Pagosa Springs Colorado
Today the Mountain Won!

by Norm Vance
There is neither heaven nor earth,
only snow,
falling incessantly.
Hashin
I have maintained snow trails in the Pagosa
Country area for over a dozen years. I’ve done snowmobile
trails, sled dog tracks and cross country lanes. I had pause today
to consider an article on how snow trails work.
The pause was when I had thrown myself and my super sized snowmobile
at a hundred foot length of trail for about two hours without
making any real progress. Those two hours were spent shoveling
snow trying to make a four foot wide, level strip, on an otherwise
45 degree snow bank AND shoveling snow to get my machine unstuck.
It was all shoveling - and at 11,000 feet elevation - and I was
forced to “pause” to let my lungs catch up. Did I
mention there was white-out blizzard going on I couldn’t
see. This is when I sat beside the machine and pondered on how
snow trails work. I thought it might be interesting for snow trail
users to gain some insight into this tricky business...
I might also say that after the pondering and
pausing, I dug the machine out for the fourth time, headed it
downhill and went home. In other words, the mountain won.
Snow trails can be made by a single cross country skier or snowshoer
up to my size of machine. Then there are the big snow grooming
machines like the Trailblazer Snowmobile Club and Wolf Creek Ski
Area use. They are the size of a large truck and make smooth and
wide groomed trails.
The only factor that makes a snow trail is that the same path
is used over and over as newer layers of snow falls. This compresses
the snow and each subsequent pass mashes new snow and builds an
ever thicker and higher trail level. It becomes a wall of packed
snow enveloped in softer snow. The wall is a few feet wide and
miles long, crossing vast open spaces, up and down river valleys
and switching back and forth up mountain slopes. Think the Great
Wall of China made of ice and buried in snow.
If you drive off the wall you are going down. On good snow,
if you have enough floatation, speed and luck you might keep going,
if not you’re stuck. If the machine is stuck it must be
dug out and then you stomp down and pack a path back up to the
hardened trail, much like the “on ramp” of a freeway.
As a pure volunteer/random act of kindness effort I am riding
the Lobo Overlook Road/Trail at the summit of Wolf Creek Pass.
With several years of low snow this trail at the top of the divide
has become super popular with all types of snow users. A special
taskforce was formed just to deal with this increased use of the
area and this year there are often Forest Service volunteers in
the plowed parking lot counting people, doing quick surveys and
trying to stay warm.
In summer the road runs straight and level out of the parking
area for a few hundred yards before it begins gaining elevation.
This winter the wall/trail starts about 12 to 15 feet above the
parking lot and gets deeper as the trail goes up! On the top is
a three story building that is less than one story above snow
level.
Certainly this is not a groomed trail, officially or in its
best condition but I am riding it to knock down the new snow,
as best as I can, and making an effort to take out the damage
that my fellow snowmobilers do to the trail.
Most of the snowmobile use is snowboarders taking turns pulling
each other to the top. New snowmobiles are so powerful that when
they accelerate hard they dig a deep trench 16 plus inches wide
and many feet long. This is exacerbated when pulling a boarder
or two up a steep trail. On top of that they tend to wallow around
in the snow making off camber stretches of packed snow. These
trenches and wallows are difficult and potentially dangerous for
cross country skiers to navigate. I drive a Super Wide Track Skandic
which is considered the HumVee of snowmobiles. Its track is 24inches
wide and I sometimes pull a small sled like drag that bites into
the snow a bit. I am able to fill and smooth over the trenches
and wallows after a few passes.
So, that is what a snow trail is all about. Its not rocket science
but it is good exercise and a good feeling for me, knowing people
are using this great trail safely and enjoying one of the most
stunning views on the planet.
The mountain won today but not forever.
For more information see “The
Playground at The Top of The World.”
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