Scooter 2014 Debut

My dogs are blessed with tough feet; still, I don’t normally like to start them out on pavement first thing in the spring. But the dirt trails are stubbornly refusing to ice out and today I just couldn’t stand it anymore and I don’t think they could either given that it’s now April 6th.

We didn’t go very far and we didn’t go very fast, and we took several breaks. After a shaky start I was pleased with how well they did considering they haven’t been in front of the scooter in months and it’s been weeks since we’ve been skiing. And I’ve just been letting them enjoy their “sniff walks” after a good skijor season without working too much on commands.

These lovely dogs are waiting nicely (if impatiently, in Squash’s case) to get going:
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Jolly Maisy… she does love her scooter.
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Some nice teamwork…
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And a little distraction… always grateful for the help of my Enforcer
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Another nice line out, after a break.
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Happy dogs after a run
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I was trying to get some nice pictures of us all at the end and they just wanted smooches.
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I’m going to try to record all our mileage this dryland season so I can look back and see how far we traveled all told.

Sunday, April 6th: 1 mile

Posted in Scootering, Training Diary | 1 Comment

Say Goodnight, Skis

Earlier this week it snowed a couple of inches. At first it felt like a bit of a slap in the face from Mother Nature; things were starting to thaw around here and I was just recovering from the emotionally jarring and unsatisfyingly abrupt end to our skijoring season, looking ahead to (and forward to) busting out the scooter.

I got up a couple of days later preparing to take the dogs for a morning cani-hike, but couldn’t stop eyeing the persistent thin snow cover in the backyard. It’s not out of the realm of possibility that this stuff is skiable, I thought. It wouldn’t hurt to just put the skis in the car, right? I thought. Well you can probably see where this went. I did end up going skijoring one last time cap off the season. It was wonderful and terrible, a little bit forced and maybe not the best decision I’ve ever made, but it definitely put a more satisfying end on the season.

The weather was absolutely beautiful, and we had a good time. When we arrived, it was early enough that the snow was actually in very good shape and we saw a few other die-hard skiers heading out. But over the course of the next 30-45 minutes things warmed up enough to turn the snow into a sticky mess of uber-friction. Sure, it was a good workout… in the way that a forced march is a good workout. By the end were all so exhausted and punchy that I was more than ready to admit it was time to leave skijoring behind for the season.

I admit I wasn’t very strict about staying on task because we were all SO tired, but I have to say aside from some occasional trailside distractibility on both their parts my MPs held it together well. They had this nice LINE OUT, which I am happy with.

And they did great here. The ends of that bridge might as well be made of dog pee, but despite being almost at the end and being very tired, they made me proud here by going right on by both ends (you can see how I even grab the line as we come over the far end in anticipation of shenanigans).

In other news, around the house we are keeping busy during this mushing limbo doing some trick training. These backwards leg weaves are challenging and a little bit out of my comfort zone, so it’s a good exercise for both of us. I’m not quite sure how I’m going to put these two pieces together to achieve what I would like to ultimately be a backwards figure eight, but I’m very proud of my polar bear for this:

We’ve been in the thaw-refreeze cycle now for a few days and the whole world is covered in ice and/or crusty hard snow. We won’t make it up north this spring until well after the lakes ice-out, so this was well and truly our last hurrah of the 2013-2014 skijor season. But I’m ok with that now, and pining for snow-free (I’ll settle for snow-freeish) trails for the scooter. Say goodnight, skis, we’ll see you next year.

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What I Like Wednesday: Microspikes

I’m just slipping in under the Wednesday wire here, but cani-hiking in early spring in Minnesota reminds me of how dangerously icy the world can be. This time of year it tends to warm up to slush-level temperatures during the day, then re-freeze at night. Until all of the snow and slush have completely disappeared, these little suckers are my best friends:

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I much prefer the microspike style to the coiled wire styles such as Yaktrax. The coils are fine for packed snow, but for me they don’t quite cut it on ice when I’m walking the dogs. The brand I have is Kahtoola MICROspikes and I’ve been very happy with them. They are pricey, but I have had mine for at least 5 years and they are still going strong, and as you can see above they even fit on my gigantic, serious Sorel boots (although they fit on an ordinary pair of shoes as well).

By the time I remember to do another WILW, I imagine it will probably be something more spring-themed than this, but for now while I can’t ski and I can’t scooter, I can at least still walk and hike without slipping and falling to my icy doom.

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There is a Season…

It’s been a long, cold winter… but far from lonely. In fact, at times there has been juuuust a little too much polar vortex-induced togetherness for my mental health. Nonetheless, as everyone else seems to be rejoicing at the warmer temperatures starting move into town (with their implication that this winter may at some point come to an end) I’m a little sad to see the beginning of the end of the skijoring season written on the wall.

So now begins the rush to fit in as much skijoring as possible before the snow is gone enough that we can’t ski anymore, when we’ll enter a weird limbo when it’s too icy and muddy to start scootering yet and can pretty much only canicross.

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In other news, thanks to some simple interventions (primarily pain and anti-nausea medications), Julius is still with us. He’s hanging in there longer than we expected based on his diagnosis, and his days are still good days. It’s very bittersweet, but we’re grateful for the extra time with him that his medications are buying us.

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Why do We Fall?

It’s ok to fall.

According to my yoga instructor, anyway, and I think she’s right. Because really, once you take embarrassment out of the equation falling just teaches you how to avoid falling again next time. And since hardly anyone ever dies from falling while cross country skiing, now that I’m too old to be self conscious about looking dumb I find every fall I get up from to be a confidence booster. Once the uncertainty of how bad it could be is replaced by the actual experience of how bad it really wasn’t, it’s easy to feel a little bolder, a little more relaxed, a little less worried, and a little more bad-ass. And just maybe, learn a little something.

We’ve encountered deer on and off this winter, so I’ve taken on more than one exhilarating thrill ride. But until today we had only seen them on the part of the trail that’s a long, straight open shot so all I have to do is hang on and enjoy the ride. And until today, I hadn’t had the GoPro running.

The way this encounter started was quite frankly a little weird. We were on part of the trail that winds through the woods, and once we saw the group of deer in the distance and they saw us, one of them started running towards us right down the middle of the trail. My thought process went something like this:

Whaaat is that deer doing? Charging us?
If that’s a buck in rut WE’RE SCREWED
Wait, no, it’s a doe…
…also, it is March.
WHYYYY OH GOD WHY STAY AWAY FROM MY DOGS OR WE WILL ALL DIE
OOOOHHHHH LORD

And then the deer zagged down a game trail that was between us and its original position, while the rest of the herd more sensibly ran in the opposite direction from the lady and two dogs.

It’s very hard to see, but put this on full screen and right after I say OOOOHHHH LORD you can finally see the deer in the middle of the trail, then see it cut off to the right.

So one thing I’ve learned today is that a thrill ride becomes significantly more challenging when you need to navigate turns in the woods. If your timing isn’t perfect, if you haven’t learned to compensate for being whipped around on the end of a line because so far you’ve been thrill-riding straight down the middle of a perfectly straight trail, if your ski so much as bumps against the edge of the groomed portion of the trail and you haven’t had very much practice adjusting your balance in this circumstance… well, then, you are probably going down. For the most part, I was able to “practice” some pretty nice controlled falls, but this one was a pretty spectacular barrel roll kinda thing:

Watching it now, with the backs of my skis stuck there in the snow while my momentum spun me around pretty hard, I’m not entirely sure how I didn’t break a ski. But I didn’t break anything at all, and the most dangerous part was when I got back up facing the wrong direction with the line pulled under and between my legs and the dogs started pulling me backwards in their zeal to make up the head start I’d just given the deer.

One thing I learned is that under those circumstances, the full length of the line is definitely not my friend until I get better at taking those turns at speed. With the dogs running full out, I was getting whipped pretty far out to the sides, much farther than I was accustomed to because PHYSICS. I wasn’t able to compensate, so I kept bumping up against the sides of the trail. When I choked up on the line, it was far easier to control my turns. You can see in this video, where I squeal, I juuuussstt cleared the turn without bumping my ski. This also gives a fairly good idea how fast they were going.

One thing I was reminded of is that my dogs are really good dogs. The way deer almost always run away from us (charging deer being a bizarre outlier) is parallel to the main trail in the woods until they reach a game trail, at which point they peel off deeper into the woods. Not once through this entire experience did my wonderful Mush Puppies try to cut off the main trail into the woods or follow the deer down the game trails. And for the most part, apart from dragging me backwards that one time, they waited with amazing patience and self-control for me to recover from my multiple falls. So I was really proud of them today.

Another thing I was reminded of is that despite the falls, this stuff is pretty ridiculously fun. Deliriously fun. As we were heading back to the car, we passed a couple on the trail who had obviously seen us skijoring from wherever they had been walking because the gentleman remarked “You were going pretty fast down the middle there!” and in response, I sang (me, among the top 5% most stoic people in a state full of stoic Scandinavians, SANG to a total stranger) “There were DEEEEEEEER out there!” and he laughed and said “Well, it happens!” and then we all laughed together and it didn’t even seem weird that I was singing to and laughing with total strangers about deer.

THAT is what this stuff is. Pure, unabashed joyful delight that usually lasts the rest of the day. And for that, you bet I don’t mind spending some of the time learning how to avoid falling again next time. I don’t mind at all.

Posted in Bloopers, Skijoring | 1 Comment

What I Like Wednesday (Thursday Edition): Ski Spot Run

I’ve been a little remiss in my WILW posts. Usually I remember on a Thursday morning that I meant to do it the day before, so in the future maybe I’ll just pretend that Thursdays are Wednesdays.

Anyway, for today’s WILW I cannot stress enough how much I like the book Ski Spot Run. I have two copies of this book and although it’s been awhile since I cracked it open, I have read and re-read it many times. I probably should re-read it again as every time I do, I come away with a new tip I missed the last time.

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It’s a quick read, and one of the things I love about it is that it is absolutely written for a beginner, but with the assumption that while you may know nothing about skijoring this does not mean you are a moron. There are tips for equipment, training, safety, starting with the dog you already have, choosing a dog specifically for skijoring, and even sections on dryland mushing like canicross, bikejoring, and scootering. The authors share stories of mishaps, bloopers, and Murphy’s Law-isms that simultaneously give you a head’s up on pitfalls to look out for and let you be easy on yourself when mishaps and bloopers happen to YOU.

The training recommendations are clear, simple, positive-based, and there are recommendations for off-ski/off-season training as well as on-ski training for all the commands as well as alternative suggestions if something isn’t working for your dog. The overall character of the book is that you can do this.

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And there is an overall tone as well as a whole chapter devoted to being a good skijoring citizen. WHAT’S NOT TO LOVE?

As a beginner, this book was invaluable to me. Most mushers and skijorers, I’ve found, tend to be supportive and helpful but they’re not always sitting on your coffee table or in your backpack or on the nightstand, and no one answers emails or hangs out on mushing Facebook groups 24/7. Even now that I’m more comfortable and experienced I’m glad to have it on my bookshelf to consult.

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Hail the Victorious Skijorer (and the Premack Principle)

Oh, the power of the Premack Principle (which, by the way, is named after Mr. David Premack and not for a mack that is somehow being preceded). Remember our nemesis, the On By Tree? We have conquered it thusly:

How? The Premack Principle, also called the relativity theory of reinforcement, is defined this way: More probable behaviors reinforce less probable behaviors. More relatably, it means that if an individual wants to do something highly desirable, they will do something less desirable to get to the more desirable thing. Essentially, to get what you want… ignore what you want. In practice, achieving success in going ON BY the On By Tree looks like this:

1. Give the ON BY command as we’re approaching the tree. At the same time, physically prevent the dogs from being able to reach and investigate the On By Tree by choking up on the line and staying on the opposite side of the trail.

2. If the dogs stop and attempt to reach/investigate the On By Tree, continue on our way.

3. If the dogs ignore the On By Tree, upon passing ON BY it give a verbal marker and release cue (in our case, “YES, OKAY!” — and I don’t want to hear about how you’re not supposed to use “OKAY” as a release word) and allow them to investigate the On By Tree.

4. Repeat, repeat, repeat, switching to a variable reward schedule (that is, only mark and release some of the time, not every single time).

5. PROFIT.

To get the On By Tree, they must ignore the On By Tree. So that’s a bright spot around here. Also, the weather has been generally good lately and I’ve been playing with the GoPro as a trailcam:

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And a lot of free play in the yard:

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Over the next few weeks we’ll be working on increasing our distance and conditioning. It hardly seems possible that spring is around the corner, before too long we’ll be on the scooter and won’t see the On By Tree until next winter.

Posted in Dog Talk, Skijoring, Training | Leave a comment

On the Heartbreak Rollercoaster with the King… Yea, We Got it Made

A few days ago I was out with the Mush Puppies and a lovely gentleman exclaimed, “You’ve got it made!” as we skied by him. And honestly, at the time I wasn’t in a very good mood. Not in any kind of mood to appreciate how made I had it.

Almost seventeen years ago, my almost-husband and I were looking for a kitten. In fact, we were at the local shelter and I had already picked one out when I walked by a young girl who was having trouble getting a cage door open to put the kitten she had been looking at back inside. I told her I would hold him for a minute, and when she handed him to me he immediately curled up and started purring like a freight train. How differently my day would have ended if I had offered to open the cage door for her instead of holding the kitten; as it was, I went home with two kittens instead of one. And I knew that he would break my heart someday because they all break our hearts someday. But I knew it in a far off, detached way because my heart hadn’t been broken in awhile and I’d almost forgotten, and anyway it wasn’t going to happen today or tomorrow or the day after or even the day after that.

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And then one day, someday arrives and slaps you right in your face and you remember that your heart is going to break, because the kitten that became the sweetest old man of a cat, your Julius, the very King O’ the Cats, will leave you soon and there’s nothing you can do about it but love him and fill his days and nights with comfort until he needs you to make a choice. For now, he’s doing ok, but I don’t think it will be much longer.

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So it’s been hard, some days, to drag myself and the weight of these feelings out of bed to get the dogs out. Some days I don’t make it. Some days it’s really just going through the motions. And then one day, a lovely stranger reminds me with an offhand comment of why we keep going back for another ride on the emotional rollercoaster when every time we do we get our hearts broken over and over again: Because we have it made. They come into our lives and they fill our hearts up with hundreds and thousands of beautiful moments before they leave us again, moments that cling to the shards of our broken hearts and knit them back together again… somehow leaving our hearts bigger than they were before we knew them.

So I was thinking these thoughts as we went on our way. I was remembering that despite my imminent loss I do, in fact, have it made: I get to spend my mornings skiing out in the fresh, crisp air with my heart-filling Mush Puppies and my evenings getting my lap warmed by the heart-filling King O’ Cats. And while I was busy thinking, we flushed some deer in the woods alongside the trail and my puppies took me for a ride. Thinking ended and I just let them run and rode behind them laughing and I had it made.

And when their somedays come, as they must (but not today, or tomorrow, or the day after that), I’ll be riding that rollercoaster with each of them. I’ll be with them until the very end, and my heart will break.

And then I’ll go back for more.

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Posted in Not Mushing, Skijoring | 3 Comments

Back on the Skis

I took my first pretty bad fall on the skis today. It had nothing whatsoever to do with the dogs or with any sketchy hills, I just accidentally put a pole down on the inside of a ski which didn’t work out so well for me when that leg came back forward. I ended up eating snow, figuratively AND literally, since I pretty much fell flat on my face. I got a couple of bruises and a headache out of the deal, but am really none the worse for wear. It was warm enough today that the top layer of snow was soft and yielding enough to yield right up in my mouth, my nose, and under my sunglasses.

There was nothing to do, really, but just get back up and “ski it off”. I was about halfway out on a 3.5K loop so whether I turned back or kept going it was a wash and I wasn’t really hurt anyway, just a little shaken up. And as we got moving again and I mentally reviewed my “helmet while skiing” policy (admittedly pretty lax this year) we left it behind us and had a good rest of the run. Which made me think about other things I should really leave behind.

After the Loppet, I decided I needed to just relax and not care how perfect the dogs are on our runs. Not that I want them to stop constantly because that’s annoying, but before the Loppet I had gotten pretty obsessed with ON BY perfection and in retrospect it was probably as aggravating for the dogs as it was for me. So I have just decided that if they occasionally find a particular tree irresistible then so be it, it’s not the end of the world.

And a couple of things have happened since making that decision: 1. They (and by “they,” I mostly mean Squash) are actually stopping less. Like, a LOT less. And going ON BY better. Like, WAY better. Including not really caring about the Original On By Tree anymore (although there is an On By Fallen Tree and a Usurper On By Tree farther down the loop) 2. I am having WAY more fun. And I’m realizing that I was probably creating, or at the very least contributing to, a horrible feedback loop of being annoyed, nagging, and being ignored for nagging. How freeing for us all, to loosen up my expectations a bit without letting things become a free-for-all.

I’ve done a lot of thinking about whether we will continue to do races, and this is the plan: After a lot of thought, I decided to withdraw from the Barkie Birkie because we just don’t have adequate practice around other teams for me to relax and have fun. I am sticking with Mush for a Cure because it’s a smaller event. We’ll finish out this season just having fun together, and then next year I am going to do some skills practice around other teams with Squash with a local skijor club and see how that goes before deciding whether to do any races next year. In other words, we’re going to try to ski off the challenges and prepare better… but if we end up never doing another race again, I’ll be ok with that. We’re having so much fun together…

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Loppet Skijor 2014

I’m having a lot of feelings about the Loppet this year. We finished, and nothing bad happened. If you recall last year my expectations for the Loppet were modest and simple: I wanted to finish, and I wanted nothing bad to happen. But last year after finishing I was riding an endorphin high for the rest of the day while this year I felt drained, and while ultimately ok, as if I had been through a ringer.

Before:
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After, still smiling:
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Why the difference? Thanks to a little bit too much post-race indulgence last night I found myself with several insomniac hours to ponder the answer to that question. In retrospect, I think there was an unfortunate combination of several different factors.

Getting ready to start

1. First and foremost, different – and unrealistic – expectations. “I just want to finish and for nothing bad to happen” is soooo Loppet 2013, right? This year, we were a seasoned race team! Surely the novelty of the experience had worn off enough to allow us to focus on being a lean, mean racing machine. My expectations were still pretty modest: I hoped to shave a few minutes off last year’s time. But in retrospect even that was still pretty unrealistic. As of this year’s Loppet, we had exactly two races under our belts. I really should have approached this as a new experience. And really, I do this for fun and sometimes I forget that serious competition isn’t that fun for me. If I’m being totally honest, even being around that many strangers isn’t always all that fun for me. I’m really ok if “finishing and nothing bad happening” are my goals forever and ever.

Cresting the last hill going into the finish

2. The weather. Along with the rest of the country, we’ve been in and out of polar vortexes that have limited our opportunities to practice and exercise. So Squash went into this race under-exercised, meaning that he was firmly in super-playful mode – which to someone who doesn’t know him is probably a bit like being charged by a rhino. At one point we were actually booed by a few spectators because Squash tried to engage a small dog in play; honestly, we did deserve it. It probably looked frightening to the casual observer.

I fell 3 or 4 times on the flat parts of the course, but not on the hills.

3. We don’t really practice around other teams or even around other dogs except when we happen to encounter them on our regular trails. If we’re going to continue entering races, I’m going to have to get with the local skijor club and remedy that.

Wheeeeee!

4. Squash has developed a dislike of malamutes. Which is… pesky, to say the least, in a sport where we are almost certainly going to encounter them at events. There is a malamute in one of our classes that Squash took an instant dislike to. That dog did absolutely nothing to provoke such a reaction, but one day their eyes met across the room and Squash apparently decided he was badwrong. In retrospect, I think it actually started before that, last winter when we unexpectedly encountered an oncoming skijorer coming fast down a hill and around a corner towards us. This startled all of us and then the skier allowed his dog to approach us, provoking a reaction from Maisy and a “monkey see, monkey do” reaction from Squash. That dog was a large husky, close enough to a malamute not to matter from my dog’s perspective.

Oddly, because absolutely nothing has happened because of this, this is the issue that probably was the most upsetting for me yesterday. So far, he just stares and growls; I can interrupt and walk him away to work on some attention and he’ll forget about it and even be able to walk by the same dog a few minutes later without reaction. But it’s very real; at one point during the race he was taking me on the joy ride of my life when I suddenly realized it was because he saw a malamute ahead of us. I was able to choke up on the line to keep him close to me and the path was wide enough to then pass safely ON BY (which took some convincing), but if he’d been able to reach that dog I have to say I’m not entirely sure what would have happened. And that’s hard for me to swallow about my sweet, goofy boy who has always loved everyone and everything. This is something that I’m going to have to do some serious work on if we’re going to continue to do races.

5. This event is getting hugely popular, with large numbers of extremely excited dogs with varying social skills congregating in a relatively small area. Some of which are malamutes. Some of which dislike malamutes. Some of which (not any of these were malamutes) with owners who, despite regular officially announced pleas to the contrary, allowed their dogs to indiscriminately approach other dogs. Some of which had owners I had to yell NO, THANK YOU at when my subtly creeping farther and farther away was not a clear enough signal that I didn’t want their snarling, fixated dog to “say hi to” mine. All of which ended up with me having to be hypervigilant and choke up on Squash’s leash a lot, which made HIM hypervigilant and even more overexcited.

6. I struggle with anxiety. Not the “pre-race butterflies in my tummy” kind of anxiety, but the “requires medication and is still occasionally debilitating even though I’m good at hiding it” kind of anxiety. As part of my strategies to prevent it from totally overtaking my life, I walk a line between recognizing whether I should seek cover from or stand my ground against that approaching emotional tornado. I was fine yesterday, but in retrospect it wouldn’t have been the worst idea to seek cover. Our pre-race malamute encounters and the crowds had shaken me, and I was making Squash nervous.

7. The course layout was different this year, in a different location. It was a little confusing, which added to my anxiety. And towards the end of the race, the 5K and 10K racers (some whose race yesterday was the actual national skijoring championship) joined up with the novice 3K route. Which was stressful. Those are people I do NOT want to mess up because my dog wants to say HI to everyone, especially at the end when he’s tired. So several times I just pulled off to the side and waited for a wave of other skijorers to go by.

I realize that this post sort of makes it sound like I didn’t have fun. On the contrary, we had a LOT of fun, and I hope that comes through in the pictures. But I try to take something away from every experience I have, and what I am taking away from this is an opportunity for reflection. Reflection not only on what I can do to make things better next time but on whether the ratio of (enjoyment:stress) associated with these events justify whether there WILL be a next time. Whether I’m a race kind of person at all, or if this little band of misfits (anxious mushbaby, dog-reactive Maisy, and malamute-disliking Squash) are best suited to playing alone with each other on the quiet, empty weekday morning trails together. And if that’s how things shake out, I would be totally ok with that.

The End. LITERALLY.

Posted in Races, Skijoring | Leave a comment