Elizabeth Allman’s private virtual Sonot

Liz's private Sonot

Elizabeth’s private virtual Sonot route

Elizabeth writes:

Years ago, when I first lived alone after a seeming eternity of
sharing a room with my sister and then apartment sharing with friends
once I left home, I watched the movie “The Thing called Love.”  It
stars, among others, River Phoenix and is essentially a coming-of-age
and love story about a young woman moving to Nashville to try her hand
at song-writing.  For whatever reason, I got this movie confused
with “My Own Private Idaho” which also stars River Phoenix, maybe
because of the BoDeans song of the same name, or maybe because
I was so impressed by River Phoenix’s acting that I watched numerous
movies in which he acted during that time.

Regardless of the title, “My Own Private Idaho” (in truth, “The Thing
called Love”) resonated deeply with me.  Newly single and with seeming
endless freedom, I spent many hours listening to music.  Loud music.
Often late at night.  It was the time of “Car Wheels on a Gravel
Road”, “Hell among the Yearlings”, “Revival”, and “Spyboy.”  I dreamed
of going to Nashville and the Bluebird Cafe, or drinking Mad Dog
margaritas at the Chili Parlor bar in Austin.

Since that time, so emotionally vivid even at this distance, I’ve
secretly reserved the title “My own private ________” for a number of
things that I really wanted to do and that, either because of family
commitments or work responsibilities or something else, I couldn’t do
officially.  I reserve this terminology for things that I feel deeply
about, to cherish and honor my memory of that time being single with
lots of loud music and popcorn for dinner.  This year it’s time for
“My own private Sonot.”

I’ve tried multiple times to get to Birch Hill, both on my own and
with a friend, but with sick colleagues in my building at work and
the reality that I am one of two working parents that have recently
become home schoolers, it is just not going to be possible this year.

Instead, for “My own private Sonot” I am skiing from my house,
literally, on roads until I can make it to the trails in the
Goldstream.  The neighborhood roads have not been plowed,
conveniently, and even better no gravel has been laid down.  The 20 k
has been done in installments of roughly 5k at a time, and I have one
more installment to do.  Hopefully, this evening before the next snow
dump.  The first installment was probably the best, with dog walkers
asking me if I were on rock skis and the adrenalin rush from an
adolescent moose on the air strip adjacent to the trails.

This hasn’t been a good year for me in terms of distance skiing, other
responsibilities had to take priority this winter, and it’s as if a
bit of my soul went missing.  (It’s recoverable.)  There is little I
like better than skiing in the Fairbanks area on fresh corduroy or in
the trees.

Thank you to BBB and others, and to all you who have posted your
“Virtual Sonot” results.  They have cheered me tremendously in this
troubled time and, though I am jealous, the vicarious pleasures your
posts and photos have given and continue to give is invaluable.

Distance: 17 k and only 3 to go.  Should be easily doable by 3/28.

Stay healthy.

previous Liz sonot


Finish line of an earlier Sonot with dear friend Kristin

Chris Broda leads gang of six on traditional virtual 20 km ski

Chris Broda, who leads the LOL (Ladies of Leisure) ski training group, like her husband, Byron, jumped into the virtual Sonot Kkaazoot before the traditional route was deemed unsafe. Not only that, she was joined by others. The half dozen skiers plus Chris, who except for this one uphill, were safely 6 feet apart.

Broda Gillis & Underwood gang at 20 km turnaround

Broda photo 2

Chris writes:  This was taken the day before the river was declared unsafe. A group of us are heading off the river to ski the loop before heading back. We put in at Pro Music so we are just short of 20K.

Virtual Sonot organizers ruled that these seven skiers had finished the virtual traditional 20 km Sonot Kkaazoot noting that in 1993 and 1994, the Sonot Kkaazoot started at the Steese Highway Bridge instead the Cushman Street one. So these skiers add 140 km to our virtual Sonot Kkaazoot running total.

Congratulations to Johnna Underwood, Jon Underwood, Callie Underwood, David Underwood, Karin Gillis, Nancy Hanneman, and Chris Broda.

Max, Steve, Owen, & Erik ski virtual 20+ km

Eric & pals

Left to right: Erik, Max, Owen, and Steve

From Erik:

Another virtual race report: Max Kaufman, Owen W Hanley, Steve Taylor, and I skied a virtual Sonot 20 k+ at Birch Hill yesterday. Max, Owen, and I skied 26.6 k in 1 hour 59 min. Steve joined us midway and skied about 20 k, and Owen tacked on some extra k afterwards for good measure. We enjoyed the great conditions, and it was good to see a lot of other people out skiing.

Laura and Sven Grage ski virtual 40 and 50 km Sonot, respectively

Laura writes:

Laura's_Sonot copy

Above is Laura’s Sonot. I did the 40 (25 miles). Route was relay start, White Bear, MMs, Warm Up, North 40, little gatorade break, Full House to Sunny Side, all the way down through 6 inches of crusted powder, then very slowly up the powder on the Connector, White Bear again, little gatorade break, Blue, Half House, Tower, Roller Coaster with Medivac, Warm Up, then a few laps in the stadium to wrap it up.
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Sven's_Sonot copy
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Above is Sven’s course. He skied with me and then added on 10 km more to get his 50 done. He went out the White Bear after we split up and returned at Coronary Bypass, added the MMs again, Tower, then half of the Warm Up.
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It was a great ski, much cooler today, but the snow was still warm and fast. It was pretty windy and gusty, so we could not have worn less clothes, but it sure was nice to not be dripping with sweat. Trails were great. We were going for nice, long ski pace.
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We are thinking we might go for another Sonot next weekend. Perhaps the cooler temps later this week *could* favor a traditional Sonot 50 route with the river firming up???
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Take care and thank you for organizing this; it was a great way to feel the nordic community, but stay “socially distant”,

Mark Billingsley skis virtual 40 km classic

Mark writes:

I did the 40k on Saturday.  (Maybe a little more than 40?)
Classic style
Mark Billingsley
Time: ?? Didn’t really keep track.  A little over 5 hours.
Notes: North 40, Black Hole, Competition, Blue, Outhouse, Relay, rest, White Bear Access, White Bear, rest.  Repeat.
Thanks!
Bummed it was cancelled.  I was looking forward to my first time doing the 40k classic.

Donovan Granger skis virtual 40 km

In Donovan’s words:

It took two installments with a geezer feed/rest break in between, but I remained vertical and ambulatory post ski, long enough to make it home to the sauna…Had moral support and company from Patrick Druckenmiller.

Granger AM

Started out with plans to do the tour-de-birch, but ended up doing a shortened version of the Black loops, and passed on Moilanen Meadows entirely. Otherwise had a pleasant tour of sunnyside, with two laps of the blue, outhouse and  the lighted loops.

Granger PM

 

Thanks to the groomers for keeping everything skiable!

Congratulations, Donovan! You didn’t miss the start of this virtual 40 km Sonot.

Joanna Fox skis virtual 20 km using both techniques

Joanna Fox completed her virtual 20 km Sonot Kkaaoot in two segments: 10 km skating on Saturday and 10 km classical skiing on Sunday with Norma Haubenstock (who skied twice on Sunday).

Here’s Joanna’s skate 10 km from Saturday in the snowstorm:

Joanna's skate 10 km

See: https://sonotkkaazoot.org/2020/03/22/fairbanks-master-swimmers-ski-virtual-50-km-in-snowstorm/ for photos and comment on Saturday’s ski.

Here’s Joanna’s Sunday stat’s and route when trails were breezy but nicely groomed:

Joanna's classical 10 km

And here is the happy duo on Sunday afternoon:

Joanna & Norma on the classical 10 km

Joanna wrote: I had a lot of fun in the tracks today (they were fast, but I wasn’t feeling too timid due to the practice we got when it was so much colder). I also continued to work on my step-turning around corners. In all, it was a wonderful ski, and a nice way to finish my 20 km Virtual Sonot effort. Depending on what the rest of this week brings, maybe I can even get up to 40 or 50 before Bad Bob shuts it down.

 

The O’Brien Woollers crush the Sonot 20 km

From Diane O’Brien:

We headed out around 10:30 am on Sunday for our Virtual Sonot in two parties, Mom (Diane O’Brien) with Owen Wooller (age 12) and Dad (Mat Wooller) with Phoebe Wooller (age 10).  Owen was determined to ski 20 km, sister Phoebe was less so, so we split up to enable different end times and routes.

All 4 started out on White Bear.  We gloried in the fresh corduroy on White Bear access and quickly discovered that White Bear was less pristine – a little snowy and stick-y but still eminently skiable.  Owen and Mom had pulled ahead by SCUM corner and thought that was the last they’d see of Dad and Phoebe.  Not so!  They caught us while we were feasting on Girl Scout cookies at the top of Heart Rate Hill (see below), and again while we were feasting and congratulating ourselves at the end of White Bear.
Mat,Owen&Phoebe_sm

Owen, Mat, and Phoebe Wooller

After White Bear, Owen and Mom skied: Tower, Outhouse, Relay, Blue, Warmup, and Rollercoaster/Medevac twice.  Stats and map are below. Their final distance was 12.74 miles.
Diane&Owen_Sonot-stats_sm

Stats for Diane and Owen

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Diane’s and Owen’s route

We periodically crossed paths with Team Dad/Phoebe and discovered they were in it to win it, the whole 20 km.   After White Bear, their route included: Tower, Blue, a lap or two around the Stadium, and 6 laps of Roller coaster/Medevac.  No GPS evidence but they’re generally truthful people.  (The Sonot blogger will attest to seeing Mat and Phoebe quickly pulling away from Norma and me)
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Owen and Mom made it back to the car ~ 15 minutes before Dad and Phoebe, who had taken a warm-up and snack break in the minivan after White Bear.  Phoebe, at < 60 lbs and the least confident of her ability to ski 20 km, probably looked the freshest of all of us.  All had a blast.
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Thanks for organizing this great event and thanks for the fantabulous grooming!

Celebrating the groomers during the virtual Sonot Kkaazoot

4 HOURS OF GROOMING AT 20 BELOW sm

Tom Helmers, head NSCF groomer after working 4 hrs at -20 deg F

Although so far, skiers have devoted from one hour to the better part of a day to their virtual Sonot Kkaazoot skis, the groomers have also been working. In the five days since the virtual Sonot Kkaazoot started, the Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks (NSCF) groomers have spent 12.5 hours working on the trails. (Updated 3/24/20: 15 hours were spent grooming last night and today)

Bad Bob Baker, who uses his personal grooming equipment, has spent 32 hours grooming the Chena River, and an additional 10 hours checking out the river conditions and hauling equipment back and forth to accomplish his grooming.

Bad Bob grooming turnaround sm

Bad Bob grooming the 20 km turnaround

This season, Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks groomers have put 840 km on the piston bully and 1,300 km on the five snowmachines used for grooming. This is effort that allows skiers to train so that they are physically able to ski the Virtual Sonot Kkaazoot. As of 12 March, groomers had logged 832 hours of effort. They often do grooming chores during their own skiing time.

BILL HUSBY DRAGING THE WHITE BEAR sm

Bill Husby grooming the White Bear trail

The condition of the groomed trails that we are skiing on now depends upon grooming all winter in addition to brushing and maintenance work done over the non-snow months.

Bill Husby and Ken Coe doing trail maintenance

Bill Husby & Ken Coe doing pre-winter trail work—photo by Tom Helmers

Ski trails aren’t maintained by the borough, they are maintained with funds from Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks donations and sponsorships. If you haven’t already done so, please donate to the NSCF trail fund so we can continue to ski this spring:

https://nordicskicluboffairbanks.wildapricot.org/Donate/

Snow that makes everyone a champion

Trails groomed so that everyone can ski like a champion.

Thank you.

Most photos of NSCF groomers were taken by Eric Troyer, SCUM in charge of Sonot Kkaazoot media and NSCF board member, who is touring and Facebook coordinator. He is also the best-dressed SCUM at races.