Sun Peaks trip 2018 – Week 5

by | Feb 25, 2018 | cross-country skiing, skate skiing, Sun Peaks

Thursday 15 Feb 2018. Sunny and cold -13ºC in the village and -17ºC at Morrisey top. We skate skied the same track as Tues 13 Feb – Down Holy Cow, along Moose, down part of MacGillivray, down Black Bear up and along Vista back to Morrisey base. Despite beautiful looking grooming, the snow was a bit sticky and difficult at the top and on Vista. Our experiment today was to take the in-resort shuttle bus to and from Morrisey. This saves the worst part – the trudge to and from the Stables. However, because of the shuttle timetable, it adds an hour to the trip. Hmm. 2:39 hours, 12.16 km, max speed 31.2 kph, 405 m descent, 1500 kcals, 2 days 19 hours to recover. This was a good session, but I am exhausted.

 

Groomer on Gentle Giant
in early morning

Friday 16 Feb 2018. Snowing. A day off for me. Helen had a few runs of resort telemark off the Sundance chair. The Sunburst chair had mechanical difficulties and was stopped all morning. Bugger. That lift services the bulk of the hill.

Check the snow blowing off the groomer to the left. As these move around the hill at fairly high speed, they send off a cloud of snow.

 

 

 

Small child and instructor

Saturday 17 Feb 2018. Snowing all day. 20cm. Day off.

Sunday 18 Feb 2018. Sunny & cold. This turned out to be an adventure. The day was to be cold, so we delayed out departure until it warmed a bit and decided to not ski from Morrisey top. Good decisions. What we forgot was the wind and its chill. Together, these gave us an effective temp of about -30ºC – which was bloody cold. We do not have the cross-country gear for that.

 

 

Much needed hot tub – outside

My fingers got very cold, as did Helen’s feet. We went out along Cotton Tail (and did not even get to its end). It was not too bad as we skied with the wind, but when we turned around to come back, it became more than horrible. The two of us trying to warm our hands between our legs on each stop. The worst bit was between Morrisey base (sheltered) and the stables, which was very exposed. By the time we got to the Covered Bridge, we were extremely cold and went in for a hot chocolate at Bolacco. Wow, my middle fingers were so cold they were extremely painful. After we warmed up, we walked to and went up the Platter and skied down to the hotel. That is a good way for us to get out and avoids the long slog back from the Stables. A much needed hot tub to warm up. Just 1:09 hours, 3km, 678 kcals, recovery time 30 hours. The next two days will be very cold and we are not going out.

 

 

View from our Cahilty room
Gentle Giant and Sunbeam runout
Sundance and distant Sunburst chairs

Monday 19 Feb 2018. Sunny and very f*#^ing cold. -22ºC minus wind. We sat and watched the slope. We have become very attached to our view from this room. Discussion has begun about coming back and even buying a room – with this view. There is something very restful about watching skiers and boards going passed – down Gentle Giant, Sunbeam and runouts to the chair lifts. Lights are on until just after 7pm each night and there is considerable activity on Platter and the two magic carpets – mainly kids. Also surprising is the number of people doing jumps off the pipes and rails set up at the bottom of Cowabunga. We really do like this place a lot.

 

 

 

Village Walking Trail
A 3m trough through the snow
Sun Peaks

Tuesday 20 Feb 2018. Very cold -23ºC with a light wind. Too bloody cold. After a day inside yesterday, we talked about going out for a few resort telemark runs. Reality prevailed when we saw that -23ºC. Maybe a walk later. We went for a walk out to the Nordic Centre near Morrisey base and back.

Wednesday 21 Feb 2018. Very cold again. -22ºC. More time inside. We have been watching a fair bit of the Winter Olympics and over the last few days have been fascinated with the biathlon and how quickly and dramatically the lead can change with shooting. Below are links to three biathlon events in which the French win. The hero to watch is Martin Fourcade who is quite remarkable. They are each over an hour long. Mens 15 km mass start, Mixed relay, Mens 12.5km pursuit. This one (Le Grand Bornand) in French which just shows the shooting is shorter.

 

 

Helen on Holy Cow

Thursday 22 Feb 2018. Cold and sunny -18ºC. We were sick of sitting inside, so skate skied from the top of Morrisey down Holy Cow, Moose, Black Bear, Cotton Tail. We waited until it had warmed up a little and left at 11am. To keep warm I had on: two hats and a neck warmer; two thermal shirts, a vest, a heavy polar 100 and a shell; knees socks, thermal bottoms and CCC recovery pants and cross country pants; two pairs of gloves. The skating was delightful – but I have significantly overdone it. 3:22 hours, 13.18 km, 1991 kcals, 420m descent – all good to here – but I kept my heart rate too high overall, 2 hours 21 mins in 80-90% of max heart rate zone – more than 8 days to recover. Eight days!!! Munted.

I overdid it bigtime today. Several errors.

  1. When stopping after 17 skates, I did not allow my heart rate to drop to 130 bpm – I set off at about 138-9 which means that I did not recover much after each exertion.
  2. Many times I did not stop at 17 but went through to as many as 30 skates.
  3. I skated on the gentle downhill which, although it improved my skating balance, was more strenuous overall.
  4. Feeling too confident.

Initially, these did not mean much – I was feeling very good and skating well. But the accumulation over 3 hours was very bad. From about the middle of Moose, I was in difficulties.

Today is a day of National Mourning in Canada. The Canada Women Hockey team lost its gold medal match to the arch enemy USA.

Friday 23 Feb 2018. Snow all day. A day off for me. Helen went out for resort telemark runs. Another day of National Mourning today when the Canada Men Hockey team lost to Germany which means they cannot even play for gold in the final.

Shield Shrimp

When it rains across Australia’s vast inland region, temporary pools crop up all over the arid ground, giving life to a strange desert crustacean known as the shield shrimp (Triops australiensis).

Named after the formidable carapace that shields its head and upper body, T. australiensis can grow up to 7.6 cm long, and it uses its long, segmented tail and mass of 60 or so legs to propel itself through shallow water.

It also breathes through these legs – its sub-class Branchiopoda means ‘gill-legged’ – and in the females these legs bear ovisacs for carrying their tiny eggs.

Several pix in the Photo Gallery and a movie.

Acacia peuce

A rare and endangered plant. The tree grows up to 15 to 18 metres (49 to 59 ft) high, with short horizontal branches and pendulous branchlets covered in needle-like phyllodes adapted for the arid dry climate. It has a distinctive habit more similar to a sheoak or a conifer.

Although speculated to have been widespread across central Australia during wetter climates 400,000 years ago, the population is now mostly restricted to three sites, separated by the encroaching Simpson Desert. In the Northern Territory, the species is restricted to the Mac Clark (Acacia peuce) Conservation Reserve which is surrounded by a pastoral lease, Andado Station. The other two sites are near Boulia and Birdsville in Queensland. The tree is found in open arid plains that usually receive less than 150 millimetres (5.9 in) of rain per annum. They grow on shallow sand aprons overlaying gibber or clay slopes and plains and between longitudinal dunes or on alluvial flats between ephemeral watercourses.

 

Owen Springs Reserve on Hugh River

Owen Springs was a station on the Hugh River. The Hugh River flows into the Finke (when it actually flows). Both cut through the Western MacDonnell Ranges. The image above shows Owen Springs Reserve as a dot at lower right. The river it is next to is the Hugh. Hermannsburg, our next town, is near middle left edge. Hermannsburg is almost on the Finke River. You can see both Hugh and Finke Rivers cutting through sections of MacDonnell Ranges.

Palm Valley

Palm Valley is within the Finke Gorge National Park southwest of Alice Springs. Palm Valley has a smallish population of Red Cabbage Palms (Livistona mariae). The nearest related species is 850 kilometres away in Katherine NT. The average rainfall for Palm Valley is just 200 mm per year. Small pockets of semi-permanent spring-fed pools allow the unique flora and fauna (desert fish, shield shrimps tadpoles and frogs) to survive.

It had been assumed that the cabbage palms were remnants of a prehistoric time when the climate supported tropical rainforest in what is now the arid inland of Australia. Genetic analysis published in 2012 determined that Livistona mariae at Palm Valley is actually the same species as Livistona rigida from samples collected near Katherine and Mount Isa, both around 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) away. It is now thought that aboriginal people brought the palms to here from Mataranka.

Mound Springs

Mound Springs occur around the Western edge of the Great Artesian Basin and represent a natural discharge of Artesian water that was captured many hundreds of kilometers away from rain falling along the Great Dividing Range and New Guinea. This article provides details. Dalhousie is an excellent example of a mound spring.

Great Artesian Basin map Great Artesian Basin diagram