None of the normal
route for today is skiable, Instead, it has been arranged that we will ski from
Kalle - our normal lunch stop at the ski centre out to a café inland and back -
23.5km each way. This track is part of the ski centre network and is groomed
throughout the winter with one of the big trail machines, which means that
there is a good hard packed base.
I notice when we get
there, there is a banner up for a race along that trail in 10 days time.
Without a drop in temperature and some fresh snow, this may be hopeful.
The trail is gently
uphill and nice and fast when we start out; there are some patches of ice where
the bogs have thawed and frozen again. I use the trail to build on the fact
that I can sustain double poling to get to grips with the double pole/single kick
- a technique I have known for years, but never been strong enough to sustain.
The difference now that I can keep these techniques going is significant. I am able to get and sustain a 20% increase
in speed, although until I have finished studying the heart rate data, I won't
know how much more effort it is taking, and thus whether it is actually more
efficient overall in terms of economy.
The track was a bit
thin in places, and at one point volunteers were shovelling snow onto the
track. On the return trip, the temperature had made it harder to glide, and
some of the bog ice simply could not support the weight of skiers by the time
we got to the end, and many of us failed in our attempts to cross it without
wet boots. These included picking our way gingerly around or across to, I
believe, and attempt to jump it, which didn't work either. Still it provides a
good test of the properties of ski socks, and within about twenty minutes, mine
no longer felt cold and soggy in my boots.
And so we come to
the end. We have skied across Finland from border to border, at least where
conditions and safety permitted. We have coped with (as Jonathan describes)
"interesting" conditions (where "interesting" has different
nuances in English).
I have been tracking
the merits of the "zero" skis - skis designed to operate without wax
only in conditions around 0C. Some people love them, some hate them; at +5C
even the proponents resorted to waxed skis and klister. On the injury count, it
is a draw - one all ( 1 - 1) - one injury due to a zero ski suddenly gripping
when the skier didn't expect it and the same happening to a traditional ski
with klister. Both happened at low speed, on the level - this sort of thing
happens to me all the time - sufficiently so that maybe I am so used to being
caught out and falling in these circumstances that I have perfected the art of
falling. Many people have told me that indeed these is an art to falling, so
perhaps I have found something I am good at!
I took a quick trip
to the sports shop to see if there were any end of season bargains (cross
country equipment is nearly impossible to buy in the UK) but the zero skis were
not on offer. I suppose it avoids the comment when I get home of "why do
you need yet another pair of skis" from someone who has nearly as many
horse saddles as I have skis.
There is the RR
tradition of each nationality providing some form of entertainment after dinner
on the final evening - a sort of revue/cabaret. Those of us who are alone as a
nationality can join another group. This year, having grown up in what was a Danish
village twelve centuries ago, and having shared rooms with the Danes, I join
them. Our theme was "The RR story as it might have been written by Hans
Christian Anderson". As it has been
requested, I provide the story at the end.
This year it was the
turn of the Kuusamo municipality to provide the souvenir (the six
municipalities the RR passes through take it in turns). It is a lovely handmade
ceramic votive from the pottery in Kuusamo (run, according to my source on the
first RR, by a Brit).
Many friendships
develop over the course of the RR. It also throws up coincidences - two of
those from the US are actually fellow Brits and it turns out that for two
years, the three of us were at the same university, but in different
departments all of fifty metres apart.
During the RR, we
have normally been in bed and asleep not long after 9pm, but the last night is
when we catch up on fun. There is a 24 hour bar across the street from the
hotel, which is how I find myself playing bingo in Finnish - with some help on
the numbers as I only know about half a dozen of them. It is mostly the same
people each year - those who like to work hard and play hard. Most of this hard
core group of us will be back next year. We were comparing notes on what we do
for a living, and concluded that a high proportion of us work either in
healthcare or IT, and many of our reasons for doing the RR are similar -
physical exercise and away from the stress of modern work, the RR provides many
of us with a week of "active meditation"; some of us (i.e. me) are so
tuned out that we take wrong turns. In the evening entertainment, someone
described it like "kindergarten for adults" - we are told when to get
up, eat, which bus to catch, when to go to sleep. For those of us who have (or
are expected) to be in control all the time, this release and letting someone
else organise and take charge is what we need once in a while.
Finally the weather
has one last trick up its sleeve - as I come out of the bar sometime after 1am,
I look up to catch a few minutes of the Northern Lights. This is the first time
in many trips to Finland I have seen them, and it makes a magical note on which
to finish.
And in the words of
a famous Austrian, I know that "I'll be back"!
Thank you Tony for your blog. It ha been very good to follow the RR this way as my own participation was cut short on the very first day.
ReplyDeleteMy RR-week here in Helsinki has not been the best one. My operation went well and the recovery looks good. But on Monday night I was waken by the saddest call. My father had passed away. He died at home at the age of 83.
So my thoughts are now specially with my mum who spend almost 60 years together with dad, and now she will be alone in the big house on the countryside.
Hope to see you next year in the RR in happier circumstances.