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Masters Mini-Camp #1 Recap

We had a rainy day and a short manmade loop for our first Masters Mini Camp of the season…BUT, we had a great time!

Thanks so much to Sleepy Hollow for allowing us to use not only their manmade snow loop, but their lodge space for waxing demos, a group lunch, and a comfy couch video review.

Things got underway with some dynamic warmups, and then skiers broke into groups based on ability. Stations led by MNC coaches Rosemary, Sara, and Kristen had folks learning or reviewing classic technique from striding to double pole, as well as spending some time indoors learning about strength training and exercises.

We had some skiers out on waxless boards for some of their first skiing ever all the way to longtime MNC masters racers. The wet weather didn’t dampen any spirits on the trails.

After spending a good amount of time skiing in the rain, it was great to be able to step inside. Skiers got together with some hot cider, cheese and crackers, homemade treats, and more. Everyone enjoyed chatting about skiing and getting to know their fellow club members, and then it was into the living room for video review!

With a bunch of cozy couches and a flatscreen TV for nice viewing, everyone was able to check out their own skiing, as well as talk through footage of some World Cup skiers. Always good to be reflecting and reviewing to progress further.

After lunch and video, it was time to head outside for skate skiing. We also rotated through an indoor group that got to spend some time waxing and learning about waxing in Sleepy Hollow’s wax room. The rain was starting to change to snow, which gave us hope for a bit of a boost to winter.

You can check out a full photo album from the mini camp at the link below:

Masters Mini Camp #1 Photos

Thanks to everybody that came out to ski, and we would be remiss not to give another very big thanks to Eli and Sleepy Hollow, a ski area helping to keep us all skiing during warm spells like this with their awesome snowmaking system!

Where the snow comes from! Thanks Eli!

 

 

Juniors Classic Dialing

One of my proudest moments as a coach is not a race victory, a team score, or an award.

Earlier this summer at a regional camp, another coach stood next to me when dividing up groups. They leaned over and said “I want to collaborate on your station, because the MNC juniors all classic ski really well and I want to start figuring out why and how.”

Many of us start out on classic skis, be it step-in skis as youngsters or waxless skis as an introduction to the sport. In some respects, that’s the easiest form of skiing there is. Want to get out on snow with someone that’s never touched skis before? It’s likely you aren’t going to jump onto skate boards.

Yet mastering classic skiing with kickwax or klister, on narrow race skis and with speed in mind, is far from easy. Classic skiing perfectly embodies that phrase “easy to learn/hard to master” due to its complexity and necessary balance of power/speed/technique/tempo/body awareness.

If you are a racer, chances are about 50% of your competitions will be classic style. It is necessary to be proficient in both techniques, and yet often teams and coaches, especially at the HS/Junior level, will opt for skate far more frequently. When you have a large team, or a group that needs to eat into training time just to get on snow (for example, taking a bus to Sleepy Hollow) this is understandable and a logical factor of planning for these teams.

Teams and coaches will also take conditions into account. If wax looks tricky, or klister is involved, a switch to skate makes life easier.

But it isn’t always about making things easy! To that end, we tend to commit to classic a lot, likely a bit more than skating, especially in the early season. Through analysis of training logs over the years, in which we track time spent in each technique, it’s clear that a huge step is made when two things happen:

  • An increase in strength training, when the developmental window is correct to involve this type of training
  • A more even balance of skate and classic skiing

Classic with our group can be tough…I often spend the first 45 minutes of a session just dialing-in wax, helping apply klister or a klister/hardwax combo, or making adjustments to skis while everyone gets warmed up. But is this really too different from a race day? Nope! And our willingness to classic ski in tough conditions pays dividends in the winter because, guess what? We’re rarely racing in nice hardwax classic conditions!

This year more than ever I have been super impressed with the level of classic skiing in our group. What is it attributed to? CONSISTENCY, more than anything else. We make the effort to classic ski, and we learn by simply putting in the time. Other little things include:

  • Consistent strength training that helps build good body position, stability, and power
  • Intervals on repeated loops, but at different speeds and efforts to feel smooth vs fast vs hard
  • Switching some of our rollerski ratchets to the front wheel, making it harder to kick during dryland
  • Doing drills where we ski on wet soapy leaves to practice slipping, or doing rollerskiing/skiing on grass
  • Watching video of top athletes, and video of ourselves, frequently!

To that end, here are some clips of early-season classic skiing from a collection of our skiers:

Even if the snow is less-than-ideal, my challenge to anyone looking to improve their classic skiing is to take a chance and put yourself in some tricky conditions. Work on the technique when it is hard, not just easy, and you’ll be rewarded with improvement and a more well-rounded arsenal of technical abilities!

 

Eastern Cup Primer

Looking to find out more info about the Eastern Cups this year?

Curious how things will look from the MNC side of things?

Trying to navigate which licenses and memberships to get?

Want to sign up for the food table and contribute tasty snacks on race day?

All of this and more can be found in the 2023/2024 MNC Eastern Cup Primer! It’s time to get excited for race season!

MNC Eastern Cup Primer 23/24

Wheels to skis

In years past, November was nearly a full month of grueling workouts in cold rain and sleet. Bounding in a snowstorm, rollerskiing in full winter gear, and training inside when the outdoors were too slippery…part of the reason New England skiers were tougher than the competition was a November full of challenges.

Don’t get me wrong, we are still absolutely the toughest skiers out there (personal opinion)! But a combination of global warming and snowmaking seems to have shortened our window of really brutal workouts. The temps stay manageable deeper into the fall season, making for comfortable (and safe) running and rollerskiing. Is this good for our planet in the big picture? Certainly not. But it has made a noticeable change to training as I think back to years (and decades) past.

To counteract the drought of early snowfall, ski areas have gotten more and more advanced with snowmaking or snow-saving techniques. With their big pit of last year’s snow stored over the summer, it’s pretty much a given that there will be SOME sort of skiing during the week of Thanksgiving at Craftsbury.

So instead of slugging along in the sleet and snow on rollerskis or on foot, we’ve been granted a reprieve from the worst of November for a few seasons in a row now. The training stays comfortable for longer, and yet we also have more security of early snow to ski on. Is that really the best thing? Are we losing something quintessentially “New England” that builds character and hardiness? Probably. But even more concerning is the fact that this weather seems to be only trending warmer. The current “window” of November is in a sweet spot for the dryland-to-on-snow transition, but there is a limit to everything. Even now, snowmaking opportunities with cold air are scattered throughout warmer and rainier days.

Is there a call to action here? Well for one thing, we live in a part of the world with lots of awareness of rising temperatures and ways to get involved. It’s easier to motivate for nearly anything when you are directly affected.

To zoom in much closer, we should all be very grateful and thankful to the hardworking ski areas, grooming staff, and snowmakers who are always working harder than they need to in order to give us more snow than nature is providing. Be sure to let them know how much you appreciate their work! Donate a little extra to a ski area when you buy your season pass, bake some cookies or buy a cup of coffee for these folks, and if nothing else give a wave and a big “thank you” when you see them!

Here’s a short video from our first ski of the winter. Thanks to Sleepy Hollow for creating a pretty sweet 120m loop of groomed snow!

 

 

Join the Masters at Pizza44/Queen City Brewery!

This coming Saturday, November 18th, join MNC at Queen City Brewing/Pizza 44 for a Masters kickoff social! Meet up with fellow skiers, coaches, and club leaders and enjoy some pizza and beverages while you’re at it!

Enjoy a laid-back event to get ready for the season. The event space at this location is reserved for our own group, with pizza for guests and beverages available for purchase.

Check out the event page here.

Remember, MNC registration for Masters programs is open now at the registration page! Register before November 15th to avoid a price increase.

Wood Fired Pizza & Local Beer | Pizza 44 | Burlington, VT

Queen City Brewery | Craft Collective

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