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  #1  
Old 02-22-2011, 06:51 PM
beungood beungood is offline
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OT: Cross Country /backcountry skiing

I know its toward the middle /end of the season but Ive beeen Cross Country skiing to keep active while the roads are horrible. Ive did alot of skiing this winter and rented back country skis from REI and some rentals from Windblown XC center and now am seeing some deals and figure I should take advantage of them.

I started last year at a XC touring center and continued on this year but added trail breaking at a local State park (Old Military Ammo depot) and found I enjoy that more. I figured i would put together a few skis that could serve me .

I thought of a Backcountry toruing ski on the skinner side with either metal edges full 3/4 or tips & tail somewhere around 62cm-65 cm at the tip and NNN -BC Bindings. am considering Rossignol BC65's , Alpina tracker, Rossignol Silent Spider. And I have someone who wants to sell me Karhu XCD GT waxable with NNN bindings for $40.

I also happened upon a set of Rossignol BC X-11 75mm boots brand new for $100 so I picked them up thinking thaat I could use a heavier binding for more remote areas and hilly decents. Plus ive recently found some fischer Outbound Crowns for a song down in Ri all ready set up for them. Im also looking at Fischer Europas and an e-99 both with 3 pin bindings already mounted for very short money. I'm intrested in skiing around or down Mount Greylock as crazy as this sounds..

I wanted a mix of waxable skis and a waxless for warmer or changing conditions and waxable for colder. This hobby seems almost as addicting as Cycling....

I thought this forum would have some people who could give me some advice...
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Old 02-22-2011, 07:04 PM
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Dekonick Dekonick is offline
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Wish there was xc around where I live
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Old 02-22-2011, 07:23 PM
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gasman gasman is offline
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I have a few different skis and they all serve a purpose. I have about 6 pairs from over the years. I've found on the west side of the Cascades I use my waxless metal edge skis for backcountry use 99% of the time. I have some wax race skis that I rarely use and some wax skate skis that I use a lot. Really it depends on what you are doing.You need fairly stable snow temps to not pull your hair out using wax skis. The waxless gear is very good these days. It is amazing what you can do on light gear though. I've been around Crater Lake in the winter several times using light boots, skis and bindings-I just carry a small repair kit-screws,extra binding, epoxy, power drive for the group. Never had a problem.
Lots of great choices out there and you can't go wrong with any of them you make but the 3 pin system is pretty old school.
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Old 02-22-2011, 07:25 PM
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konstantkarma konstantkarma is offline
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I miss cross country/ backcountry skiing. Very few consistent opportunities here in Maryland. If you plan any area telemarking I suggest getting full metal edges on a lighter ski that can be used also for touring. Also, heavier boots and bindings would be a good idea. It is hard to find a single ski that will do everything well, but light touring/ light telemarking skis are a good start.

As you noted waxless skis are best for wetter hard packing snows, but if you plan on any cold weather tours waxable skis are the way to go. Also with waxables you have the option of a stckier kick wax on the center of the ski with gliding wax on the tips and tails. There are lots of modern great options for whatever you decide to do. I just returned from a trip to Colorado, and rented nice telemark stuff for area skiing that i also used for a couple of backcountry tours. For this I used skins instead of wax so I didn't have to wax the rental skis. I also rented some waxless skis to ski tracks at a flat nordic center. It was all good, and lots of fun.........enjoy your new passion!
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Old 02-22-2011, 07:29 PM
mtb_frk mtb_frk is offline
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My first and only pair of skis is the BC65. Where I live we get some good snow then it usually turns to icy packed snow pretty quickly. They seem to work good in either, and the metal edges are nice when there isnt much of a track. I think that I may get into racing next year, so I will be looking for something faster, but these seem like a good all purpose ski.
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Old 02-22-2011, 09:56 PM
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christian christian is offline
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XCDs, Outbound Crowns, Europas, and E99s are all good skis. Just a matter how much you want to prioritize glide versus downhill ability.

I ski a pair of the original XCD GTs with Rottefellas. I'm happy with them as a bash-around ski for carriage ways and hiking trails, as they have nice kick and glide, but at 210cm and fairly stiff double camber, they take a pretty good skier on anything but gentle slopes. I paid $10 for mine, but $40 is a fair deal if they're in good shape.
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Old 02-22-2011, 10:04 PM
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Karin Kirk Karin Kirk is offline
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Sounds like you are definitely going for the quiver approach! Just like bikes, there is a ski for every purpose. My advice would not be to buy too many skis at once - at least not until you flesh out just what sort of skiing will really appeal to you and what your taste in skis turns out to be.

A basic metal-edged touring ski is a great workhorse ski that you can use in lots of conditions. If you go with waxable it's more important that the ski length and flex are suited to your weight so that the wax pocket is engaged when you want it to be. Nothing is suckier than getting the wax wrong or the ski flex wrong and spending a lot of time slipping backwards while traveling uphill.

Personally I'm a fan of no-wax skis because for me touring is a simple pleasure that I like to do spontaneously and without any thought of getting the wax correct. But if you are into zen and the art of waxing, then it can be satisfying to go with waxable skis. Maybe this is like the clincher vs tubular preference.

As for descents - the setups you mentioned will work. They are a bit dated and might not be too great when it comes to turning, but if that's not your focus, then why not go with the temptingly cheap gear. If this turns out to be stuff that you love, you can always upgrade later. There is a large continuum of touring gear that goes all the way up to the full plastic-booted tele setup.

Yes, this is definitely as addictive and as gear-intensive as cycling. Of course, that is all part of the fun!
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Old 02-23-2011, 07:11 AM
djg djg is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by konstantkarma
I miss cross country/ backcountry skiing. Very few consistent opportunities here in Maryland. If you plan any area telemarking I suggest getting full metal edges on a lighter ski that can be used also for touring. Also, heavier boots and bindings would be a good idea. It is hard to find a single ski that will do everything well, but light touring/ light telemarking skis are a good start.

As you noted waxless skis are best for wetter hard packing snows, but if you plan on any cold weather tours waxable skis are the way to go. Also with waxables you have the option of a stckier kick wax on the center of the ski with gliding wax on the tips and tails. There are lots of modern great options for whatever you decide to do. I just returned from a trip to Colorado, and rented nice telemark stuff for area skiing that i also used for a couple of backcountry tours. For this I used skins instead of wax so I didn't have to wax the rental skis. I also rented some waxless skis to ski tracks at a flat nordic center. It was all good, and lots of fun.........enjoy your new passion!
Rode a chair with some telemarkers at Alta a couple of weeks ago and it turned out one of the guys was from around here (DC area) -- said he'd been the only tele skier at Wintergreen the week before. No idea where one goes for back country skiing in the area, unless it's Dulles or BWI. Maybe higher up in WVa?

To make the thread drift even more shocking . . . so I had to leave my skis in my car because I missed the 45 minute baggage check-in cut-off by 2 minutes (nice little sprint back to the lot and then back to the terminal) . . . so I rented some boards that I reckon are pretty modest-to-mid wide by Western standards but way, way wider than the 70mm underfoot that I'm used to. Dynastar 6th Sense -- effin' loved them on just about everything.

Last edited by djg; 02-23-2011 at 07:16 AM.
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  #9  
Old 02-23-2011, 08:27 AM
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Karin Kirk Karin Kirk is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by djg
. . . so I rented some boards that I reckon are pretty modest-to-mid wide by Western standards but way, way wider than the 70mm underfoot that I'm used to. Dynastar 6th Sense -- effin' loved them on just about everything.
Nice! Missing the baggage check was probably a blessing. Fat skis are so much fun on soft snow. Good choice.
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  #10  
Old 02-23-2011, 09:34 AM
endosch2 endosch2 is offline
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I have about 10 pair of different skiis. I do mostly skate skiing on groomed trail systems here in NH and do some back woods trail breaking. I have 4 pairs of good skate skiis, 2 pairs of rockers for spring/ early season, two pairs of wider waxless skiis for out the door non groomed skiing. I also have two pairs of classic race type skiis for groomed tracks.

I have always made due with long and light waxless classic skiis going out the back door. I am not sure why you would want the metal edge unless you thought you would get to some downhill/ tele skiing kind of backcountry skiing.

If you are an exercise junky I would recommend learning how to skate ski and getting in to that. I do that 90% of the time.

The best thing to do is take a lesson (or a bunch of lessons). Nordic skiing is all technique related so lessons are key.
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  #11  
Old 02-23-2011, 10:29 AM
beungood beungood is offline
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I took a lesson with some cycling friendss at windblown last year and was hooked from the get go. I like metal edges as the classics seemed really hard to turn in some out of ther way sectons when it was icy or packed. I did some trail breaking at a few state parks with some rentals ( Fischer back country crown BC ,NNN-bc bindings and Rossignol bc x-5 boots)and found I preferred it to groomers.

Also the guy helping me back into military did the Nordic military race and was saying at my level ski both and use lighter gear or excercise and heavier 3 pin for some of the more rugged and hilly places. As a swettener, he said I coukld probably get on the biathlon team and get issued some gear to allow me to save money on my quiver. I kind of liked the long roads at that old abandoned base and brewaking through powder down long straight aways..

And my looking for the 30's area Thunderbolt run down the side of Mass's highest peak,Mount Greylock, and climbing then xc'ing down it is intriguing. I want to ski it,then comeback to climb it with my Hors Cat when its warmer ..
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Old 02-23-2011, 03:05 PM
beungood beungood is offline
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Wow,Alot of great advice as usual! On the lighter end of the spectrum anyone ski both NNN -BC and Salomon Bc and XA -raid bc bindings/ Ive heard a few say the Salomon might handle better?

Snows coming this way..
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Old 12-10-2017, 08:32 AM
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AngryScientist AngryScientist is offline
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i have never tried cross country skiing, but seeing all the cool carriage roads in minnewaska state park has me considering.

i think, if my local REI or someplace offers rental equipment, that would be the way to go to flesh out what i would want.

do you guys think that for someone who knows the basics of downhill skiing, lessons would be required, or just grab some equipment, watch some videos for basic technique and hit the trails?
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Old 12-10-2017, 11:35 AM
adampaiva adampaiva is offline
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@Angry I forget if Minnewaska has rentals but Rock & Snow in New Paltz does. Either daily or for the season. I’ve rented every time I’ve gone but think I’m going to buy a setup in the next couple weeks. Wish I would have thought of this in the off-season for some clearance deals. My plan is to buy waxless 50/50 groomed/back-country type skis with partial meta edge. Think it will Be Fischer Spider 62 Touring. Maybe I’ll add in some dedicated groomed skate skis if I find cheap used ones.

Lessons are not necessary. I learned in a day on a 9 mile ski into a cabin deep in the woods accessible only by ski or snowmobile. Once you get the hang of it you can move to harder trails with more elevation change and turns.

It’s really fun. I think an excellent winter activity for someone into cycling.
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Old 12-10-2017, 11:59 AM
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Vientomas Vientomas is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AngryScientist View Post
bump

i have never tried cross country skiing, but seeing all the cool carriage roads in minnewaska state park has me considering.

i think, if my local REI or someplace offers rental equipment, that would be the way to go to flesh out what i would want.

do you guys think that for someone who knows the basics of downhill skiing, lessons would be required, or just grab some equipment, watch some videos for basic technique and hit the trails?
Are you skate skiing or classic skiing? Either one can be learned without lessons if you have a downhill skiing background. There are differences in equipment between skate and classic skiing and skating generally requires a nicely groomed trail while classic does not. If your goal is to plonk around on ungroomed roads or trails, or where there is no groomed skate track, classic gear is your best bet. You don't need a racing ski or boot for that, a good middle of the road recreational ski and boot would be good enough. I would look at getting a "no wax" ski. I find "kick waxing" to be a bit of a pain. Have fun!
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