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Fall Camp 2022: Registration Open

Last year we held our first-ever Fall Camp. This is common among many college teams and helps split the long gap between the start of the school year/fall training and the anticipation of Thanksgiving Camp. It’s a great way to get in some volume training and be energized by a different location and atmosphere to really focus-in on training.

In 2021 we visited North Conway, in part because we had been away for a few years with Mountain Camp being in VT. You can read a recap of that trip here.

This year, we are heading to Lake Placid! We’ll be visiting the area for the rollerski races in late September, but in October it’ll again be a great base for some volume with rollerski loops, hiking, and great trails every direction.

You can find the registration for this camp here. Camp takes place October 14-16 (Friday thru Sunday).

 

Volunteers needed for Biathlon Summer Nationals this weekend!

From EABC’s John Madigan

Hello Folks!

We are excited to host the North American Biathlon Rollerski Championship on August 6th and 7th. They will be here before we know it. These will be exciting races with athletes from across the US and Canada, many beginning their journey toward a future Olympic dream. Saturday will be a Sprint race and Sunday will be a Pursuit race except for Seniors who will race a Mass Start! Always one of the most exciting races to watch.

In order to make these races happen we need your help. Many of you have been very generous with your time. Summers can be very busy for everyone, but if you are able to spare one or two mornings that weekend it would be a tremendous help. Socks for volunteers! Time commitment is roughly 8:00am to noon.

We will have a banquet on Saturday night and all volunteers will be welcome guests. Pig roast and an exciting guest speaker. Let us know if you are interested in helping and please invite your friends to help out as well. For those of you that continue to come back year after year, it is your enthusiasm, sense of fun, and great attitudes that make events at our range some of the best in the country. Thanks for all the help in the past and in the future. Feel free to contact me directly if you have any questions.

Best,
John Madigan
Ethan Allen Biathlon Club
802 373 5777

jpmad2013@yahoo.com

Intro Rollerski Clinic #2 Recap

It was a beautiful day for our second rollerski clinic of the summer on Saturday. Six participants can be added to the June clinic to make for over 15 attendees total, many of whom were trying out rollerskiing for the first time. With ages ranging from 7 to 53 it truly showed the scope of our sport, and you may just see some new faces out on the bike paths and roads!

This time our warmup included some soccer on skis!

We now have a poster filled with lots of rollerski checklists and safety notes:

For a little more detail, it seems like this would be a great place to share some safety and equipment notes…basically, what these bullet points refer to!

SAFETY NOTES

Helmet: Gotta have this to protect the head! AT ALL TIMES

Pads: Not mandatory, but sometimes helpful for beginners who may fall over a bit more and want to prevent road rash

First Aid Kit: Bandages and antiseptic are the key items here, so it’s worth creating or keeping a small kit on your person or in your car

Road side/route: Know the side of the road to ski on (the right) and know your route ahead of time to avoid sketchy intersections

Daylight: While biking at night sometimes happens for commuters, try to stick to rollerskiing in daylight hours only

Stopping: There are several stopping techniques and it’s great to practice/know when to use them

Hi Viz/Light: As the photos on the poster all indicate, bright colors are really useful. We often try to wear yellow, or if we forget (or take off a shirt when it’s really hot out) we use some reflective vests/strap contraptions to remain visible. The US Ski Team is trying to encourage the use of blinking lights more, and many of the kinds you can put on your bicycle can easily clip/wrap right onto a helmet or water belt!

CHECKLIST FOR YOUR SKI

  • Skis
  • Boots
  • Poles (with rollerski tips)
  • Helmet
  • Bright colors
  • Water
  • Watch if you want to record time/data
  • Snack(s)
  • Gloves if you prefer
  • Glasses if you prefer/are skiing in a group/if it’s sunny
  • Dry shirt for after training

Thanks again to all those that came to our clinics, or helped out at them! Safe and happy skiing-

 

Coach Rosemary receives 2022 NENSA BKL Leadership Award!

Congratulations to Coach Rosemary, who received NENSA’s prestigious BKL Leadership Award for 2022. Thanks to her tireless work planning ski days, creating a fun environment for skiers, and deep involvement and love for the sport Rosemary has brought our BKL programming to awesome places.

Don’t forget Rosemary also coaches regularly with Masters and Junior athletes, including regular sessions as well as big races and trips!

You can read the NENSA press release, including more quotes and stories, right here.

Way to go Rosemary! We’re lucky to have you with us at MNC.

A Week for ‘Projects’

The final week of Spring training for the Juniors involved a few different projects for the team. Some standard sessions took place on Tuesday and Thursday (track intervals and double pole speeds) but Wednesday was a bit different.

Will cuts away at the trail edge

Although there were not many takers, we opted for a volunteer day with Richmond Mountain Trails to help on construction of a new trail in Bolton. With a trailhead about a mile east of the Bolton access road on Rt 2, this new network is being designed with adaptive riding in mind for the primary climb. That means creating a trail wide enough for special 3- and 4-wheeled bikes to climb, something we don’t often think about when we take our ability to cruise around on 2 wheels for granted!

It was great to see what looked to be about 30 people all out chopping away at the dirt and carving a beautiful benched trail into the hillside…I wish I had taken some before/after photos.

What’s most cool about this trail network is it encompasses a huge land mass (some of it criss-crossing the Catamount Trail) and has the potentially to someday connect to Bolton Valley and the bike/hike trails up at the ski area. That means you could run from down in the valley, all the way up to the ski area, and then hop onto the Long Trail for a loop or further distance. It’s kind of incredible when you think of the number of well-build trails we have at our “hub town” of Richmond. Between the Long Trail, the Catamount Trail, the mountain biking/running trails within Richmond Mountain Trails, and even ski areas like Sleepy Hollow and Bolton, the options are immense.

I think it’s also important for us to spend some time contributing to the trail networks in our area, as MNC can be some of the most frequent users. We spend time on these trails often, whether biking or running. It’s only right that we play our part in helping grow and maintain the resources we rely on so heavily.

Hard workers Jonah, Nico, Matias, and Will

On Saturday it was time for a different type of project; one that many had been looking forward to ever since it appeared on the training plan. The 5k Project!

I referenced this workout in a previous blog post, and the team delivered! Some took on this workout for the first time, while others showed their experience and improvements in pacing, technique, and energy management. After the workout we reflected in the van about a few key elements that make this workout so special and beneficial:

  1. This workout requires a lot of attention-to-detail, from both coaches and team members. We were doing this workout on the Craftsbury rollerski loop, and I drove up on Friday to get in a ski with Coach Rick specifically to measure out distances and set a plan for where the start/finish/testing/fueling area would be. A lot of work (and driving) for a pre-workout mission, but worth it because it meant there were clear directives and setups when we arrived as a team the morning of the session.On Saturday morning, everyone arrived with the appropriate clothing for a cold and rainy day, and everyone was ready to get down to business despite the weather.  To get the loop, the goals, and the timing all down required very diligent focus and execution from the team, and everyone delivered.
  2. This workout brings out great questions and learning moments for everyone…whether it’s a question about managing heart rate spikes over a course, what the heck lactate testing is all about, or what to shoot for in terms of improving the next time out, the team was asking the right questions to develop as athletes.
  3. This workout can change your whole perception of five kilometers. Doing 5k once is usually the typical distance for a high school ski race, and plenty of Eastern Cups and championship races…but doing it three times in a row? With only a short break between each? That not only improves pacing ability for a 10k or 15k, it also means spending more time getting familiar with how hard a single 5k can be pushed.
  4. This workout relied on athletes being individually focused and motivated. With Sara and I doing lactate testing and taking down numbers (times, HR, lactate) we barely saw much of the action apart from the stadium area. It was up to the skiers to complete the task and they certainly did. This was great prep because the next time we’ll do this workout will be at the Range where we have a course already set, meaning it will be that much more efficient.

Nico and Kai charging up a hill

Project crew!

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