Jackrabbit Classic: Global warming spurs ski marathon organizers to carve out new northern trail - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 30, 2024, 05:44 AM | Calgary | -16.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Jackrabbit Classic: Global warming spurs ski marathon organizers to carve out new northern trail

Some 250 seasoned cross-country skiers will ski from Mont-Tremblant to Montebello, Que. on Saturday, roughly along a route Herman "Jackrabbit" Smith-Johannsen bushwhacked for decades.

Inaugural cross-country ski event from Mont-Tremblant to Montebello in Herman Smith-Johannsen's spirit

The new northern trail, running from Mont-Tremblant to Montebello, may become part of the Canadian Ski Marathon's official route in years when snow cover is poor. (CSM)

When 275skiers set out from Domaine Saint-Bernard in Mont-Tremblantat 6 a.m. on Saturday in the direction ofthe Ottawa River,they will be following roughly in the tracks once skied by Herman "Jackrabbit" Smith-Johannsenon his annual trek from Piedmont to Montebello.

Smith-Johannsen, the Norwegian-born pioneer who coached Canada's 1932 Olympic ski team andblazed cross-country ski trails throughout the Laurentians, is the stuff of legend skiing well past his 100th year.

He helped establish theCanadian Ski Marathon and attendedit for a last time when he was110, dying a year later, in 1987, at 111.

Snow cover a climate-change issue

The Canadian Ski Marathon(CSM) turns 50 this year.

However, for the past severalyears, organizers of the 160-kilometre, two-day event between Gatineau and Lachutehave worried about the effects of climate change on snow cover along the Ottawa Riverespecially on the low-lying areas west of Montebello.

Work to clear the new northern trail for the inaugural Jackrabbit Classic began well before the snow fell. (CSM)

"We've had years when the snow is not so good," said Paul "Boomer" Throop, the one-time coach of Canada's national ski team who is past-president of the CSM. "The western trail really won't hold snow because of all the farmers' fields it crosses."

There is no immediate plan to change the ski marathon'sroute permanently, although that may be down the road,Throopsaid.

"Our intention now is to have a backup."

Throop said the Papineauville heavy-equipment operatorwho has been responsible for trail-cutting, grooming and sign-posting the routefor years, Denis Marcotte, has long advocatedfor a northern trail, to go where the snow is more reliable.

"Now he's created it," Throopsaid.

Farmers, municipalities enthusiastic

Of course, when Johannsen plied the route, there were no double-tracked trails, no water stations or pit stops.

"He would just bushwhack," his granddaughterKarin Austinsaid. "He had an amazing sense of direction. He was born with a compass in his brain."

An elderly man on skis
The inaugural Jackrabbit Classic is named for Herman "Jackrabbit" Smith-Johannsen, who blazed cross-country ski trails throughout the Laurentians over more than six decades. (CSM)

Austin is the honorary president of the inaugural event, and she will be on handat the 60-kilometre mark in Boileauand then later, 39 kilometres farther south in Montebello, to hand out medals to the finishers.

"This event is so much in my grandfather's spirit," said Austin.

In Johannsen's day, "he would just ski into a farmhouse and say, 'I'm Herman Smith-Johannsen, could you put me up for the night?'" Throopsaid. "And they'd put him up."

Today, planning a new trail meansgetting permission to cross the land of dozens of property owners, obtaining the co-operation of snowmobile associations to keep their members' machines off portions of the route and finding volunteers to shovel snow across roads, escort skiers through towns and villages and hand out water at key points along the way.

Experts only for 1st-time event

Throopsaid the plan has come together with the help of two other major ski organizations, les Traverses des Laurentides and Ski de Fond Mont-Tremblant, as well as the Redbirds Ski Club, the Arundel Outing Club and municipalities along the entire route.

Participation for this first-time event was limited to expert skiers, but even for experienced skiers,in a year in which the snow arrived so late, 99 kilometres in a single day is a big challenge, Throopsaid.

"I've never skied more than 80 kilometres in one day," Throop acknowledged. "But I think we'll be impressed with the number of people who finish it."