
Joanna writes:
Here’s a short video clip for Joanna’s ski today:
.
And here are the routes, times and temperatures for her 4 installments:




.Looks like Joanna will be ready to take on the 50 km Sonot Kkaazoot in 2021.

Joanna writes:
Here’s a short video clip for Joanna’s ski today:
.
And here are the routes, times and temperatures for her 4 installments:




.Looks like Joanna will be ready to take on the 50 km Sonot Kkaazoot in 2021.
Forest Wagner, UAS faculty member, who is working remotely from his father’s house in Fairbanks writes:
Although I didn’t document myself through GPS or photos, I did participate in the virtual Sonot today. Starting at 10 a.m. (4 deg. F) I skate skied the black loops (cold), then everything near and including the outhouse (cold, windy, but sunny), including the sunnyside loop, not recommended but sunny!, then the tower and coasters down through the White Bear, including Moilanen Meadows, and concluding with the Warm Up. Finished my ski at 1:02 p.m. (11 deg. F) right as the glide was getting good!
I imagined I would ski the White Bear a couple more times, but decided to call it complete as described. I skied everything that was groomed, or groomed recently, and had a great outing. Although I signed up for the 50, I suppose what I skied is probably more 20-25ish. Thanks for all of the effort getting and keeping the trails in shape and for the good vibes in this challenging time.
Best, and hats off to all of you,
Thanks, Forest.
Forest is also working on an interdisciplinary Ph.D. in Arctic & Northern Studies focusing on endurance sports. He writes:
I am running a survey about what motivates winter marathoners and ultra participants. I am particularly interested in the perceived psychological effects of climate change on winter people, like how we feel in winter when it is lacking in cold or snow– not a problem this year, thankfully. The project is non-commercial research approved by the UAF Institutional Review Board.
Forest is one of my fellow classmates in our grad Images of the North class and his father was a former SCUM, so I attest to the legitimacy of his survey.
A informational flier with a link to the 5-minute survey is below. Download the PDF version to get a direct URL to the survey.

As the virtual Sonot Kkaazoot draws to a close, let’s review the time spent by the Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks groomers in keeping up the the record snowfall and gusty winds. During the 10 day virtual Sonot Kkaazoot, our NSCF groomers put in 44.5 hours. Between just Thursday and today, they put 123 km on their equipment. Hey, that’s more km than even Bad Bob and Sharon Baker or Bill Husby skied.
Please remember that the Iron Ranger (on a post as you enter the Birch Hill stadium) is always hungry for cash or check donations. No amount is too small.
Enjoy the sunshine and beautiful ski trails that you share with moose and other critters. Yield right of way to the moose, they’re struggling these days, too.
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Carl Hemming, who had already skied a virtual 40 km Sonot, has moved up to the 60 km Sonot (or to the 50 km Sonot with 10 km toward his next 20 km? ) with this latest installment:
https://sonotkkaazoot.org/2020/03/22/carl-hemming-skis-virtual-40-km-in-2-installments/
Carl writes:
This was my first attempt to transfer electronic workout information from my android phone. It was yesterday, on classic skis I went 20 km in 2 hrs 40 min. The course was the same as on Thursday but out to 6 km on the White Bear and up the ramp and down through the RC bypass to make 20 km. (hmm, . . we seem to be missing the Thursday ski report and route).
Unfortunately Thumper sent the email to himself but did send this route to me:

so I was able to query him for the rest of the information.
Carl’s virtual Sonot Kkaazoot is very much like his first Sonot Kkaazoot as primordial SCUM (25 years ago) when he skied the Chena River with skate skis and the hilly terrain with classical skis. Thumper has always been a practical SCUM.
Robert writes:
Registered with cash bib 9999. I will drop another $80 or $100 in the Iron Ranger box to cover it. Hope the other $50s I have been putting in the box made it to the club.
The route for the my Virtual Radioactive Free Of All Style Whatsoever 20 k (I hope) Sonot Kkaazoot done with skate gear
Completed March 27, 2020 at 9:30pm ADT in a blistering 3 hours and 39 minutes give or take a few seconds (timed on my phone)
Start: at Warm Up Cabin. Hard right at end of stadium to short downhill portion of Competition Loop. North Forty. Missed turn to the very bottom of the North Forty. Skied across to the corner where the cutoff to the Black Hole is located.
Encounter moose. Turned around on same part of trail. Crashed head first into snow bank when I turned to check on moose and caught a rut. Found entrance to lowest part of North Forty. Completed North forty after passing moose who had moved to the ungroomed cutoff to the Black Hole.
Black Hole. Competition Loop up to top and back to Stadium. Main ramp up to Blue Loop. Outhouse loop all the way to bottom. Sunnyside to Section Line crossover (marked 900 meters to Outhouse). Completed Outhouse. Relay Start Loop to corner marked Tower Direct 2.3 K. Tower. Medivac Rollercoaster. White Bear Access. White Bear to Hilltop Cutoff (formerly 4.2 K Cutoff). White Bear Access. Stadium to around behind main building at the top of Warm Up (did not do Warm Up Loop). Under Skyway. Finish: at Warm Up Cabin.
Thanks to all for all your hard work.
Thank you, Robert, for all your trail and Sonot contributions. Your low tech route description is the most detailed one we’ve received. The Birch Hill moose seem to be the only critters out there moving slower than those of us who are normally at the back of the Sonot Kkaazoot pack.
This week’s snow had the Sonot Kkaazoot blogger sidelined with snow removal and berm relocation at her house. Living below Birch Hill, the snow was very wet and heavy. On Thursday, although my shoulders and core were quite sore, I skated the blue, relay, white cub and white bear for 12 km with just the piston bully and overtaking skiers for company.

Today I recruited some fellow skiers to help motivate me through the last 8 km that I needed for my virtual 50 km Sonot. I was just missing the incoming portion of the Outhouse Loop and all the Black loops. Since it was zero deg F when we headed out with a 8 mph wind, we decided to do the Outhouse loop first since it gets more sun. However, when we got to the intersection with the Sunnyside Trail, we couldn’t resist getting a view of town and beyond. So we skied Sunnyside enjoying the bright blue skies and glittering snow.

Joanna Fox was so far ahead of Bernardo Hernandez and me on the Sunnyside, I was unable to take any group photos.
We took the relay return and headed for the Black loops so that I could finish my Sonot Kkaazoot grand tour. Once again Joanna was in the lead, however, she hasn’t skied the traditional 50 km Sonot Kkaazoot so she wandered off skiing portions of the N40 repeatedly while Bernardo and I skied leisurely along the Sonot course. Meanwhile, unknown to the three of us, Bill Husby had missed us at the start so he’d been doing loops of the Blacks, too, trying to catch us.
Eventually, we were all reunited near the end of the N40 loop:

With Bill and Joanna together, the pace got more frenzied, so I used the former luge run downhill on the Black Cross as an opportunity to catch up. Bill and Joanna were waiting for us at the bottom. Bill suggested that I make a snow angel in the untouched snow on the Black Funk loop. The result is what I call the “snow flounder on the Black Funk” because snow angels don’t work well with classical skis and poles. However, thanks to 8 years of PT with Denise Jerome, I was able to get up without taking off my skis.

We finished the rest of the Black Loops with Bill doing a little grooming with his skis.(https://sonotkkaazoot.org/2020/03/27/what-a-trail-groomer-does-in-his-spare-time/).
The motley crew finished the black loops (and my virtual 50 Sonot Kkaazoot) just about in time for lunch.
Here’s hoping that your virtual Sonot Kkaazoot is as much fun as my four installments were. Stories and photos are more important than times for the Sonot blog, but Eric Troyer is compiling times on the Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks website so here are the first two installments of my virtual 50 km Sonot.
Installments 2 and 1 respectively:
https://sonotkkaazoot.org/2020/03/22/norma-and-susan-add-10-more-km-to-their-virtual-sonot-kkaazoot/
https://sonotkkaazoot.org/2020/03/22/fairbanks-master-swimmers-ski-virtual-50-km-in-snowstorm/

Last two photos by Joanna Fox
To summarize my virtual Sonot Kkaazoot math rounded to 1 significant digit:
Saturday 20 km + Sunday 10 km + Thursday 12 km +Friday 12 km = 50 km
My total elapsed time isn’t as important as the stack of student proposals I need to review and the lit crit reading assignment I need to finish. I will trust whatever Eric Troyer reports.
Please send your virtual Sonot Kkaazoot stories, times, and routes to contact@sonotkkaazoot.org
Don’t worry if you’re too exhausted and seized up on Sunday and can’t submit your report until Monday or Tuesday. Please get it to us by 11:59 pm. ADT on 31 March 2020.
I’ll post your stories and Eric will tally the times and distances.
Warning: Your report may be an April Fool’s joke if we don’t get it by the end of March.
Ever wonder what a Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks trail groomer does in his spare time? He skis, of course. But if there’s a trail not groomed, Bill Husby will remedy that situation with his skis.

Poles reconsidering skiing in the Tommy Knocker—photo by Joanna Fox
Thanks to Joanna Fox who took this video, and to Bill, Bernardo Hernandez, and Joanna, who helped make the last installment of my virtual 50 km Sonot Kkaazoot, a truly memorable day.
As you can see, most of the Black Loop trails were in absolutely awesome condition.
Enjoy the penultimate day of the Virtual Sonot Kkaazoot. The event ends Saturday, 28 March 2020.

Brandy writes:
This will have to do. I got home and realized 20 k was 12.42 miles not 12.20. (No problem –you’re within rounding errors). I was able to ski the 20 k portion of the river early March. I really appreciated the grooming that day! Thank you Bob!
Dr. Corrine Leistikow normally takes on ski and bicycle challenges that are hundreds of miles and longer. However, during the COVID-19 pandemic, as a family practice physician, she’s preoccupied with keeping the rest of us well. However, she did a leisurely 20 km virtual Sonot:

She writes:
Half with Barb. Decided to at least do the 20K Sonot. Might try to do 50K on Saturday but will need to see what happens at work. Glad to get out a little early today.


Thank you, Corrine. These doctors are heeding their own advice of getting exercise while maintaining social distancing.


Well, the Denali State Bank Sonot Kkaazoot may be virtual this year, but skier/artist Mark Ross has made some real Sonot Kkaazoot posters! They are available in the Warming Hut at Birch Hill Recreation Area. They are 17″ x 24″ and come in orange or black. The cost is a donation to the Birch Hill Trail Fund of any amount. Honor system.
Click on the link below to go to the club’s Birch Hill Trail Fund page. Recommended donation amounts are listed there. If that link doesn’t work then go to the NSCF website (www.nscfairbanks.org) and click on Support NSCF > Birch Hill Trail Fund
https://nordicskicluboffairbanks.wildapricot.org/Donate/
You can also put money or a check in the Iron Ranger at the bottom of the stairs to the Stadium at Birch Hill.
Thank you, Mark!