I have a lot of goals but the one that was at the top of the list
when winter came was to ski as much as possible. This year, I feel
like I have truly accomplished that goal.
A few days ago I posted a video
showing what the last few days of the 2024-2025 XC skiing season
looked like in my corner of the world, the Western Hiawatha National
Forest of the UP in Michigan. Hopefully that video evidence can help
you understand how I was able to make this an almost unbelievable ski
season. This report is a look back at this amazing season.
My main metric for how I judge a ski season is number of days I was
able to ski on snow. This winter of 2024-2025 I was able to ski on
snow 150 days. Not only that but these were all the contiguous
days starting on November 25 and ending on April 23. I believe I
skied every day it was possible to ski.
One of the ways I am able to ski so much is that I am doing cross
country skiing, a.k.a. Nordic skiing. Nordic skiing is a kind of
transportation where you actually travel, uh, across the countryside.
Over these 150 days, my total distance skied is a pretty serious
1146.5km (712mi). This is like the distance separating Chicago from
New York City. This is an average daily distance skied of 7.6km/day.
The total amount of time I spent skiing on snow this season was
141hrs 37min. This is an average daily time of about 57min/day.
Each and every day for 150 days.
You might be noticing that this works out to an overall average speed
of 8.1kph over the whole season, and thinking that's not that fast.
That is quite true and this pace tells much more of the story. The
reason this pace is so low is that 87% of the time I did not ski where
grooming ever takes place, and half of the time I went to some place
that sometimes is groomed, they had not yet started or stopped for the
season.
This can be seen when looking at the disparity in my pace. My fastest
two kms were tied at 18.4kph. My top 8 daily fastest extraordinary
kms on snow over the entire season averaged 17.1kph, over double my
average pace. Compare that with a quotidian outing on rollerskis, for
example this morning, where I did 8 contiguous kms all of which
averaged 21.0kph. (The fastest km was 24.3kph!) Clearly the slow
speeds on snow is not so much about me but about the exceptionally
strenuous snow conditions I regularly skied on.
Another hypothesis would be that I'm somehow good at rollerskiing and
less effective on snow. I would challenge that by pointing out that I
was incredibly lucky with mishaps. Sure, I had a couple of stumbles
here and there getting my ski hooked around a beech tree or
slightly overcooking icy descents or tripping over a layer of crust
after it collapsed under me, but really I only had one bad fall in all
of the 150 days. I had stopped at the driveway of a neighbor to chat
with him and was standing there chatting for maybe 15 minutes when
suddenly I fell to the ground. I did a pretty good job of landing on
my butt in a damage minimizing way, but out of all the sketchy things
I did on skis this year to have the biggest problem just simply
standing still, well, I'll take it! (I think what happened there was I
was on some snow that transformed from the pressure of me standing on
it from pretty high friction to very low friction icy. I maybe melted
down to an ice layer. Suddenly the very slight angle of the driveway
became more relevant than I was expecting.)
You might assume that with all this extra hard skiing that I would be
in fantastically good physical shape. You would be correct. Also
consider how all that snow got cleared from my
driveway and walkways.
I was blessed to avoid any serious illness this winter. The closest to
ill I felt was later in the afternoon after skiing on day 150. Good
timing.
There are not a lot of photos of me skiing but this, day 142, is
roughly what I looked like most of the time.
As you can see, I was up for it but what is most astonishing is the
weather. Last year in the UP, there was practically no snow at all the
entire winter. But this year, wow. And it wasn't the kind of obnoxious
lake effect snow where you get 2 meters in a weekend and then it goes
back to raining (ahem South Towns of
Buffalo). The snowfall was really well paced. And what I always
stress is that it is never about the snowfall really — what makes a
great ski season is the temperatures. You need to have consistently
cool temps so that when precipitation comes, no matter how slight, it
adds to the snowpack, not extirpates it in the form of rain. I thought
early on in the season that surely there would be some skiable snow
that would disappear and that would repeat a few times until the
proper base came. But no, that first snow covered the ground and
endured in many places for five months. It's also important for
maximal skiing to be very attentive to weather reports and signs so
that you can choose the optimal time of day to ski. Also important to
be attentive to is tree shading, slope facing, drift catching,
drainage, ice formation, etc.
With so much skiing, ski care became quite an operation. I only started
recording my ski waxing habits at the end of December when I realized
this would become somewhat complicated if I didn't pay attention. I
recorded 32 times where I waxed a pair of skis but it was surely well
over 40. I did get better at it as the season went on. It now takes me
about 6 minutes per ski to clean the ski, apply wax, iron the wax,
scrape the excess wax, brush the ski (3 different brushes), polish,
and do whatever else is necessary to get them ready to go again (e.g.
lightly run a cabinet scraper to cut away base damage, paste wax on
the tops and/or bindings to prevent sticking snow, etc). This means
I spent well over the equivalent of an entire work day doing nothing
but waxing skis all day long. I tried a bunch of waxing strategies,
but with "garbage snow" or even great snow that's not groomed, you're
really chasing your tail if you worry about the fine details too much.
I mostly stuck with what I call
"Toko
Cheap Red". It roughly works, it's easy and, yup, it's cheap.
Here's my wax log showing when I waxed each pair of skis and how many
kms they had on them.
Here is what such a long season of wax scrapings looks like.
As you can see, I have a lot of pairs of skis and they all have their
merits. The wax log hints correctly at which skis are my favorite.
Here is a breakdown of exactly what my ski collection is and how many
times this year I used them (the half values mean I came back to the
house and switched halfway through).
I think it's pretty weird that my best and fastest skis — which I
protect from abuse — were only appropriate for the conditions twice.
If there's an area for improvement, that is it.
Here's a photo of my well loved blue Evos after skiing through some
very ragged snow on day 146. These skis have taken some serious abuse!
Here is a complete day by day representation of most of the
interesting data I have about this season.
The blue bars show the duration of the outing in hours.
The green bars show the distance covered in km.
The black diamonds show the average speed of the outing in km/hr on
the same scale (or close) as the distance bar. The numeric value of
the average speed is shown as the first number on the right.
The black triangles on the right show the speed of the fastest km
for that outing. It's interesting to compare this to the average.
Some outings didn't get individual kms recorded and this mark is
absent. The numeric value of the max km pace is shown as the second
number on the far right (where extant).
The stars are a personal subjective rating of the outing where 1
star is skiing but as annoying as it can be and 10 is the best
flawless skiing imaginable. I only started rating the outings in
2025 so early days just have a square.
The color of the stars (or square) show which skis I used, color
coded the same as the pie chart above.
The codes after some of the dates show excursions to official ski
trails which sometimes will be groomed. "mk" = McKeever Hills, "vs"
= Valley Spur, et al.
The stars that show my subjective rating of a ski outing were an
attempt to empirically analyze and optimize the good things about
skiing. I find that rating the outing is very helpful for clarity. "Am
I really enjoying this?" is a sane question that everyone who skis 150
days in a year will be asking at some point.
The interesting thing I have discovered with such a large data set is
that for me something like the following is roughly true.
This means I'm reckoning that my assessment is correct about half of
the time — good or bad. But when I'm wrong, I tend to overstate the
lack of potential. The lesson one should take if this kind of pattern
is observed, is that, sure, you should try things that seem like they
will be suboptimal. By recalibrating my expectations to give
opportunities the benefit of the doubt, I've definitely come out ahead
skiing. I think it also applies to many other areas of life.
Finally, I must mention one other element of unreasonably good
fortune this ski season, my wonderful wife. Imagine what a fantastic
good sport you'd need to be to indulge my foolish quest to ski such an
unreasonable amount — and she was that good sport. She didn't just
tolerate my mad hobby but she herself skied 35 days on snow. She skied
a very respectable 185km this year. Sometimes the date is shown twice
in the data plot — that is generally where I'm going out multiple
times in the day, usually a second time to ski with her. She did not
grow up skiing and rightly avoids a lot of the sketchy conditions I
will blithely ski on. She can have a hard time descending which is the
part that's normally considered "easy". But her climbing is impressive
and her endurance is better than mine — her average outing time was
just under 59 minutes. Getting to ski with her was definitely the
highlight of the season.