The Alberta XCD thread
Re: The Alberta XCD thread
All the skis are now rock skis. Skiing is alright though. Got some decent turns on the High Noon Hills practice slopes yesterday evening. That place is unreal in the late day sun
- Inspiredcapers
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Re: The Alberta XCD thread
Thats some nice country. Is that road cleared all the way to Blue Rock during the winter?
Re: The Alberta XCD thread
The road us closed at the turnoff to Sandy McNabb campground, you can tour in from there to a few nearby trailheads. Imo the best skiing around that area is in the immediate vicinity of Sandy McNabb and the Nordic center. Awesome meadows off the ridges if you get a half decent snowpack
- fisheater
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Re: The Alberta XCD thread
See what happens if you use red klister
- Inspiredcapers
- Posts: 315
- Joined: Wed Oct 31, 2018 4:11 pm
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- Occupation: Heavy Equipment Operator
Re: The Alberta XCD thread
Skiing is a challenge in this part of the country this year. We had -50 w/windchill this morning. The extended forecast is indicating +2 and rain in 7 days. I might have to add a pair of scaled skis to the arsenal, figuring out wax has been a P.I.T.A.
Re: The Alberta XCD thread
Skiing out in the horse pasture today doing low angle laps in pow on junk, I found I really only got glide on a ski with no wax and no pattern. Even ascending was fine with no wax whatsoever. Had polar wax on these tua wilderness (scraped as much as possible off) and they were slower than the Cho Oyu with no wax.
The fishscale guides did have advantages when doing nordic stride turns with a little kick off.
Can anyone recommend a glide wax that will be optimized for -35 to 45 degrees Celsius?
The fishscale guides did have advantages when doing nordic stride turns with a little kick off.
Can anyone recommend a glide wax that will be optimized for -35 to 45 degrees Celsius?
- Capercaillie
- Posts: 209
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Re: The Alberta XCD thread
So you are saying you had Swix PS Polar glide wax, and that it had less glide than an unwaxed ski at those temperatures? That makes sense. If it is about hardness (in the Shore scale sense) at those temperatures, the polyethylene base would be harder. I wonder if an ABS base ski would be even better (no downsides to ABS here since you don't need wax absorption or mitigating surface tension).Lhartley wrote: ↑Sat Jan 13, 2024 5:24 pmSkiing out in the horse pasture today doing low angle laps in pow on junk, I found I really only got glide on a ski with no wax and no pattern. Even ascending was fine with no wax whatsoever. Had polar wax on these tua wilderness (scraped as much as possible off) and they were slower than the Cho Oyu with no wax.
Re: The Alberta XCD thread
No glide, just polar grip wax from previous use. It was pretty thoroughly scraped.
Was out again yesterday in warmer Temps and a bit of fresh snow, no more sticking issues. Nice conditions in foothills County tight now. Just my luck that I have a coolant leak and am dealing with cars instead of hitting the hills
Was out again yesterday in warmer Temps and a bit of fresh snow, no more sticking issues. Nice conditions in foothills County tight now. Just my luck that I have a coolant leak and am dealing with cars instead of hitting the hills
- Capercaillie
- Posts: 209
- Joined: Sat Nov 26, 2022 1:35 pm
- Location: western Canada
- Ski style: trying not to fall too much
- Favorite Skis: Alpina 1500T, Kazama Telemark Comp
- Favorite boots: Alfa Horizon, Crispi Nordland, Scarpa T4
Re: The Alberta XCD thread
Yeah, Swix V05 Polar kick wax is good maybe down to -27°C; at -30°C it is too sticky. Lowangle Al recommended using straight pine tar. I tried Rex Universal Tar kick wax, that worked much better past -30°C:
https://telemarktalk.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=5370
Ski construction seems to make a really big difference when it comes to glide at low temperatures. Fischer TN66 is the best ski I have for temperatures below -25°C. Expedition skis like Åsnes Amundsen and Ousland probably work better too.
I have yet to figure out glide wax.