March 30th Grooming Report--Thank you!

March 30th Grooming Report

Thank you!

The sun rises over the eastern Gros Ventres, the hard working snow ready for one last hurrah, the fox cruises the fields, the robins soar from their roosts; another day begins at Trail Creek.  With the abundant early season snow and pandemic parameters, more kilometers have been groomed, more tracks made, more breaths taken in pursuit of Nordic contentment than ever before at our beloved Nordic center.  The same joy of mastery that a Lollipopper neophyte feels as she finds air under her skis for the first time is still alive in the octogenarian as he makes yet one more lap around the Betty Woolsey course.  Our sport is truly one for all ages.  We are blessed to share such rich splendor in our athletic pursuits.

Thank you to all who make this Nordic adventure happen.  Thanks to kids with good attitudes, who listen to your coaches and do their best.  Thanks to parents for the herculean effort required to bring this opportunity to your progeny.  Thanks to all for dealing with pandemic parking.  Thanks to coaches for the long days of training and at races, hours at wax benches, skiing with masks on.  And thanks to the community for membership, trail passes, skiing, helping with the new snow cat campaign, and any other form of support that makes this all happen.   Thank you!

Today’s final grooming once again happened last night as our Pisten Bully Paana—possibly for the last time if our campaign is successful—made multiple passes on almost every trail.  Up to two inches of snow had fallen since the last grooming, although the raging winds of late had blown a lot of it out of the fields.  This new snow worked in quite nicely to the very firm base for the skaters, although the classic tracks were a bit variable in the shady locations as yesterday’s temps barely surpassed freezing.

Today is the last day to ski the private property section of Trail Creek.  Skiing should be pretty good all day, starting out very fast with slight softening by late afternoon.  The National Forest trails may be skied until the snow is gone, which should last some time.

The vision of hope: in 225 days a huge dump will once again usher in first day skiing on trails that have been groomed to perfection by a brand new grooming machine, and that from the youngest pupils to the oldest masters, all will be poised and ready to do the thing called Nordic skiing at this place we call Trail Creek.  Until that day . . .

Groomer’s choice is Trail Creek.