Post
by fisheater » Mon Jan 15, 2024 5:04 pm
@Chass3ur in nice powder snow, in cold temps (below 25 F) you can climb easy blue at the resort pitches. I don’t iron in polar, I cork it. I don’t kick wax, other than polar, beyond the heel.
I’m not saying putting kick wax beyond the heel doesn’t add grip. I am saying that grip wax beyond the heel just 6 or 8 inches kills glide, and at 6-8 inches beyond the heel, grip was not improved at all. I quit going beyond the heel, and with my current wax/skin system I can’t see myself waxing beyond the heel. My system definitely works for me.
So I cork my polar, with a natural cork, and shine it up nicely. I don’t otherwise grip wax beyond the heel. I’m a late bloomer in the use of X-skin.
If I didn’t have an X-skin, I would use a narrow skin attached to the ski tip, and cut at the back of the heel. It would be light and not take up room. Mine would be mohair. For a full skin, I would go nylon, mohair mix. I would just order a the narrow width of my ski. The only question would be if I needed a tail hook.
I’m pretty good with wax. I don’t ski with other people often, but on the trails I ski, I climb in other’s herringbone tracks. When I went to Whitegrass, I was never outclimbed as far as ski grip. It was a different story when we talk about 30 year old local billy goats, and a 60 year old guy from the rolling hills of Michigan. They could out climb me, but they were good at pretending they weren’t faster on the up.
You’re in a ski up, to ski down area. My waxing philosophy is shaped by the up, down, up, down nature of my skiing. When you get to the bottom of your run, you can easily scrape off the kick wax from heel to tail for better glide.
You should always carry a scraper. I carry two, one to scrape, one to clean the scraper. Most guys don’t, but I use the Swix Nordic metal scrapers. I have been using them for years. They don’t screw up my bases. They do strip kick wax far more effectively than a plastic scraper.