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Kissing the '12 ski season good bye. This was the best part of the Birkie race and it was only 2K in. Long day…
Single Swizzle

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Kissing the '12 ski season good bye. This was the best part of the Birkie race and it was only 2K in. Long day…
Single Swizzle
People keep asking me how the 2011 Birkie went. And maybe by seeing how long it took me to write-up a final race report will tell you how it actually went. After a week and half of being asked how it went, I have found myself answer with “well, it came…and….it went.”
I have done a total of 16 Birkies/Kortes. I have skied the Birkie in 52° with women wearing just their bras and I have skied it with six inches of fresh snow covering the course. I have also skied it when there has been nothing but ice and one year I didn’t ski it because it was flat-out cancelled.
But I will tell you this…I have never skied it when it has been so cold at the start. Don’t get me wrong – most Birkies start out cold but end up with some sweet temps at the end. The 2011 Birkie…not so much.
I got out of the car at McNaught road to ski in for my warm-up. The outside temp in the car read -12°. Alright, I thought, I don’t mind the cold and I’m sure once I get skiing I will be just fine. I skied in on a hard, fresh groomed Birkie trail and thought to myself, “see, I’m already toasty.”
That didn’t last long. I had to strip down to my race outfit 15 minutes prior to my start so that I could get into the start gate and ready. That is when everything went south. By the time the gun went off I was frozen to my core and I couldn’t feel my toes. I wasn’t too worried because I figured I would be sweating by the time I got to the other end of the power lines.
Well, the power lines came and went and I was till cold. I actually felt like I was shivering while I was skiing. I was never worried about being cold but I was worried with how I was feeling. I wanted to ski the first half conservatively so that I had something left in the tank when I came out of OO.
It is amazing how at one k you can feel good and feel strong but by the very next K you are worried, hurting, and wondering how you are going to finish the race. That is how I felt throughout the whole thing. This hill I felt good, that hell sucked, this section I feel strong, that section kick my butt. It was an up and down roller coaster Birkie (pun intended).
I hit OO and exchanged my frozen water bottle with a warmer one from Nikole and I told her that I couldn’t get warm. She said don’t worry, no one can. Well that made me feel somewhat better. I typically enjoy the OO to Mosquito Brook section. Its rollings hills and I find that I can get into a pretty easy pace. Not this year. I had fast skis and that was about it. I would catch and pass people on the down hills only to have them pass me and then ski away from me on the flats.
After Mosquito Brook I took my time climbing the hills and I made sure I took care of myself so that I had something left on the lake. The lake came and I managed to pass one skier. Ya hooo. By the time I hit main street I had absolutely nothing in the tank. In fact I could barely glide out on one ski I was so tired and I think I double polled it the last 50 meters.
I crossed the line with another sub 3hr race…barely. My brother summed up my Birkie the best…”you looked like shit at the finish but I’m proud of you.” It truly was my hardest Birkie yet and I’ve never been so glad to see the finish line.
You get what you put into your training. This years Birkie resembled what I put in. I skied quite a bit but I also rode quite a bit. And when I was skiing I was thinking about biking. Chalk this Birkie up as base training for this years bike season.
It was fun. It was great to be with family and friends. It was hard yet filled with the same amount of emotion and sensation that the Birkie always brings. But, it was the Birkie that came and went.
Single Swizzle
Sturgie
I purposely put a hold on updating this because…well….I wanted a break. But its a new year now for sharing the excitement, risk, danger, peril, certainty and the uncertainty in the Sturgis family.
CHRISTMAS 2010
Ayden had a blast this Christmas. From eating cookies and chocolate covered pretzel sticks to picking out our Christmas tree during the storm of the century, Ayden was livin it up. Note to self – two-year olds need only one present. His first present was a dump truck and he was so into the dump truck that he didn’t care about the other presents. Things we wish we had known. Would have saved us some money.
Ayden continues to grow each day and teach us something new about life everyday. We are lovin it and trying our best to enjoy each day!
I will let the pics speak for themselves. We had a wonderful Thanksgiving/Christmas. It has been another year in which we were able to pause and reflect on the blessings and joy that we find in the company that we keep both with our families and our loved ones.
So here is to you, here is to an event filled 2011.
Single Swizzle
The Sturgie Family
The following words/pictures are for your eyes only. If you are mature enough…please keep reading.
Back in November I posted this asking if anyone has seen Jesus on a bike. Well, many wanted to know who’s tattoo it was. Now that my parents know I have one I’m ready to come out (I think). This was Nikole’s birthday present for me. For four years she listened to me talk about getting this and she finally got really tired of it. Would this be considered a mid-life kind of thing? Maybe later we can talk about the theological understanding of it….just for fun.
I have been biking a bit this winter and I have finally found the time to get out on the skinny boards. I need a kick in the butt because the now “sold out” “closed” all waves “full” Birkie is right around the corner! Game on….
Hebrew, food, family time, running, maddening, teaching, relaxing, lying around, crawling, preaching, walking, RTA, skiing, ordering, internet, dancing, loving, travel, toys, sleep, books, dogs, snow, hikes, spring, Birkie, and livin life -
That has been the order of the family over the past couple of weeks. It’s been fast paced to say the least. Ayden moves about more on his feet now than on his knees. He found his “private part” and now looks like a dog chasing it. Nikole continues to care for her boys and is still, she won’t say this, training for a 1/2 marathon this spring.
Birkie is right around the corner and this is my final week of intense, high volume workouts. I have the pre-Birkie this weekend followed by the Hinder Binder next weekend. Hopefully I will use those two races as confidence boosters because right now I sure don’t feel fast. Like it or not, I have to be ready -
More to come….