Try Nordic skating in New England
Popular in Europe for centuries, sport still relatively obscure in U.S.
![]() | A skater tries her hand at Nordic skating on Lake Morey in Fairlee, Vt. |
Toby Talbot / AP file |
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FAIRLEE, Vt. - If you prepare meticulously for the worst, the worst actually can be fun.
That's how Nordic skating enthusiast Jamie Hess explains the attitude toward his favorite sport in Sweden, where many skaters like to brag about crashing through the ice, clawing their way out, then continuing on their way.
In Vermont — here the ice was a solid 12 inches thick the day I took one of Hess' workshops —I didn't need the ice picks, rope or spare clothing that serious "wild" or cross-country skaters carry. But I was unprepared in other ways, what with my weak ankles and mistaken belief that the groomed trail winding around Lake Morey was only two miles, not four.
In the end, though, it actually was kind of fun.
Popular in Scandinavia and northern Europe for centuries, long-distance, outdoor skating remains a relatively obscure pursuit in the United States. Hess, who fell in love with the sport on a trip to Sweden in 1999, is credited with boosting its popularity through his workshops, tours and Nordic Skater shop in Norwich, which sells skates specially designed to skim over ice that hasn't been smoothed by a Zamboni machine.
The lakes of Vermont and New Hampshire offer some of the best conditions, including the four-mile loop on Lake Morey, which was expanded from two miles last year and is the nation's longest groomed ice skating trail. It was blanketed beautifully in fog when a friend and I arrived for Hess's three-hour workshop, and I immediately imagined gliding into the mist toward the snow-covered hills.
The fog soon dissipated, along with any notions I had of achieving gracefulness. As Hess explained, Nordic skating is closest in movement to skate skiing, in which cross-country skiers use diagonal strokes to propel themselves. Inline skating experience would be the next best thing, followed by ice skating in hockey skates. Figure skating — ike the lessons I took a few years ago — doesn't help much if you're used to using the skate's toe pick to kick off from, Hess said.
"Push to the side, don't kick and glide, that's how it works on these skates," he said.
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"It's sort of like if you have a truck with big tires — you don't go into the pot holes the way a car with small tires would," Hess told me and about a dozen other students. "If the ice is really bumpy, you're sitting on top of the bumps instead of dipping into the dips between the bumps."
We started behind the Lake Morey Resort at the southern tip of the lake. After a few minutes of instruction, Hess ushered us onto the ice, where most of us struggled for balance as we navigated the ridges and bumps along the opening stretch of ice.
Wessel Kok, 44, who grew up skating in the Netherlands and now travels to Lake Morey once a year to skate, advises new skaters to take it slow. He compares Nordic skating to riding a bicycle: eventually you become proficient enough that aside from checking your balance now and then, you don't have to focus all your energy on what you're doing.
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