Christmas

Another Christmas has come and gone. The day was spent at Vail with friends, which has a disappointingly small amount of new snow. It was still soft and fun though, as there had been multiple feet of snow in the week prior. After that, it was off to a delicious and very filling dinner with family and beasts.

Amy gave Scout an adorable collar & hat set. There’s some motion blur in this photo, and it’s indicative of how she felt about the hat.

This is more like it:

Here’s a rare moment, the dogs lying quietly and behaving:


Boo sleeping in his monkey bed:And Boo a little more alert:


This really is the way to spend Christmas – with friends and family, getting to do what you love.

Solstice Skiing

It’s official, Winter is here and in full force! I spent the day with some friends at A-Basin yesterday for my 6th day of the season. It was very cold – -3F at the base mid-day, and so windy they shut down everything but the main lift at the bottom. There was only one black run open, so I lapped that for the entire day. I’m sore today as I aired a five-footer to flat about a dozen times, and had a good crash through some trees that had a couple people shouting and asking if I was ok. Got a couple photos…nothing spectacular.

Skier
Girl on a snowboard
Josh Snowboarding
And a photo from last weekend, driving on I-70 through town:

I-70 Snow
Christmas morning will be spent at Vail, and the snow is supposed to continue all the way through then!

Snowy Scenics

The following are some photos of recent snows in Denver. The first two are from Nov. 29, when Denver got its first real snowfall of the year. The rest are from today, at the recently opened bridge at Grandview Ave. and Wadsworth in Arvada.

Snowy Chimes
Bluebird on Snowy Branches
It was cold, snowy, and overcast early this morning, but the sun came out and brightened things up by noon or so (though it never warmed up).

Snowy Red House
Old Neighborhood
Black and White Train Tracks
Newly Opened Grandview Avenue
Long exposure Wadsworth

A bike-home epic

Yesterday, as most of you know, was very cold in Denver, along with a few inches of snow. In the morning, it was in the low teens, and the snow was very light, dry, and unconsolodated. I decided to bike, and only added a couple minutes to my standard ride in. Things were substantially different on the way home.

By 3:30pm, the snow had been packed down everywhere by drivers. Some of it had melted (either due to the sun or icemelt dropped by plow crews) and refrozen, as it was cooling off again. I can’t imagine it getting worse and still being able to stay upright on a bike without studded tires. Several times I was absolutely positive I was going down, yet only once did I actually hit the deck. Montview was untouched by plows so instead of a nice bike lane, it was rough partially refrozen slush thrown by cars. Not great conditions for a road bike. I took the sidewalk along Colfax for the last couple miles, and got a big thumbs-up from an enthusiastic pedestrian.

Lesson learned: stay off the bike next time it snows.

November biking

November was a great month for biking to work. I biked in 17 days (of 18, due to the holiday), and drove today just because I need to be able to get around more quickly to book it out of town after work. I’ve driven far more due to the start of ski season, but that was anticipated. I’ll be entering December with 69 days biking to work since June 25, and only 30 days of driving in that time period (only six of those since the Oct. 1). My goal for December is 21 days (of 22 work days). I won’t be disappointed with 20.

Still haven’t pulled the photos from Berthoud, but with the long weekend I should have them up in a few days.

Factors: Factored!

Yesterday was my third day on skis for the year. Normally unremarkable, given the total lack of snow we’ve had thus far. To my extreme joy, the Black Diamond Factor AT boots I ordered arrived on Friday. I hadn’t been planning on skiing this week, but their arrival changed my tune. I went down to REI to get them custom molded to my feet, and drove up to A-Basin yesterday morning for a couple hours on the WROD. Crowds were impressively small, due in no small part to the warm and dry weather we’ve seen for the past week.

Now to the Factors; yes, they’re heavy. On the upside, they ski like a dream. Stiff (forward and laterally), amazing fit for my foot-type, and a ridiculously awesome walk mode. I was finding rollers and little airs to go off of and felt totally stable and in control at all times. I can’t wait for more snow and real terrain to open.

After a couple hours there, it was off to Berthoud Pass to scout around for a while. I got a good perspective on the area and some pictures, but despite the forecast for warm and dry with highs in the 40s, a storm blew in with high winds and snow. Hopefully a sign of things to come. Pictures to follow…

Focus on Fitness

With winter bringing shorter days, colder temperatures, and excessive quantities of generally unhealthy food, it’s a good time to get thinking about fitness again. It’s easy in the summer time. It’s light for hours after getting home, and the warm weather makes it a lot easier to bike to work, go for a walk or run, and just generally be active in the outdoors. Like many people, I’ve had a tendency to gain weight as the weather turns cold, and lose it in the summer. Since I decided to get in shape back in the summer of 2005, I’ve been periodically tracking my weight.

As you can see, I dropped from over 190 to hitting 170 in roughly four months when I first started. Then winter hit. When it warmed back up I spent a lot of time hiking 14ers and running, and hit the mid-upper 160s. I may have been thinner than what is ideal, but man, I was swift. The same thing happened in the winter of 2007 and repeated the next summer. I gained 22 pounds in less than five months, and never took it off despite all my time on the bike. While I’m fast, strong, and by no means fat, I do have a few pounds I could shed which would make me faster and stronger.

Enter the Wii Fit. I finally found one online last week, and it arrived yesterday. It has fun activities for various benefits, but one of the best aspects is weight tracking in only a minute or two every morning. I set a goal in Wii Fit to get sub-25 for my BMI in two months (at my height, that line is at 176). That will require a loss of almost two pounds a week, which may be overambitious. Regardless, I need to get there prior to the spring ski mountaineering season. An extra layer of wool or polypro is far better than extra fat to stay warm.

I’m lucky enough to have a friend who is also actively working to get back in shape, and fantastic backcountry skiing opportunities nearby. A hard skin up in cold weather can burn several hundred calories per hour. Even better, each lap you’re rewarded with a ski run through untouched powder and no crowds, with low-speed quads to get you up any where you want to try. Even better is light winter mountaineering. The cold, wind, and gear weight can result in so great an energy burn that you could lose a pound of fat even after a huge meal at the end of the day to recharge.

Get out there, burn some fat, and most importantly, have fun!