Ah … this is what vacations are made for … enough of Web 2.0 for now. The response to the Northstar Nerd's Nordic Fashion Show has been so positive, that I created a new category for this blog, Nordic Skiing. Thus, for better or worse you now can easily pull up all my cross-country skiing posts. Here are just a few highlights from the past few years (now the Nordic Skiing Category):
It's Thanksgiving Week, and the forecast includes snow for the Upper Peninsula, which means we should all be able to hit the trails soon. More than likely the first stop will likely be ABR near Ironwood, Michigan. Given my excitement over the impending snow, I give you my Nordic Ski Review for this year including my first ever Northstar Nerd Fashion Show!
While you might find the idea of a fashion show crazy, given the HUGE difficulty I had finding some "retro" ski wear this Fall, I want to insure my readers don't have the same difficulties! As always, it's important to point out that the NorthstarNerd never takes money to review any product. Good or bad, my opinions are my own.
(Make certain you see my Nordic Skiing Section of this site with a custom X-Ski Search Engine, Garmin measured ski trail distances … and more via MinnSki)
In this show I will review … (scroll down for the embedded video .. both videos require a YouTube connection to work properly. The fashion show will display w/o a YouTube connection, but you won't hear the yodeling!)
Bjorn Daehlie Ski Wear (found at almost any ski shop)
commentary: Bjorn Daehlie Ski Wear provides good wind protection and is good for all around training and touring. The jacket allows the skier full upper body movement for pole plants. For the serious skier, unless it is extremely cold (-0F), you will overheat during hard workouts.
Cross Country Skiing Men's Knickers (via the Sportsman Guide)
commentary: Finding good knickers for the serious "retro" skier is hard. I finally stumbled across these knickers from the Sportsman Guide. Although the knickers are used, you will be purchasing some fantastic German Army Surplus Knickers. My seamstress said the quality of the construction and wool was very high. However, that leads me to one other point. I am 6 feet 2 inches tall and weigh 175 pounds with a 36 inch waist line. Even though I purchased "large sized" knickers it was necessary to let them out for comfortable skiing. It was worth every penny!
commentary: Christel at Bergland Trachten Imports defines customer service. The search for men's knee socks via Google was a HUGE challenge. You don't want to know what often comes up in search results … unless I was trying to outfit my wife for a different kind of exercise in the bedroom. Although one can find lots of socks online, finding cross-country ski socks that come up all the way to my knees and have color (snowflake patterns like yesteryear) was almost impossible. The key to a successful Google Search was to query "socks" and "trachten". Apparently Tracht defines folk wear from Austria and Bavaria (Wikipedia entry).
commentary: Thanks to Exos Medical who rescued my racing season last year when I broke my thumb and tore a ligament during a bad Fall, I am now outfitted in the latest racing uniform.
commentary: Due to my own stupidity and a dishonest person, I had some skis stolen at the end of last ski season. After a very hard 25k workout, I entered the warming house to get some water. Still being tired, I went to my car and left my skis in the rack next to the chalet. When I returned later … my skis were gone. Thus, this year I will be skiing on two new pairs of Atomic Classic Skis (Pro Classic for training and Pro Race Classic for races)
Thus … without further adieu … Happy Holidays from the Northstar Nerd!
Nordic Fashion Show on PhotoPeach
Retro Cross-Country Skiing Roots!
Finally, if you really enjoy cross-country skiing and the retro look, visit Wood N Skis! You'll find great commentary, instructions on how to pine tar your skis, wood skis for sale … and this great video on visiting the birthplace of cross-country skiing … and guess what, it's not Norway! You'll be visiting the Altai Mountains in central Asia (China).
Here is the latest computer engineering prank from the hallowed halls of academic learning (via my son).
Find a friend's computer which is unattended, hopefully not an software engineering student. From the task manager turn off explorer.exe process and insert your favorite screenshot for the desktop image. Sit back and enjoy your friend's frustration! (and for this I am paying thousands of dollars per year in tuition for my son?!). Actually, GE has offered Erik (my son) a very nice electrical engineering co-op job … thus some of the money must be well spent. Anyhow, Happy Thanksgiving everyone. At home on vacation enjoying time with my devious son who is also on Thanksgiving break from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. I plan to password protect my home latop ASAP!
And from MIT, learn about some classic engineering pranks … such as how MIT students took over the Rose Bowl scoreboard to announce they were beating CalTech!
I’ve been quiet with respect to Legos for much to long! However, as anyone who is involved with First Lego League knows, it’s tournament time! It seems strange after all these years of coaching S.N.I.P (Super Nerds In Pink) to be a spectator on the sidelines … however my boys are all off to engineering colleges around the USA. Thus, I decided it was time to do a few updates to my Google Custom Lego Educational Search Engine. After a few queries, I discovered that Google itself has finally caught the Lego bug. Here are the latest additions:
The Lego Engineering lecture was given by the folks at Tufts University, who first defined this domain. To learn and see more with respect to Lego Education, link to my special section of my Engineering Learning Wiki, or just try the custom Google Lego Search Engine which I created last year.
Enjoy a brief sojourn and Viennese Waltz with the Northstar Nerd and his wife as they hike the Lake Superior Wilderness (video link). While some folks may enjoy vacations to warmer climates, an off season get-away allowed Molly and me to hike for two days without ever seeing another person on the trails. You'll cover in about 2 minutes what took us 8 hours of hiking over two days!