The History of Snowshoe Racing
For some athletes, there is no such thing as cabin fever, as the snowy outdoors provides yet another outlet for competitive sport
- By Jim Morrison
- Smithsonian.com, January 11, 2011, Subscribe
Laurie Lambert is a runner, always has been, it seems. So when she was snowed in at her remote cabin in New Mexico’s Sangre de Cristo Mountains nine years ago, she strapped on a tiny pair of children’s snowshoes and went out for a long run.
“It was awesome,” she remembers. “I was like, wow, I think I could make a sport out of this. Little did I know it was already a sport.”
As Lambert soon found out, snowshoe racing has become an increasingly popular sport in the United States and abroad, where last January more than 5,000 people competed in the 37th running of La Ciaspolada Snowshoe Race in the Italian Dolomites, a ten-kilometer event won by a former Olympic marathoner from New Zealand. In the United States, this season began with a race in Truckee, California, in December, and ends in March with the National Snowshoe Championships in Cable, Wisconsin.
Mark Elmore, the sports director for the United States Snowshoe Association, was a die-hard endurance runner who started racing on snowshoes in 1989. “It added variety to the winter season,” he says. “And I really liked the people. There was a different mentality than road racing where you’re just trying to beat the other competitors. In snowshoeing, you’re racing against the course and the snow conditions. You’re competing against yourself a little more.”
Most of the enthusiasts are like Lambert – runners, cyclists or triathletes looking for a new challenge and another way to get outside and raise their heart rates. “It’s so much fun,” she says. “It’s fantastic exercise. I’ve run marathons and done all kinds of crazy things and it’s the best workout I’ve ever done.”
The rise of snowshoe racing parallels the rise in popularity of snowshoeing. According to the Outdoor Industry Foundation, 3.4 million Americans traipsed through the winter wonderland on snowshoes in 2009, a 17.4 percent increase over 2008.
Divining when the snowshoe was invented is difficult because the ancient materials used to make them were perishable, but the consensus is they developed in Central Asia about 4000 B.C. Elmore says snowshoes may have facilitated crossing the Bering land bridge. They appear to have developed independently in both North America and Europe, with European snowshoes longer and narrower).
The traditional webbed snowshoe used in racing was created by American Indians. Explorer Samuel de Champlain wrote in his memoirs of them using “a kind of snowshoe that are two to three times larger than those in France, that they tie to their feet, and thus go on the snow, without sinking into it, otherwise they would not be able to hunt or go from one location to the other.”
In the 1830s, painter George Catlin depicted Indian use of snowshoes in paintings such as Snowshoe Dance at the First Snowfall and Buffalo Chase in Winter, Indians on Snowshoes. Tribes each developed their own shoe, differing in shape and size. The bear paw, an oval design, was short and wide and favored in forested areas. The Ojibwa shoe resembled a canoe, and its double toe helped the tribes of Manitoba cross diverse country. The Michigan, a snowhsoe credited to the Huron tribe, featured a long tail and was shaped like a tennis racket, allowing hunters to carry heavy loads of elk and buffalo.
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Comments (3)
How often does an athlete get the opportunity to qualify and race in a National Championship? Since qulaifying times are based on age-group and gender Snowshoe racing offers that opportunity to many athletes...how cool is that? For more on Snowshoe Racing rules/strategy discussions see www.snowshoewarriors.com
Posted by Brad Canham on February 4,2011 | 11:52 AM
THANK YOU for the fantastic article...'bout time some heads start turning toward one of the most Ancient and Humanity-saving traditions on the planet! Now; ilg says, "Let's get snowshoe racing into the Winter Olympics!...I mean, c'mon...they gave Ice Dancing medal status...why not the sport which has it's roots in humanity's survival in the Northern Hemisphere!??!"
Posted by coach steve ilg on January 25,2011 | 08:53 PM
Interesting article.
If you want to know more about snowshoe racing in the USA or are interesting in giving it a try, go to www.snowshoeracing.com and visit the website of the United States Snowshoe Association (USSSA)
There are calendars for the five regions around the country listing many of the snowshoe races.
Stephen Cobb
Website Manger- USSSA, ESSRA
Posted by Stephen Cobb on January 12,2011 | 06:38 PM