on snow I get the feeling we might start seeing some killer results sooner than expected.

On the men’s side, Will Frielinghaus is continuing to improve and impress in every hard effort. He’s probably most known for being on the eccentric side, both in personality and ski technique…but as he skied by the waxing benches while Ethan and I were prepping the women’s skis, we saw a whole new Will. Calm, smooth and efficient, but with all the snap of that wild side. He was carrying out absolutely everything that we’d talked about and that he’d worked on this summer and fall, and doing it all without prompting. It was clear within 10 seconds of watching him ski that he would be our top guy on the day. Eric was struggling a bit after tweaking his leg skiing the day before, but opted to gut it out and race, still coming out competitive in the end. I’ll still hold to the statement I’ve made all fall that Eric is possibly the best classic technician on the EISA Circuit (and not far off in skating), and when he’s at full throttle there’s gonna be some impressive races from him this year.

Reed also had a solid race, and looked powerful throughout. He ended up less than a minute off some consistent top-20 Carnival racers, and I’m confident he can keep chipping away at that gap by the time the real race season gets underway.
Foret TT footage

RESULTS

The night before we left, some of us took the customary trip down to the Stoneham Terrain park after dark to hit some jumps and boxes. Here's some photos of Reed and Austin Hart gettin' it done and working on their balance:
Box grind

Stair gap

ON CAMPUS
In a rare move, mother nature decided to throw us a bone and give us a  little early-season snow at Star Lake this week. It’s always a treat to finish up Thanksgiving camp and keep skiing, and we’ll be heading out this afternoon for a little skate ski on the golf course. I spent most of yesterday driving around and checking out other options, but Star Lake, like usual, is where it’s at.

We’re eagerly awaiting Exam Week, the end of the semester, and the beginning of the racing season!
Star Lake, 11/26/12


Wednesday, November 21, 2012

The Mysterious Quebon

Milk comes in bags in Quebec, and this year we've got a real-life Canadian (Philip) with us demonstrated the simple solution everyone knows and we were too stupid to figure out. Turns out you keep the milk IN THE BAG, put it in the jug, and THEN cut it open. We'd been doing it wrong for four years...



Monday, November 19, 2012

Thanksgiving Camp

We've been up in Stoneham and training at Foret Montmorency for a few days now. Currently we're relegated to the same 1.8k loop as last year, which as far as little loops go is pretty sweet and?varied. The weather has been cold upon arrival, changing to mid-40s by noon, with bluebird skies and solid tracks. Essentially, we're doing laps in midwinter conditions in the morning session and spring skiing in the afternoon. Since the other college teams (Colby, Bowdoin, etc) aren't arriving until tomorrow, we've essentially had the place to ourselves for the entire time with the exception of a few locals and XC Ottowa members. 

We're gonna ramp it up and get some intervals in tomorrow before the loop gets too packed. Rumor has it they'll be spreading out some extra piles of snow on the lower section to add a few hundred meters...can you say 2+ kilometers baby!?

Here's a few photos:





Monday, November 12, 2012

Snowdancing

All eyes are on the Laurentides' long-range forecast this week as everyone tries to push through one more week of dryland before heading to Canada for Thanksgiving Break training camp. Last week everyone got a bit of a break, as the hard training and shorter days were really starting to take a toll. We backed off just before the breaking point, eliminating an interval workout and morning practice from last week's schedule. On Saturday, we headed down to Mt Arab, just outside of Tupper Lake, and did some hard uphill running intervals as our one focus workout of the week. This "mountain" has a fire tower and cool views of the northern Adirondacks, yet it only takes 11-12 minutes to get to the summit when you're fit and running fast. The men went up three times, the women twice. The conditions were cold and clear, with mud, ice and snow. That's all likely out of the picture now that we've had back-to-back 60 degree days, but hopefully the snow guns are still running up north.

Longboards were all the rage at SLU my Sophomore year (2009/10). Then they fell out of style, only to come back this year for some reason. The access road to the Mt Arab trail was really nice for carving (if you're Reed), sitting (Calvin) or skeleton-ing (Kelsey)

The other big news, which you already know if you follow the various other social-media outlets of the team, is the newest addition to the ski team armada: The SLU-Haul. A gigantic heated, insulated, wired wax trailer that will be towed to races behind our new Chevy 3500 Duramax HD Diesel pickup truck. Everything is big, loud and red:

The giant snowflake-logo on the side is forthcoming...


Thursday, November 1, 2012

"East-Coast Bulls#!&"

First-year Evan Martell grew up in Vermont, but he was a Sun Valley transplant for the past few seasons before coming to SLU. After being pampered with bright, dry, bluebird weather for the last 24 months, he gets irate at the first drop of rain or cloud in the sky.

     "Look at this straight-up East Coast Bulls#!%!" he proclaims loudly on any workout taking place in less-than-perfect conditions. Meng, also used to West Coast summers of hard-packed manicured trail runs, brings out the old "we don't have this crap in Tahoe"  speech whenever he trips on a tree root or a pile of wet leaves. 

     "Having such nice conditions all the time out West is great for training," Meng mused Tuesday as we ran alongside the Raquette River at Stone Valley.
     "Yeah, and it also makes you complacent and soft!" I replied (maybe with some more aggressive language), eager to defend my East Coast upbringing. 

Instead of fighting back, Meng agreed with me.

Being uncomfortable is a natural part of ski racing. If you live and train in a cold, wet, empty landscape like we do, you get to ingrain a certain level of toughness with every workout. And when you add tough workouts to a tough setting, you really induce a final layer of mental-strength: either suck it up and get it done, or you just won't survive

With that in mind, Ethan and I have a list of all the toughest and hardest workouts SLUSKI has, and we've been incorporating one per week starting after Mid-semester break a few weeks ago. The Dpole Derby, the Higley Bounding Loop, Russell Hill yesterday...

It's too bad the body can't sustain these hard efforts day after day...instead of getting dreary and whiny, everyone's been getting more fired up for these workouts than ever. The hardest workouts were my favorite as an athlete and they're by far my favorite as a coach: everyone is really into it, technique and fitness gains are really brought to light, and there's a definite sense of complete satisfaction on the van ride back to campus. Everything we do is geared toward getting faster, but on a cold November day these are the workouts where you really feel like you're faster before you even finish your cooldown.

Connor came out to help shoot some video at Russell Hill yesterday, as Ethan and I were shuttling skiers back down the steep hill after each repeat. Here's a little footage -