AP

Climate change makes the future of Nordic skiing uncertain

Jan 18, 2022, 11:05 AM | Updated: 12:48 pm

A cross country skier glides along the freshly groomed trails at Cabin Creek Sno Park near Easton, ...

A cross country skier glides along the freshly groomed trails at Cabin Creek Sno Park near Easton, Washington on Dec. 19, 2021. When COVID-19 hit in the winter of 2020, many escaped cabin fever by hitting the ski trails and Nordic skis quickly became the new toilet paper – they were hard to find and sold out in stores. The ski boom has continued as the pandemic makes winter outdoor recreation appealing, but climate change means its future is uncertain. (AP Photo/Martha Bellisle)

(AP Photo/Martha Bellisle)

WINTHROP, Wash. (AP) — For the first time in 32 years, organizers of the Rendezvous Cross Country Ski Festival in West Yellowstone, Montana, had to cancel November’s traditional start-of-the-ski-season event due to a lack of snow.

Some 300 miles away, Soldier Hollow Nordic Center in Utah offered skiing in November by building an elaborate snow-making system while a small operation in Vermont was able to double its ski days after laying new pipe to feed the water-hungry snow-blowers. That wouldn’t work at Methow Trails in northern Washington, which can’t possibly cover its 200 kilometers (124 miles) of ski tracks with artificial snow; instead, they do snow dances and work on plans to move trails to higher elevation if needed.

The snow hasn’t stopped falling but it is certainly not piling up as much or as far as it used to amid climate change and it is hitting a sport that saw wild growth when COVID-19 hit in the winter of 2020. Many escaped cabin fever by hitting cross country ski trails for the exercise, the fresh air and the serenity.

Nordic skis quickly became the new toilet paper – they were hard to find and sold out in stores.

“What COVID did was push people outside,” said Reese Brown, executive director of the Vermont-based Cross Country Ski Areas Association. “It brought a huge number of new people to cross country skiing because it’s the perfect winter sport.”

Still, climate change makes the future of all skiing uncertain, from the elite World Cup circuits and sprawling resorts to the mom-and-pop operations that bustle on weekends with recreational skiers. For cross country centers, warmer temperatures mean more precipitation is falling in the form of rain instead of snow, forcing them to look to snow-making equipment to cover their trails.

The scarcity of water and costs make that option impossible for some, especially in the American West. A new study predicts that mountain states will be in a “low-to-no snow” predicament within 35 to 60 years if greenhouse gas emissions continue at current levels.

The problems have already affected top athletes who spend more time on snow than most. A lack of snow made early-season training difficult for many top cross country ski racers and biathletes as they prepared for the Winter Olympics in Beijing next month. A group of U.S. Ski Team members went to Germany in the fall to train in a ski tunnel.

“In cross country skiing, we see the impact of climate change in the towns that we go through,” said Olympic gold medalist Jessie Diggins of Afton, Minnesota. “There are years where they only have manmade snow and 2 kilometers of skiing on a tiny little hamster loop.”

When the team trained in a small town in northern Finland that traditionally is guaranteed snow in mid-November, the tracks were limited.

“We were skiing on a ribbon of dirty, manmade snow and there was green moss and little purple flowers blooming on the side of the trail,” Diggins said. “It looks wrong and feels wrong.”

Tim Burke, a retired U.S. biathlete who has competed in four Winter Games, said he has seen the impact of climate change throughout his career. Places like West Yellowstone used to have reliable snow for early season training “but that’s just not true anymore.”

Marine Dusser Bjornsen is a former member of the French biathlon team who now lives in Winthrop, Washington, where she runs a ski shop with her husband, retired U.S. ski team member Erik Bjornsen. She watched Nordic skiing explode after COVID-19 hit, but she’s also seen how climate change depletes the snowpack.

“When I was 15, 16, we would go to glacier to ski and it was groomed,” she said. “Now those glaciers don’t exist anymore. It’s just rock.”

Nordic skiers and biathletes are made in the summer, the saying goes, but climate change has cut into offseason training.

Brian Halligan, biathlon training director at Auburn Ski Club Training Center in Truckee, California, said smoke from the wildfires that hit the Lake Tahoe area in September killed their fall season.

“We’re actually thinking of implementing some training camp trips to the East Coast or maybe down in the Bay Area to basically avoid the smoke so we can continue training,” he said.

West Coast wildfires even impacted training in the east, according to Olympic biathlete Susan Dunklee, who lives in Vermont.

“I could taste the smoke in the air,” Dunklee said. “The change in the air quality puts a stress on your lungs.”

Methow Trails, on the east side of the Cascade mountains, boasts of being the largest cross country trail system in North America, with those 124 miles of groomed track that run between the towns of Winthrop and Mazama thanks to agreements with more than 200 state, federal and private landowners.

The operation is a significant contributor to the region’s economy to the tune of more than $12 million per season, said James DeSalvo, the trail system’s executive director.

“There would be drastic consequences if the snow melted,” he said.

Methow’s operators have spent years developing contingencies for a low-snow or no-snow winter, but those plans don’t include snowmaking. The trail system is just too big.

“And then there’s the environmental piece — water,” DeSalvo said. “There’s already a moratorium on drilling wells in the county.”

One option is to move the trails to higher elevations, he said, taking advantage of old logging roads.

“This is one of our strategic priorities and has been for over a decade,” he said. “We are very worried about it.”

While not an option everywhere, snowmaking has breathed new life into some cross country ski areas that saw the snow disappear.

“If you look at the Alpine ski industry 30 or 40 years ago, they were where we are now with cross country,” Brown said. “You had some alpine areas that had some snowmaking and others that didn’t have any and it was a struggle. Now virtually every alpine ski area has 50 to 100% snowmaking capacity.”

Some smaller Nordic centers in Vermont were able to get set up with snow-making systems for $65,000 to $80,000, Brown said. These involve blowing snow into a pile and using front-end loaders to move the snow around the trails.

Riker Nordic Center in Ripton, Vermont, made a bigger investment and went from 70 days of skiing to 140 thanks to HKD snowmaking equipment. The initial cost topped $850,000 and it’s about $40,000 every season to maintain the system, which includes labor and electricity, Brown said.

Luke Bodensteiner, general manager of the Soldier Hollow center where cross country skiing and biathlon races took place during the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics, said climate change has reduced the snow they see each year.

“The natural winters are definitely getting shorter. No question about it,” he said. “We’ve probably lost two to three weeks early season skiing on natural snow on both the front end and the back end of the year since this place was established.”

Utah is hoping to host the Winter Olympics in 2030 or 2034. Soldier Hollow has invested in state-of-the-art snow-making equipment to make that work. It helps that they sit at an elevation of 5,900 feet (1,798 meters) with colder temperatures. Still, the changing climate has made an impact.

“We’ve been able to kind of keep pace with our historical opening days but we do it far less often on natural snow and far more often on manmade snow,” Bodensteiner said.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


              A group of cross country skiers glide along the freshly groomed trails at Cabin Creek Sno Park near Easton, Wash., on Dec. 19, 2021. When COVID-19 hit in the winter of 2020, many escaped cabin fever by hitting the ski trails and Nordic skis quickly became the new toilet paper – they were hard to find and sold out in stores. The ski boom has continued as the pandemic makes winter outdoor recreation appealing, but climate change means its future is uncertain. (AP Photo/Martha Bellisle)
            
              Snow-making equipment sits along the trails awaiting cold temperatures at the Soldier Hollow Nordic Center, site of the 2002 Winter Olympics, in Midway, Utah. Climate change has made the future of cross country skiing and biathlon uncertain as temperatures rise. World Cup and Olympic cross-country ski and biathlon venues have the ability to make and store snow so they can offer a white ribbon of trails that snake through the trees. But many smaller venues don't have that luxury. (AP Photo/Martha Bellisle)
            
              Clouds move over newly groomed cross country ski tracks at the Cabin Creek Sno Park near Easton, Wash., on Dec. 19, 2021. When COVID-19 hit in the winter of 2020, many escaped cabin fever by hitting the ski trails and Nordic skis quickly became the new toilet paper – they were hard to find and sold out in stores. The ski boom has continued as the pandemic makes winter outdoor recreation appealing, but climate change means its future is uncertain. (AP Photo/Martha Bellisle)
            
              FILE - Sweden's Frida Karlsson, center, takes a fall during the WSC Women's Skiathlon 15km cross country event at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Oberstdorf, Germany, Feb. 27, 2021. Climate change is forcing many race organizers to rely on artificial snow for competitions. They use creating a ribbon of white with grass growing along the side. Some skiers and biathletes say machine-made snow is more dangerous and crashes more common because it has a higher moisture content and becomes icy and hard. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader, File)
            
              Mark Waechter, owner of Nordic Ultratune, a ski retail and repair shop in Winthrop, Washington, stands with a new batch of skis that arrived for the 2021-22 winter ski season. When COVID-19 hit in the winter of 2020, many escaped cabin fever by hitting the ski trails and Nordic skis quickly became the new toilet paper – they were hard to find and sold out in stores. The ski boom has continued as the pandemic makes winter outdoor recreation appealing, but climate change means its future is uncertain. (AP Photo/Martha Bellisle)
            
              A group of cross country skiers glide along the freshly groomed trails at Cabin Creek Sno Park near Easton, Wash., on Dec. 19, 2021. When COVID-19 hit in the winter of 2020, many escaped cabin fever by hitting the ski trails and Nordic skis quickly became the new toilet paper – they were hard to find and sold out in stores. The ski boom has continued as the pandemic makes winter outdoor recreation appealing, but climate change means its future is uncertain. (AP Photo/Martha Bellisle)
            
              A cross country skier glides along the freshly groomed trails at Cabin Creek Sno Park near Easton, Washington on Dec. 19, 2021. When COVID-19 hit in the winter of 2020, many escaped cabin fever by hitting the ski trails and Nordic skis quickly became the new toilet paper – they were hard to find and sold out in stores. The ski boom has continued as the pandemic makes winter outdoor recreation appealing, but climate change means its future is uncertain. (AP Photo/Martha Bellisle)

AP

Lead water pipes pulled from underneath the street are seen in Newark, N.J., Oct. 21, 2021. (AP Pho...

Associated Press

Biden to require cities to replace harmful lead pipes within 10 years

The Biden administration has previously said it wants all of the nation's roughly 9 million lead pipes to be removed, and rapidly.

3 days ago

Facebook's Meta logo sign is seen at the company headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., on, Oct. 28, 2...

Associated Press

Meta shuts down thousands of fake Facebook accounts that were primed to polarize voters ahead of 2024

Meta said it removed 4789 Facebook accounts in China that targeted the United States before next year’s election.

3 days ago

A demonstrator in Tel Aviv holds a sign calling for a cease-fire in the Hamas-Israel war on Nov. 21...

Associated Press

Hamas releases a third group of hostages as part of truce, and says it will seek to extend the deal

The fragile cease-fire between Israel and Hamas was back on track Sunday as the first American was released under a four-day truce.

8 days ago

Men look over the site of a deadly explosion at Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City, Wednesday, Oct. 18, ...

Associated Press

New AP analysis of last month’s deadly Gaza hospital explosion rules out widely cited video

The Associated Press is publishing an updated visual analysis of the deadly Oct. 17 explosion at Gaza's Al-Ahli Hospital.

11 days ago

Peggy Simpson holds a photograph of law enforcement carrying Lee Harvey Oswald's gun through a hall...

Associated Press

JFK assassination remembered 60 years later by surviving witnesses to history, including AP reporter

Peggy Simpson is among the last surviving witnesses who are sharing their stories as the nation marks the 60th anniversary.

11 days ago

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, chairs the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Sunday, ...

Associated Press

Israeli Cabinet approves cease-fire with Hamas; deal includes release of 50 hostages

Israel’s Cabinet on Wednesday approved a cease-fire deal with the Hamas militant group that would bring a temporary halt to a devastating war.

12 days ago

Sponsored Articles

Follow @KTAR923...

Valley residents should be mindful of plumbing ahead of holidays

With Halloween in the rear-view and more holidays coming up, Day & Night recommends that Valley residents prepare accordingly.

Follow @KTAR923...

The best ways to honor our heroes on Veterans Day and give back to the community

Veterans Day is fast approaching and there's no better way to support our veterans than to donate to the Military Assistance Mission.

...

Dierdre Woodruff

Interest rates may have peaked. Should you buy a CD, high-yield savings account, or a fixed annuity?

Interest rates are the highest they’ve been in decades, and it looks like the Fed has paused hikes. This may be the best time to lock in rates for long-term, low-risk financial products like fixed annuities.

Climate change makes the future of Nordic skiing uncertain