Article Menu
Ski TLC
Alpine Skis
Telemark Skis
Skate Skis
Classical XC Skis

Related Features
Gearing Up for Free-heel Skiing
Skate Skiing Primer
NE Backcountry Skiing
X-C Skiing MN's Gunflint Trail
Utah Backcountry Ski Tour

Related Resources
GORP Travel: Skiing/Snowsports
GORP Skiing & Snowsports
Regional X-C Skiing Guide
Skiing Forums
Skiing Books
GORP Gear
 
online favorites
GEAR
Tune Up Your Skis
Classical Cross-Country Skis
By Michael Lanza

Waxable Cross-Country Skis
Traditional kick-and-glide cross-country skis (classical) get the same wax treatment as skating skis, with minor differences. Use a warm iron to apply a glide wax to the tips and tails of diagonal skis just as with skating skis. Each time you go out — and often more than once while skiing — crayon a kick wax (aka grip wax) onto the middle of the ski, and use a synthetic cork to smooth it out. (Always smooth from tip to tail.) Kick waxes are color-coded for specific temperatures. Old wax should be diligently scraped off and new wax applied when needed. A wax-removing solvent helps remove sticky waxes.

Waxless Cross-Country Skis
Some 85 percent of all nordic touring skis sold in this country are waxless, for one very good reason: They require virtually no maintenance. But a little TLC will make even these no-brainer boards perform better. Wax the tips and tails above and below the fish scales before skiing, for better gliding and turning.


Michael Lanza is a regular contributor to several outdoor magazines and author of The Ultimate Guide to Backcountry Travel (AMC Books) and New England Hiking (Foghorn Press).

Move back to *Introduction: Ski TLC

Return to *Top

RELATED GORP LINKS
*GORP Travel: Skiing and Snowsports
*GORP Skiing/Snowsports
*GORP Regional X-C Skiing Guide
*GORP Gear


Article © Michael Lanza, 2000.



Top Trips

Road Trip Guides

National Park Guides

Hiking Guides

Today's Gear Guy

Gear Guides
[from Outside magazine]