And a glorious weekend it was. Updates on the team penning, which was more
along the lines of chase-the-cattle-as-you-please penning, will come when I
pull together some of the video footage (since videos make everything more
fun). Yesterday, though, I skied.
Day two on my telemark skis.
A very talented friend held a free tele clinic. I picked up some more tips and things started
to click a little better. My turns to
the left are pretty solid, my turns to the right tend to fail semi-epicly. But I’m getting there! Definitely not bad for only two days!!
My butt was seriously kicked again yesterday. My quads were absolutely killing me at the
end of it all. Kill-ing me. But such is
the price of being ripped – I kid, I kid.
But really, my legs better be shredded at the end of the season! I enjoy the pain to some extent.
Yesterday I had two firsts: My first accident and my first
climb up a mountain on my tele skis.
-
The accident: After 6 months of training and “We’ll
practice this, but you’re never going to see it on the mountain,” I’m presented
with ‘what I’ll never see’. Lovely. Nothing gory or gruesome, no worries, but
interesting all the same. Training paid
off as I kicked into gear, a rhythm of getting ‘er done that only comes about
from hours of practice. Working the
accident with two others from my candidate class led for smooth operations, as
well. Oh, and in case you were worried,
the patient ended up being just fine in the end.
-
My first climb: Slogging through sun melted
heavy snow is not something I have too large a desire to do again soon, at
least not in as many layers as I was wearing!
But oh, it was enjoyable. I love
the woods up there, thick with red spruce and birch. The wind whistling softly through the snow
and ice covered branches. The view on
top was brilliant to both sides of the pipeline tree cut. Out one, Bald Knob and the valley, the other,
Dolly Sods wilderness and the foothills and farms at it’s base. Curtis was a great guide, even if I did miss
some of his story telling due to my huffing and puffing. The draw of more
potential adventures reached with skis encourages me to keep it up and work
hard. I lamented not having a camera for
our little adventure. The skies were
blue, with low hanging grey clouds moving in with the weather front. Snow clung to the spruce and hardwood trees
and to the ground, creating a white carpet rolled out between the tree
cover. Early dusk lighting cast
beautifully over the mountains in the distance.
I just love what trees bare of leaves look like in that light. My two companions, far ahead of me at the
peak of the hill looking into the distance really would have made for quite the
photo, but some things, I reckon, are meant to be held only in the mind and
described only with words. Such was this
experience.
While my legs are grieving my pursuits yesterday, I’m eager
for some more adventures. Perhaps with
some moving and still pictures to tell more of the story next time. We will see.
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