Oldest 2016 Sonot Kkaazoot 50 km finisher

If you thought trail conditions were a little challenging on Saturday, here’s a finish line photo of Alan Delamere, the oldest finisher of the 50 km Sonot Kkaazoot and woodel winner for the men’s M10 age category (80 and over).

Alan edged out Dermot Cole, 18 years younger and not wearing a lycra speed suit. The Delamere family in the 2016 Sonot Kkaazoot included Alan, son Peter (top skier in Men’s M4 category for the 50 km), and granddaughter Hannah (top skier in U12 girls in the 20 km event).

As Sharon Baker (who co-founded and organized the Sonot Kkaazoot for many years with her husband, Bad Bob) said at the Sonot Kkaazoot awards ceremony, Alan is our role model and why we HAVE to keep skiing the 50 km Sonot Kkaazoot.

Congratulations, Alan!

Dermot & Alan at Sonot 50 finish

Dermot Cole (left) and Alan Delamere (right) finishing the 50 km Sonot —photo by Susie Frei

Kudos to out-of-town youth ski teams

The 2016 Sonot Kkaazoot ski conditions required ski experiences that most local skiers haven’t had.

The soft slushy snow conditions are more common to the Anchorage bowl area so the skiers from Dimond and West Anchorage High Schools that Kyle Whisenhant brought to the Sonot Kkaazoot had an advantage there.

Here  is a team shot taken by Kyle of his team on the Cushman Street bridge:Dimond High team at Sonot Start

Jon Korta, ski coach (and mayor) of Galena, has some first hand experience dealing with flooding when his Yukon River community was inundated during a rapid break-up in spring 2013. He brought a large team from Galena, who skied through water as well as over snow.

Galena team at 2016 Sonot_sm

photo by Dan Johnson

Thank you for coming to Fairbanks and to the 2016 Sonot Kkaazoot. We hope that you will return for our 30th annual Sonot Kkaazoot in 2017.

SCUM also rises on Easter Sunday

Easter Sunday for the Sonot Kkaazoot organizers felt like a resurrection after we watched winter melt away during our event Saturday that from start to finish took barely 6 hours. Seeing as none of us wanted to ski out onto the Chena River today, we decided to examine the largest south facing slope whose melting snow helped feed the river flow as yesterday unfolded. The Sonot Connector is south facing and by mid afternoon it was a combination of deep slush and bare ground. This morning, it was icy and the trail rattled beneath our skis. Don missed one of the curves and face planted a foot shy of a tree:

Close-up on Don after head first fall on Sonot Connector

Don was fine and we progressed downhill to where the Sonot Connector joins the Fort Wainwright alpine hill. A slush pond had formed there and Poles (the Eddie Haskell of the SCUM) tried to splash those of us nearby and ended up cooling off in the slush pond.

Poles down on Easter off Sonot Connector

Notice how no one is offering to assist him. However, demonstrating the flexibility of his bionic knees, Bill rises:

Poles demonstrating flexion in his bionic knees

and joins us for a group photo:

Up and ready to head up alpine hill

and a trek up the alpine hill (the way the Sonot Kkaazoot used to go).

SCUM rises

Happy Easter! I hope that you got a solid chocolate Easter bunny in your basket after your great efforts yesterday.

 

Please send us any photos of the Sonot Kkaazoot you’d like to share.

contact@sonotkkaazoot.org

Media reports on the 2016 Sonot Kkaazoot

Stories with photographs from Fairbanks Daily News-Miner:

http://www.newsminer.com/sports/local_community/rebecca-konieczny-joins-elite-company-with-third-k-sonot-kkaazoot/article_e627d160-f3f3-11e5-ab72-675ce17abb1c.html

http://www.newsminer.com/sports/local_community/uaf-s-seiji-takagi-captures-sonot-kkaazoot-k-title/article_2bc3b20e-f3f2-11e5-ae3f-3fcee415085e.html

 

Chena River breaks up during 2016 Sonot Kkaazoot

Having completed all 29 of the 50 km Sonot Kkaazoot events to date, the 2016 one was definitely the most exciting. It had a little of everything including a break-up of the Chena River during the event.

Sonot detour

Sonot skiers on detour after Chena River breaks up on trail. Photo by Stella Wisner

Huge thanks to David Frey, nordic ski coach at Tanana Middle School who alerted Sonot Kkaazoot officials of the major disruption of the Sonot Kkaazoot trail on the river and provided standby guides around the hazardous area until Sonot volunteers could set up an alternative course.

Congratulations to all 285 skiers who finished the event that they entered! You’ve  finished one of the harder ones that Mother Nature has given us.

Huge kudos to our groomers and volunteers who made for a safe 2016 Sonot Kkaazoot.

Unofficial results are posted on the results page. Let me know if you see any problems.

contact@sonotkkaazoot.org

Also, if anyone has a photograph of the course break-up, please share it with us.

 

Drilling team says Sonot start is safe

This morning, Doyon, Ltd, had a drilling team out on the Chena River in the vicinity of the Sonot Kkaazoot start determining ice thickness. The thinnest ice found was 8″ in one spot. Most was a 12″ – 18″ thick. They checked for several hundred meters from bridge and into the curve.

Groomers found that yesterday’s melting left a crusty surface this morning. They were able to chew it up into skiable icy snow. Again, the plan is to groom Birch Hill, the Sonot Connector, and the Fort Wainwright trails late tonight with the piston bully. Saturday morning, they will drag and set tracks on the Chena River.

Check this website before you leave for the start tomorrow morning. At 4:30 p.m. Friday,  conditions look great for the traditional start on the Chena River. However, if we have to move the start, we will post a notice on this website, and will start all events 30 minutes later than currently scheduled at Birch Hill Recreation Area.

Mother Nature holds all the cards, and Sonot Kkaazoot organizers obey.

 

Updates on trail grooming Thursday

While some of the Sonot organizers were buried with late registration and bib pick-up, the groomers were busy working on the trails. Here’s the Thursday update from Bill Husby:

“Today Tom took the ginzu down to the river and leveled the bumps between the RR bridge and FWW bridge. He also got above the RR bridge. We also added some snow by  electrical box along the road. As of now that 200 meter section is beautiful corduroy with no vehicle ruts. There are piles of snow by the crossing areas ready to be shoved onto the road with the piston bully (PB) on Saturday morning making for little or no shoveling for the crossing staff.

Ken and I will be grooming the river tomorrow morning. Expect an update with pristine photos😎. Tom will start grooming all the BH trails with the PB tomorrow evening. He will also PB the Sonot Connector, road and down to the river. Around 0700 he and Ken will drag and set tracks on the river and wherever else they are needed. This should prove the best 50K course in the state of Alaska this year.”

So that’s the most recent report. The Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks are working hard to make the 2016 Sonot Kkaazoot special for all skiers.

One final note: Sonot Kkaazoot volunteers will be drilling the ice on the Chena River to make sure that the ice will safely support skiers and run all our equipment on Saturday.

A HUGE THANK YOU to all our wonderful volunteers who have come together to pull off the 29th annual Sonot Kkaazoot, and our awesome groomers who have allowed us Fairbanks skiers to continue skiing through our winter drought.

 

Sonot Kkaazoot entries as of 7:30 a.m.

With early bib pick-up scheduled for tonight at the Doyon, Ltd. Building from 5 to 7 p.m., we already have 280 skiers signed up for the various events on Saturday. While 75% of the entries are skiers in the Fairbanks North Star Borough, 69 out-of-town skiers are currently planning to fly or drive to Fairbanks to participate. High school skiers from Galena, Nenana, and Anchorage’s Dimond High School will be at the start line on Saturday morning. Fifty eight percent of the skiers plan to ski in the 20 km event with 118 skiers currently signed up to ski the 40 or 50 km course.

Check to see that your entry has been recorded correctly.

https://sonotkkaazoot.org/entries-2/

We still have one skier who indicated that he was born in 2016, and hasn’t responded to our email query.

Thank you to all our foreign skiers in the 40 and 50 km events who have contacted us and provided their passport numbers as requested by our Fort Wainwright collaborators.

Let’s keep our fingers crossed that the course remains intact for three more days.