Bangkok Post

GO WILD ICE SKATING IN ALASKA

- ELAINE GLUSAC

|’d been waiting for months when I finally got the call from Alaska last March. Wild ice was on.

A roughly two-week high-pressure window of cold and clear weather had frozen Portage Lake, the terminus of Portage Glacier, some 75km southeast of Anchorage, and it was solid enough to skate on its wild — or natural — ice.

“Skating A-grade ice under a glacier really is a ‘take off work now and just go to it’ type of treat, even for us Alaskans,” said Paxson Woelber, who owns the Anchorage-based skate manufactur­er Ermine Skate.

A few months earlier, I had purchased a pair of Ermine Nordic skates, long blades similar to speed skates that affix to the bindings of cross-country ski boots. The compatibil­ity allows skiers to get to remote ice, then switch into blades to skate without changing boots and, as Woelber put it, “get you off the rink”.

While figure and hockey skates are designed for manoeuvrab­ility, including directiona­l changes and tight turns, Nordic skates are designed for distance. The longer, faster blades require less effort to propel, and their stability makes them more tolerant of natural conditions like bumpy or weedy ice.

But the problem with Nordic skating or any kind of wild skating — which is defined as outdoors and on naturally formed ice, regardless of the style of skate used — is finding good ice. Wildice seekers extol late autumn and sometimes spring for freezing conditions without snowfall, which degrades ice.

“That’s why it’s so magical. It’s fleeting,” said Laura Kottlowski, a former competitiv­e figure skater based in Golden, Colorado, whom I called in my search for wild ice. TikTok and Instagram videos of her jumping and spinning on high alpine lakes have gone viral, and Kottlowski teaches her combinatio­n of winter mountainee­ring and ice skating as Learn to Skate Outside.

WILD ICE 101

I’ve been skating outside since childhood, mostly on Midwestern lakes and ponds that I know well. But the kind of wilderness that Kottlowski and Woelber explore requires next-level knowledge of ice and safety gear.

Preparing to skate in the wildest spot of my life, I spent a few hours watching videos in an online class on wild ice (US$149; 5,350 baht) made by Luc Mehl, a swift-water safety instructor who grew up in Alaska and swapped backcountr­y skiing for skating several years ago as a way to avoid avalanche risks. Based in Anchorage, he has become known for his skate safety training and stunning social media videos of him and other skaters gliding on remote frozen lakes.

When I reached him via phone to discuss my skating plan, he was just returning from Tustumena Lake on the Kenai Peninsula, where, on an overnight trip, he had cross-country skied 13km to reach the lake and then skated some 75km.

“Part of why skating is so rewarding is it’s not a guaranteed thing,” Mehl said. “Because of its rarity, it feels special.”

SKATING TO A GLACIER

“Indoor rinks have the ambience of a Costco,” said Woelber as he, Mehl and I set off with Woelber’s fluffy Samoyed dog, Taiga, from Ermine’s workshop in a modest office complex in South Anchorage for Portage Lake the next morning.

There was nothing Costco about Portage, a roughly 7.5km-long lake ringed in snowcapped mountains separated by glacier-filled valleys in the Chugach National Forest. In the bright sunlight, the clearest sections of ice mirrored the landscape with the addition of a few skaters in the distance.

After carefully hiking down a rocky slope and over some crusty ice near the shore in my cross-country boots, I clicked into my blades. Mehl lent me a set of plastic-sheathed ice picks to wear like a necklace, which — should I fall through the ice — I could deploy and use to stab it, creating a grip to haul myself out. He also provided a pole with a sharp tip, known as an ice probe, to test the ice as we went along.

“Two strong stabs from the elbow,” he demonstrat­ed by jabbing the ice, “and I know it will hold me.”

On an ice scale of A to F, we skated what my guides estimated was clear, black, A-grade ice with B-grade patches that were the texture of an orange peel, and a few C-grade sections of frozen snow. Cracks showed ice depths between 17 and 23cm; Mehl explained that 10cm is safe. In the centre of the lake, an iceberg was frozen in place, used as an ice slide by local children.

We connected t he smoothest stretches as we slalomed towards the glacier, linking unblemishe­d patches of ice so precisely reflective of a nearby mountain that the lake looked as if it had been surfaced by a Zamboni.

Edging right around a thumb of land at the far end of the lake, we faced the looming Portage Glacier, suspended in giant milky blue blocks that rose nearly 10 storeys above the frozen lake. After much gaping, we continued to its south face, gazing at a new shade of turquoise ice, shiny and dimpled by the sunshine.

ICE LIKE GLASS

The next day we had another, in skier’s terms, powder day — meaning perfect, hard-to-resist conditions — prompting Mehl to suggest we test out Kenai Lake, a long, deep, zigzagging body of water on the Kenai Peninsula about 160km south of Anchorage, which he had heard was newly frozen.

There, below a hanging glacier tucked into a mountainsi­de and beyond the moose tracks in the snow leading to the shore, was ice graded A-plus: smooth as a windless day on water, with surroundin­g peaks reflected in a sea green, mirrorlike surface.

“Yesterday, we got views,” said Mehl, equally thrilled by the conditions. “Today, ice!”

We could see open water about 350m out, but we stayed away from it, testing the ice at occasional cracks. In some areas, small waves looked as if they had frozen in motion. Others rippled gently like sand dunes. As we explored it on a calm, windless day, the lake began talking back in burbles and aquatic belches that Mehl said were non-threatenin­g, indicating the natural expansion and contractio­n of the ice. Other times, hairline cracks shot through the ice with a laserlike zing and at least once the lake mimicked a cow mooing, adding aural wonder to our tour.

In October, Mehl began posting social media videos of skating on clear, wild ice on snow-free lakes around Anchorage. But if Kenai Lake was my last wild skate of 2023, at least I slid into the sunset on peak ice.

 ?? ?? Laura Kottlowski goes Nordic skating in Alaska.
Laura Kottlowski goes Nordic skating in Alaska.
 ?? ?? On Portage Lake with Taiga the Samoyed.
On Portage Lake with Taiga the Samoyed.
 ?? ?? ABOVE
Portage Lake, the terminus of Portage Glacier.
ABOVE Portage Lake, the terminus of Portage Glacier.
 ?? ?? RIGHT
Skaters get close to Portage Glacier.
RIGHT Skaters get close to Portage Glacier.
 ?? ?? LEFT
Kenai Lake, 160km south of Anchorage.
LEFT Kenai Lake, 160km south of Anchorage.

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