
An Article About Grooming
Reprinting this from Chippewa Snow
Chasers site.
Grooming A Trail
Every thing you wanted to know but were afraid to ask!
By Jerry Moore Jr.
As Webmaster for the Chippewa Snow Chasers, I receive a
lot of e-mails concerning groomers and trail grooming.
As someone who drives the groomer day in and day out, I
find it hard believe how many snowmobiler's are unaware
of how a groomer works and what is involved in grooming
a trail. In this article I will attempt to explain in
terms everyone can understand how the trails are
prepared for your riding pleasure.
The following scenario would be typical for a
snowmobiler’s day especially on the weekend. It is 9:30
A.M., the sun is out and you have just finished
breakfast. Ready for a great day of riding, you get the
sled all warmed up and hit the trails. You say to
yourself, " Wow! These trails are smooth." The miles
fade into the distance behind you and we know you are
having fun. After a wonderful ride to your destination,
it is time to head back to the motel or cabin. As you
return to your camp or motel room, that trail that was
smooth eight hours ago, now looks like the U.S Army had
used it for target practice or it looks like a mountain
road in Afghanistan. How did it get this way, you ask?
Believe it or not, this question has been posed to me in
e-mails hundreds of times. The answers are not simple
because good trails depend on a number of factors,
temperature, amount and kind of snow, and the traffic
during the day. Snow can be fluffy like cotton, wet and
sloppy, granular like sugar and any one of a hundred
variations in between. As snowmobiles travel over the
smooth trails, the packed snow is loosened a bit as each
sled passes. Each machine tends to sink in where the
snow is soft and the harder portions of the trail become
the tops of the growing moguls. Spinning tracks, doing
doughnuts and speeding around corners loosens the snow
even faster. After hundreds of sleds have passed over a
trail, it becomes mogul alley. In addition,
temperatures above freezing are deadly to any trail no
matter where it is located and how much snow is on it.
The Chippewa Snow Chasers groom our trails every
night, weather permitting but there is no way that we
can keep those trails smooth 24 hours a day. There are a
few things in life that fall under the heading of
impossible and freshly groomed trails 24/7 is an
impossible dream. Two groomers cannot keep 81 miles of
trails smooth when hundreds of sleds rip up and down
them, spinning tracks, sliding around corners and
tearing up the fresh groom. We can go out at night and
try to repair the damage and make the trails smooth for
the next day, but the next day the hundreds of sleds are
back, tearing up the freshly groomed snow.
After hundreds of riders have torn up the trails, it is
the responsibility of the groomer driver to fix the
damage and make it smooth for the next day. Grooming
requires that we first fill the tractor with diesel and
fill up the thermos with a lot of coffee because we are
in for an all night trip. We leave our home base at
about 5pm. We start late because we need to groom the
trails when there are fewer sleds on them. Lower
traffic volume means the trail has a better chance to
set up and is much safer for everyone involved. We are
now rolling down the trail at a speedy 5 to 8 miles per
hour. We look out ahead of our front blade and all we
can see is moguls! It’s going to be a long night! We
drop our drag as low is it can go. The drag is that big
long thing we pull behind the grooming tractor. We have
to get the blades of the drag down to the bottom of the
moguls. If we only skim the top of the mogul, then we
are wasting our time. If we cut off the top of the
mogul, snow held in the drag will be deposited in the
low spots between the moguls. The trail will look
smooth behind the drag but it is not. The first
snowmobile that travels down such a trail will start a
wavy motion, because he is hitting hard snow (the top of
the mogul) and soft snow (the snow between the moguls)
and in no time the moguls will be built up again by the
sled traffic. By running our blades on the front of the
drag as low as we can go, we take the whole mogul out.
Now that the front blade of the drag has taken out the
mogul, the snow is funneled through a series of other
blades before it reaches the pan. (The pan is located at
the very back of the drag.) As the snow goes under the
pan, it gets flattened out and packed down.
Groomers call the snow that comes out from under the pan
"The Ribbon". Every groomer operator loves a good
ribbon. Now comes the most important part of grooming.
The ribbon needs time and cold temperatures to set up.
If the temperature is at or above freezing, the ribbon
will not set up. On a warm night if I get out of the
groomer to stretch and take a break and walk on the
ribbon, my footprints will be three or four inches deep.
If these conditions last, the trail will not hold up the
following day to all of the sled traffic. When it is
cold out and we have some new snow, the ribbon will set
up and will harden up almost like concrete. When the
weather is cold, the groomer operator is happy because
the trails can then take a bigger beating and will last
longer. We do use the front blade on the groomer as
well. The large front blade is used when the moguls are
really deep and when we have to bring snow back into a
corner where the speed demons have thrown it out.
I hope you are still with me and are paying attention
because you have learned something about making your
trails smooth. I have explained how a mogul starts,
what we do to get rid of them and how the ribbon looks
and feels. I will now explain how one should treat the
ribbon when you meet a groomer. When you are on a narrow
trail, you must ride on the ribbon after you meet a
groomer. When this happens, don't spin your track right
away. Speed won't hurt the ribbon but stopping and then
ripping it will. When you meet a groomer on a wide trail
you probably say, "Wow fresh trails, but don't jump on
the ribbon right away because the snow hasn’t had a
chance to set up yet. If it is reasonably smooth on the
old section, stay on the old section and let the new
ribbon set up. If the trail is rough, by all means get
on the smooth part since we don't want you to ride on
rough trails. Just be careful how you treat the ribbon
at first. There have been many times when I was grooming
the trail at two o'clock in the morning. A couple sleds
would follow me riding up and down spinning their tracks
and doing doughnuts on the freshly groomed ribbon.
These two idiots on those sleds ruined the riding on
that section of the trail for the following day.
One Saturday this past season, I began grooming out of
Hulbert at 6:00 p.m. I met what seemed like hundreds of
sleds but by 11 p.m. the sled traffic was almost gone.
I groomed down to Trout Lake and when I returned to
Hulbert at 7:30 a.m. the next morning, the trail looked
as if it hadn’t been groomed in over a week. Why was
the trail destroyed in less than twelve hours? The
answer that night was temperatures above freezing.
Temperatures held in the mid-thirties until almost 5:00
a.m. Finally, when the temperature dropped, the ribbon
began to set up, and since there were no sleds out
ripping it up at 5:00 A.M., the trail that Sunday
morning remained smooth until the weather warmed up
again. Once the temperature climbed above the freezing
mark, the trails quickly fell apart.
Weather is the major deciding factor in determining the
condition of the trails and how long a freshly groomed
trail lasts. Cold is good, colder is better and low sled
traffic and a cold night insure a good ride the next
day. There are times when I pray for wet snow. When we
receive wet snow and then cold weather follows, our
ribbon becomes like cement. There were times last winter
when I groomed during a warm day and I felt like I was
literally wasting my time. As soon as five sleds passed
me, it did not even look like I had groomed. That is why
we groom at night. The temperatures usually drop in the
evening and the lower amount of sled traffic gives the
ribbon time to set up. If you are sledding at night,
remember don't tear up the ribbon because you are
ruining it for everyone the next day.
I will end this groomer lesson on a final note. When you
meet a groomer, there are three things you must do.
First, get out of his way. The tractor and drag cannot
get off the trail easily. A snowmobile can get off the
trail much easier and remember a stuck sled is easier to
get out than a stuck grooming tractor! Second, use the
proper hand signals to let the groomer know how many
sleds are behind you. It is nice to know if someone else
is coming, especially if we are approaching a corner.
Third, give the drivers a big thumbs up and let them
know that you appreciate them volunteering hours of
their time to help groom the trails. If you come up
behind a groomer, wait until he sees you in his rear
view mirrors. As soon as he can find a place to get off
to the side, he will pull over, stop, and let you pass.
A little patience on your part could avoid a nasty
accident. Remember he is much bigger than you are!
Oh! I almost forgot. Another great way to keep the
snowmobile trails smooth is to join a club. Without
snowmobile clubs providing volunteer labor and raising
money to help buy grooming equipment, your trail permit
fees would need to be at least 10 or 15 times higher
than they are today. Join a club, and participate in
some of the events they sponsor throughout the year.
Become a part of the 10 percent of snowmobilers who help
with the trails. As more people participate, the job of
keeping our trails in great condition becomes easier for
everyone concerned.
All of the people in the Chippewa Snow Chasers are
strictly volunteers. We do not receive pay for our time.
We do it for the love of the sport and to provide our
area with nice and smooth trails. Thanks for taking the
time to read this long article. Your thumbs up and
support of the clubs is the tonic that keeps volunteers
going during those long lonely hours on the trail. By
the way, have a great ride!
|