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I had the pleasure this evening of paddling my kayak on Lake Calhoun with 16 HOW women.  Doc brought lots of boats, the weather was perfect, and many of the women were from our kayaking trip last summer. What a joy!  We paddled Calhoun into Lake of the Isles, around the island and back.  It took about an hour. 60 minutes of conversations on the water, moving meditation, women connecting. Never mind the frantic paddling of Hoigaard’s Canoe Derby participants rocking the water around us.  We moved into the zone and enjoyed the evening.

 

By this time next week the North American Nordic Walking Expo will be a memory.

In the meantime I’m hoping that you’re all coming out to see us at Hyland Lake Park Reserve on Saturday.  Remember - it’s free, it’s outdoors, it’s fun!

The Nordic Walk around Hyland Lake is at 10am, an excellent opportunity to meet other Nordic Walkers from your neighborhood.  The rest of the day is full of classes, clinics, and free introductory lessons.  Check out the schedule for the day on Hoigaard’s or visit Great Lake Nordic Walkers for the latest on our guests and special programs.

Consider this your official invitation from the Nordic Walking Queen!!!!

 See you on Saturday!

Last week we got rained out on the first Nordic Walking Tuesday, this week it was a beautiful evening and there were 18 of us at Lake Calhoun with our poles. It was a reunion of sorts, walking friends I haven’t seen all winter. It’s like the first ski clinic in the fall when I see instructor friends I don’t see all summer.  It was so good to reconnect with all of them.  We had just a few new walkers so we really stepped out on the walk around a lake free of ice with wind surfers on the waves and kites in the sky.

 

It’s only the beginning of what promises to be the summer for Nordic Walking!

 

Let the season begin!

It’s Wednesday morning in Grand Marais Minnesota. For those not familiar with Minnesota I’m way up on the “arrowhead” just about 60 miles from Canada, right on Lake Superior. Grand Marais is a small town cradled between the big water and the big woods. At times there are more deer on the hiway than cars. It’s an artistic community, inspired by the natural elements around them that set the pace of every day. The Superior Hiking trail, Gunflint lodge, Lutsen ski resort, multiple state parks, and of course the lake itself are only a few feet away.In summer it’s a busy tourist spot, in winter lots of the stores and restaurants are closed so it’s much quieter, the perfect place for a retreat from life in the city. I’m watching the day begin on the lake. Yesterday it was windy and big waves crashed on the beaches and rocks along the shore. Water splashed up over the breaker for the harbor. Clouds broke apart creating islands of sunlight out on the lakeand eventually the day ended with a spectacular sunset of red and gold.We are a mixed group of wise and wonderful women, ten in number and generations in experience. We have skied, snowshoed, explored, ate and drank together during our time here. We have stretched our bodies and our minds, challenging ourselves to take a deep breathe and go a little further.I am refreshed in spirit and mind and almost ready to return to the cities. I love HOW, Hoigaard’s Outdoor Women. It allows me to know women who are outside my normal circle of life. I am enriched by their energy and their willingness to share their lives with me and each other on our trips and events. It is a joy and a blessing.

 This time of year it’s all about Nordic Walking.  In the past 2 weeks I’ve led walks at  Mall of America, Medica, Plymouth Senior Center, Minnehaha Park and taught classes in 3 different communities.  The numbers aren’t all big, sometimes as few as 5 walkers, but the enthusiasm and delight in discovering Nordic walking and trying the poles for the first time is always huge.

I should know better than to plan the first Nordic Walk of the season on April Fool’s Day. Once again mother nature played a trick on us and gave us snow on Tuesday evening after heavy rain all day long. I awoke on Wednesday and looked out at snow flurries that were determined to keep going the whole morning.  We had 2 walks scheduled at the MN Arboretum, one o’clock and six o’clock, and I was totally convinced that due to the cold, dreary, nasty day there would be no one to play with on the trail. My vision was one of sitting around all day hoping for someone to come walk with me.

 But I was to be totally surprised! We had 25 walkers at 1:00 and 28 more at 6pm.  Most of them were new walkers and some had driven 45 miles just for the walk. They were all excited to be there and the recurring theme was “heck, we’re from Minnesota, a little cold and snow won’t keep us from doing what we had planned.” 

It was sooo much fun!  After a short introduction to the poles we walked the 3 mile drive through the gardens and orchards. Not much happening there except for some snowdrops blooming in the frozen hosta gardens but the action was all on the path with the energy and joy of nordic walking for the first time.  If this day was any indication, it’s going to be a great season!

Did You Know?

Heart Desease is this country’s #1 killer.A sobering thought for a Monday morning. Heart disease, not cancer, is our biggest threat. Even more sobering is that a lack of physical activity doubles your risk of heart disease. Once again, sitting around and doing nothing is not an option!

The American Heart Association has a plan to help get people moving in the workplace. Wednesday, April 8 is National Start! Walking Day. “On this day, employees are encouraged to wear sneakers to work and take at least 30 minutes out of their day to get up and walk. It’s a great way to raise awareness of the Start! movement and to give your coworkers a friendly push toward a healthier life.” They even provide a free packet of information to make it easy to do. It’s available at http://mystartonline.org/about_start_walking_day.jsp. I just signed Hoigaard’s up and already have my email with all the information. Check it out. If you can get one fellow employee up and moving, it’s worth it!

Of course HOW is way ahead of the curve, we’ll be on our second week of scheduled walks by the time this kicks off. Mittens and hats will be required to walk this week but cold has never kept us from our appointed walks. You will still see us out at the Arboretum on Wednesday although I don’t think we’ll see any early blooms in the gardens. Tuesday walks will begin on April 7th at Lake Calhoun.  Be sure to check the calendar for other CE Classes.


I received a a silver aspen leaf to wear around my neck as a special thank you from the women on the Breckenridge trip. (Thank you ladies!  It was my pleasure to be with you!)

When you drive through the rocky mountains today your eye is drawn to the rust colored lodge pole pines on the hillsides. They are dying from an infestation of pine beetles. Scientists tell us that the outbreak is due in part to global warming, the winters just aren’t cold enough to kill off the beetles so there’s more of the hungry little buggers to eat the trees.  It’s hard to see the devastation of the forests but we need to remember that it is a natural occurance and we are helpless except to let nature run it’s course. When the beetles have had their feast the forest as we know it will be gone but the hills will not remain bare.  Nature will always choose life and although the forest will change there will be new growth and new life on the mountainsides.

There are some areas where they have logged the dead trees and left small teepee stacks of dead branches. These will be burned this spring under controlled fires, more efficient than hauling it all out of the mountains. They look like funeral pyres for the dead trees. Once burned the ashes will replenish the ground, rain and sun will spur new growth on open land and the aspen, the largest living organism - connected by one expansive root system, will cover the hillsides.

This time of year is hard on everyone. We’re wanting so hard for spring to come. We’re all hoping that winter will let go it’s grip, the sun will warm us, and the ground will thaw out. We wait for that miracle of life to spring forth and turn our black and white winter world into one of green and color. We need only be patient, mother nature will choose life and will awake from the frozen ground in all her spring glory.

What do you do to choose life right now for yourself?  Have you been hibernating all winter waiting for spring to rouse you from your winter slump? Are you ready to put away the winter toys and get out with your bike and nordic walking poles? Whatever part of the activity spectrum you’ve been on for this winter it’s time to choose life, choose health, and get outside to play. You might even consider putting on your rubber boots and walking in a few puddles, just don’t splash your friend!

I know that many of you walk all year round and that some of you have been walking indoors this winter, but it’s time to get back outside. April kicks off the season with our first walk out at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum on April 1.  It might be risky to plan an outdoor event for April Fool’s Day, never know what mother nature has in store for us, but I will be leading walks at both 1pm and 6pm that day, rain or shine.  (I’m just not going to include snow, ok?)

 As always, we’ll bring the demo poles along so you can try them.  Come experience for yourself the joy and benefits of walking with poles.  If you’re not a member of the Arboretum you can get in free for the day by using the password “nordic walking” with the gate keeper.  Be sure to ask for your membership for Mother’s day so you can go out often to walk. 

After the first we will be walking on Tuesdays in April, Mondays in May and Wednesdays in June.  We decided that alternating the days each month would give everyone a chance to come with us.  Locations for the walks are on my calendar here or you can also see them at www.hoigaards.com

 I have also scheduled lots of Community Ed classes throughout the western suburbs.  If you would like to learn more about nordic walking and have some more intentional coaching on technique the schedule for these classes is also on the calendar. 

 I hope to see you out on the trail soon!

I really have to get better at taking my camera along for pictures.  Monday night we were snowshoeing on Medicine Lake, a local frozen wonder, as the full moon rose over the island of trees.  It was a great picture, full moon rising, women covered head to toe against the below zero temps, and lots of snow kicking up from our snowshoes.  You’ll have to imagine with me.

But it wasn’t really about the moon or the snow.  It was about a group of women very close to my heart. In my past life I was a “family day care provider”.  I spent my days with children, loving them, teaching them, playing with them, taking them outside everyday.  Years have passed and the children have grown and some have babies of their own but still I get together with the “daycare moms” and we go outside together.  We snowshoe, nordic walk, hike, stroll, simply sit in the garden and we connect with each other sharing the joys and pains and celebrations and trials of our lives. 

 It’s an important time for me. These women know me like no others. They have been there for me through 27 years of diapers and school conferences and job changes and graduations and so much more. I know that if I needed anyone of them today I would only have to call and they would be here to hold me and help me to the other side of whatever was happening.  I count these women among the many blessings in my life and I know how lucky I am that they found me all those years ago.

 May the full moon find you all with friends to love and support you in these hard times. 

 When LEKI was in town we did a quick filming on getting started with nordic walking poles. It’s been posted on You Tube so I guess I’m a star now!  Check it out:

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oyWOPHhSxWY

The target ad this week featured Nordic Walking poles for $20. Now we all know it’s a cheap substitute for a good Nordic Walking pole, but the amazing thing is that they have it at all.  Just think, only 4 years ago, when we all started nordic walking no one knew anything about it.  Even today many think we’re training for nordic skiing, or maybe we’re just confused. I think it’s exciting that nordic walking has come to the point where it is accessible to everyone! 

Joy in the Snow

 Did You Know?

It’s my birthday today!  And my birthday wish is for all of you to go outside and play in the snow today.

Gail and I have been snowshoeing instead of nordic walking this holiday week.  There is something magical about taking off in the fresh snow before the sun comes up. We tracked along our road and into the fields and wetlands around us.  I wonder what the office dwellers thought when they came to work and saw our big foot prints in their front yards.

We have a pact for our morning walks, we often begin our walks with a bit of venting about the hard stuff going on in our lives.  Morning ranting and raving gets us walking faster and ups the heart rate. But the rule is that by the end of the walk we have to find the joy in the day.  It may be something very simple, but it always brings us back to being centered and grateful for the new day and all it brings to our lives.  It sets me up to seeing joy all day long.

On Tuesday morning we made joy, literally. In our snowshoes we stomped out 30 foot high “Joy, Peace, Joy” in the snow fields over at the Carlson Twin Towers. We laughed and giggled the whole time, snow flying from our snow shoes and visions of employees reading our message in the snow dancing in our heads.  I don’t know if anyone even saw it, but it certainly brought joy to our day as we told our shared the story over and over again.

I hope joy has found all of you during this holiday season. My mom’s favorite Christmas Card greeting was “Joy to Your World!”  May we all see joy every day, letting it find us when we least expect it.

I don’t walk at -20 degrees.

I have to draw the line somewhere and Monday morning was the day. Gail and I gave up our nordic walking poles and tried our new Pilates DVD workout.

You can call me a wimp if you want, but it’s really dark at 6am and with the wind and cold and ice it seemed to be the better decision to work out indoors. Of course that brings it’s own challenge, like getting the DVD to play and her dog Coco to stay out from under our feet. I must get some points for walking across the yards, at least I still went outside first thing. We’ll get our snowshoes out for the end of the week, a couple of days of pilates is about all I can handle before coffee.

And speaking of being out in the cold, if you missed the kick off cross country ski under the full moon last week (since there were only 3 of us I know many of you missed it) it was a beautiful evening. The full moon cooperated and was simply glorious in the night ski. The lighted lake trail at Hyland was groomed for skate skiing and the snow was good. We were 3 of only a handful of skiers out that night and finished 2 loops before we came in to warm up. The areas will need some snow to recover from our rain on Sunday but be sure to join us soon for an evening outdoors. There’s something magical about being out in a winter night. As hard as it is to motivate myself to get dressed to go out I’m always glad to be there.

As you finish up your holiday preparations and get really busy with family committments I hope you’ll find the time to get outside and breathe deep the cold, clear air. Give yourself the gift of time outdoors among all the busy doings of the season. Let the peace of the natural world bring peace to your spirit.

Joy to you all!

I did it!  Nordic Walked 13.1 miles on the Birkie Trail with my poles and 97 other pole walkers. Not being a nordic skier I’ve never done the Birkie or any other “marathon” events.  I was really excited and a little nervous to do a half marathon nordic walking.  It was an exciting event, well organized with over 400 participants in the 4 different offerings: relay marathon, 1/2 marathon of running, 1/2 marathon of nordic walking and a 5K fun run/walk.

 The weather was perfect!  Not a cloud in the sky and 55 degrees at the start.  The trees were just beginning to show some fall color.  The trail is actually almost a grassy road through the woods, 18 feet wide with rolling hills all the way.  It never goes flat, you’re always either going up or down so it’s quite the workout.  The staff and volunteers who take care of trail maintenance do a terrific job, the grass is mowed and large obstacles are removed on a regular basis.  It cleary is a labor of love for them.

 My goal was to try and maintain 15 minute miles throughout the Trek.  I finished in 3 hours and 18 minutes, just over my goal.  The events were staggered so everyone finished at the same time and it was fun to come across the finish line with runners and walkers of all ages. 

 I really enjoyed the challenge of doing the distance.  I wasn’t sure how it would feel to walk that long but I felt strong and once I warmed up and fell into rhythm the time flew by.  There were lots of conversations and new friends to be made on the trail, and there were surprises around every bend of the trail.

 It’s an annual event so you might think about joining us next year!

There were 30 nordic walkers on the trails by Hoigaard’s tonight.  Eleven who were walking with poles for the very first time, and lots of familiar faces.  I had spent the middle of the day at Methodist Hospital Farmer’s Healthy Market promoting healthy lifestyle choices for outdoor activities.  Seems that lots of people did just that tonight.

 It was our biggest group of the season and we were not really prepared for it.  It’s a lot of poles to adjust and we want to make everyone feel welcome and part of the group.  Once we got out walking it was a beautiful evening and everyone fell into rhythm by the end of the first mile so we were on a roll.  Lives connected, new friends made, a new activity explored. 

 I’m ready for bed!

It was a simple article in the paper, but it seems to have reached out to so many people.  I am humbled and very touched by the response to the “How I got this body” article from last week.  I have talked with so many individuals and couples, coming into Hoigaard’s to look at nordic walking poles.  And their stories all have one thing in common, reading about the early morning walking gave them hope, inspiration, confidence, and motivation to try something new that just might make a difference in their life.  Again, I am humbled by the response.  Thank you.

It’s always fun to be in the press.  Pictures taken at 6am are questionalbe at best but I do believe that Sarah Moran, writer for the Star Tribune “How I got this Body” article, did a good job profiling Nordic Walking and how it plays into my day.  You can’t see the picture but the text is available at

http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle/22072149.html?location_refer=$urlTrackSectionName

 Seems that nordic walking is getting headlines more and more. It’s great fun to be part of it all. I have to thank Mike White from Hoigaard’s for putting us on the “cutting edge” 4 years ago.  Hoigaard’s introduced nordic walking to the Twin Cities way before it was ready for walking with poles.  And now today my calendar is full of classes and demos, from the Mall of America to the Birke Trail, it’s all about nordic walking.  Amazing what time and patience will introduce to your life.

The heat and mosquitos weren’t enough to keep 25 women from walking last nite.  It was good to see some familiar faces and there were also many new friends from recent demo’s and classes ready to do some more miles.  It was our night to get off the paved path and unto grass and dirt, my favorite way to walk when the tips of the poles really connect with the earth and move you along.  I do think it’s easier to feel the upper body engagement when off the beaten path.

Conversations on the trail covered work and family and summer plans. The one common thread was how good it was to be out with HOW, this group of women that simply welcomes you into the evening’s activity and encourages you to be true to yourself.  There was lots of energy about the Baker Weekend and the Birke Trek, yea!  And when the walk was over a small group came back to my house to enjoy a cold drink and sitting by the pool and gardens.  The wonder of HOW!

 By the way, our Monday eletter went out to 608 women. We continue to grow and touch more and more women every day.  thank you!

I believe in multi tasking, I’m really quite good at it.  But I do believe that even a good skill can be put to obnoxious use.  When I left this afternoon to drive west for a Nordic walking demo I passed a young woman in the middle of her afternoon walk.  She was moving at a pretty good clip but was wearing a head set, not sure if it was music or a phone, she was pretty animated so she was either singing or talking while she walked.

 

I can understand singing along to your favorite tunes while you walk, kinda like whistling while you work. But she also had a notebook and was reading notes or maybe comparing them if she was talking, while she was walking. Bummer. I’m pretty sure she didn’t notice that the French lilacs had just burst into bloom overnight or that the lilies at the corner house had opened or that you can smell peonies every where you go right now.

We celebrated the first day of summer with a wedding in my gardens!  A dear friend from work married her sole mate here on the family property this evening.  It was quite the event complete with a beautiful bride, perfect weather, manicured gardens and yards, delicious food, sweet wine, and lots of wonderful friends to here to celebrate their union and new life together.  Michael Monroe played for the wedding and reception, amazing, he was here on my deck playing all my favorite songs. Wow.  We had a few moments of rain that graced us with a double rainbow to bless the wedding. It was truly magical!

 

And I now know that having 200 people to party here is not such a scary thing…

 

Some mornings make it worth your while to get up and get going. This morning on our 3 ½ mile Nordic walk we saw (bear with me while we use a well known theme)

8 great blue herons

7 Canadian Geese watching

6 brand new ducklings

5 snapping turtle eggs being layed

4 goslings playing

3 swallows spinning

2 orange koi jumping

And one egret with a green heron fishing

 

It was a glorious morning!  And it was a Friday, doesn’t get much better.  Happy Solstice

As we approach the solstice I am struck by how unbalanced it is to have all this extra daylight.  Having traveled to the tropics I have learned to appreciate the balanced life that can be experienced when the day is 12 hours of sunlight followed by 12 hours of night.

 

 sunset4.JPG

 

There is a constant rhythm of life that doesn’t suddenly get turned upside down by longer days or never ending nights.  You don’t feel compelled to get one more thing done, to work just a little longer, to extend your energy over a few more hours as the day and night shift for the summer.  Sometimes summer exhausts me with the expectation, real or otherwise, that with the additional hours of daylight I should somehow be more productive. I can be constantly disappointing myself as I reach the end of the day and collapse knowing there was more to be done. 

Somehow I need to go into these long days with their late sunsets and early sunrises and not burn out. Instead maybe this year I can let myself use these extra hours of daylight to sit a little longer by my pool or walk a little longer on a trail or talk a bit with an old friend.  Time is relative, there really isn’t any more just because it’s summer. But maybe I can use it a little more wisely.

April 20

I spent the weekend with 40 women at Camp St Croix in Hudson, Wisconson.  It was our 2nd annual Women’s Weekend with an emphasis on taking good care of oneself in all aspects of our lives.  For most of us it’s a chance to dump our everyday responsibilities and go play for a couple of days.  It’s fun to watch the women as they slowly let go of kids, jobs, homes and life stresses and start to relax.  Friday night we sat by an outdoor fire til almost midnight just talking and enjoying each other’s company.  Strangers when we arrived and friends immediately.  It’s that special magic of women just accepting you for who you are and inviting you to openly share yourself and learn from each other. 

There was a multitude of choices during the weekend and of course Nordic Walking was at the top of the list.  We did 3 different walks, introducing lots of women to my favorite outdoor activity. The fun thing about camp is that we get to walk on grassy trails, a joy after all the miles on paved paths.  The camp is on the St Croix River with lots of trees and open fields.  The brisk air, yes it’s still cold here in Minnesota, combined with the rhythm of the walk, kept us at a good pace.  As always everyone really enjoyed the opportunity to try the poles.

The highlight of Saturday was when Julie and I took a break and went for our own walk down the hill towards the river.  There is an eagle’s nest on the trail.  When we stopped to look at it the eagle came flying out of the tree behind us, swooping down over our heads on it’s way to the nest.  Took our breath away!

I’m please to say that Brynda from Hudson is going to try and start a Nordic Walking group on the east side.

We’ve done lots of classes in Stillwater and so she has a base of walkers.  Good luck to her!

April 13

New York was a blast!  It was a thrill to nordic walk on CBS Early Show and then I got 2 hours of nordic walking in Central Park with my new best friend Lindy from LEKI.  It was a glorious Saturday afternoon, sunny and warm and Central Park was in full bloom.  New Yorkers were out in force enjoying the day; walkers with strollers and dogs, bikers, skaters, baseball games, volleyball, row boats and people just sitting in the sun.  Such a treat coming from the never ending winter we seem to be having in Minnesota.

And now it’s back to reality.  I flew in early this morning and worked the floor at Hoigaard’s all day.  Such a whirlwind adventure, was it real???  I am in constant awe at how Nordic Walking has changed my life.

It all seems so unreal.  I’m in New York City, guest of CBS and LEKI.  I left Minnesota in the middle of a spring snow storm, go figure, and now have been prepped, coached, dined and dressed for the spot tomorrow morning on the CBS Early Morning Show.  My LEKI hosts have taken good care of me and I have been assured that it will be fun, easy and over before I know it.  Now I’m suppose to sleep well so I’m ready for my big one minute of fame and fortune on national TV. Somehow I’m not sure that sleep is going to be easy.  I imagine wild dreams until the wake up call rings me into the big day. 

I am overwhelmed by the outpouring of support and love from family and friends.   I know that I am only here because you all believe in me and who I am.   Thank you all!

Be sure to tune into CBS Early Show tomorrow morning. The Nordic Walking Queen will be there!

I can’t believe it!  Greg Wozer, president of LEKI USA, called me on Wednesday to ask if I would be willing to fly to New York next Friday and be the spokesperson for Nordic Walking on CBS Morning Show.  Wow!   Of course I said yes.

It’s been a long journey.  I’ve been a walker since 1985.  Getting up at 5:30 am to hit the trail for my morning workout. Why so early?  It was the only time that no one else wanted and I’m basically a morning person anyway.  My walking partner, Gail, lives next door so we set the motivation for each other to get up and going.  A day is just not right if it doesn’t start out with a walk.  Walking sets the pace for my day, the  rhythm of my life.  Adding Nordic Walking Poles in 2004 was a perfect fit!  I’ve personally seen the results in my own fitness levels and love to pass the good news on to everyone I meet. 

LEKI’s mantra is one walker at a time!  And I’m known to stop or turn around on the trail to answer questions and tell people about what I’m doing.

And now I get to New York and tell millions of people about it!  I’m excited and nervous and wondering what to wear. It’s going to be such a fun adventure.  What I know right now is that it will be an outside one minute of fame sometime during the Early Morning Show.  If I get more details I’ll pass them on.  Til then, New York get ready, the Nordic Walking Queen is coming.

One of my most successful programs last summer was Hoigaard’s Nordic Walking Tuesdays. Meeting at different spots within the Twin Cities, we provided Nordic Walking Demo poles and a quick introduction to the sport and then off we would go for a 2 ½ to 3 mile walk.  Last year we averaged 25 women on Tuesdays from April to October and maxed out at 42 one evening in June. Many of the women came every week, connecting with the group and bringing their friends come with them to try Nordic walking.   Through the course of the summer, including corporate demos, classes, special events and the Tuesday walks I introduced over 500 people to Nordic walking while tracking over 150 miles.

April 1 was our first Nordic Walk of the new season.  Everyone was excited to get back out on the trails after a long winter here in Minnesota.  I was worried that mother nature could play an April Fool’s joke on us weather wise but I never expected the 8 inches of snow we got on Monday, March 31.  My email and voice mail was filled with women depressed about not being able to walk.  But Tuesday dawned with full sun and lots of melting. Mixed with the superb job the Minneapolis Park Board did plowing sometime during the early morning hours and the path around Lake Calhoun was clear and dry when I checked it at noon. Nordic Walking Tuesdays could begin!

I drove the Hoigaard’s van to the lake and waited for the walkers to arrive, hoping they got my message that the path was good and the walk was on.  One by one they came skipping over the snow drifts with big smiles and hello’s. Hugs and introductions, poles adjusted, leaders identified.  By the time we strode off we had 18 nordic walkers swinging their poles and delighting in the early evening sun and brisk air.  It was so good to reconnect with my summer friends from HOW.  We had 4 newcomers so I got to walk the sunny side of the lake with them, working on rhythm and beginning technique.  We all finished together back at the beach, feeling good all over!

Is it the rhythm of the poles, the connection with other women, the new friendships, being outside, the good workout, the runner’s high at the end?  Everyone felt better at the end of the walk, everyone had let go of their day and now looked forward to the rest of the evening, everyone had rosy cheeks and a big smile and we can’t wait for next week.

It was my pleasure to take 10 women from the HOW (Hoigaard’s Outdoor Women) Program to Steamboat Springs in early March for 3 days of skiing and adventure. Being a large group we quickly became known as the “Ladies from Minnesota” to the local taxi company. We ranged in age from late 20’s to early 60’s and included downhill as well as Nordic skiers. One of our group came all the way from Amsterdam to join us making us an international HOW group once again.

This was a year of lots of snow for the Rocky Mountain states and Steamboat was on their way to a record winter with over 400 inches as we arrived. The snow gods were good to us, we had new snow every night and beautiful “blue bird days” our first and third day on the mountain.

One of the highlights of our trip was skiing with Deb Armstrong. She coached the women in the triangle of power as it applies to skiing and allowed that they can use the image in everyday life as well. She’s delightful, energetic and has a very personal approach with women. Her tips early on made it easier for women to enjoy the variety of snow conditions all over the mountain.

A trip to Steamboat wouldn’t be complete without an evening at the Strawberry Hot Springs. The hot water and beautiful setting was the perfect antidote for sore muscles and tired bodies. We even took the plunge into the 40 degree river!

I really enjoy traveling with women. It’s a very special experience in the lack of competition in the group. Women offer total support to each other, offering and taking options, allowing each other to be independent (one of our group took off on her own every day to the Nordic center) and recognizing and respecting their own personal limits. We all took great delight in getting to know other and came away having made new friends and connections.

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Upcoming Events

INWA Nordic Walking Instructor Training
August 14/15
presented by Nordic Walking North America
Malin Svensson and Gary Johnson
Eagan Community Center, Eagan MN
details and registration: www.nordicwalkingna.com

Hoigaard's Nordic Walking Tuesdays
all walks begin at 6:30pm calendar for locations
Free LEKI demo poles available to use for the walks

Nordic Walking Classes

Hoigaards Intro to Nordic Walking
Wed August 11 6-7:30pm
meet at Hoigaards
5425 Excelsior Blvd
St Louis Park MN 55416

Push those Poles
Thursdays August 12-26 and Sept 2-16
Nordic Walking training for distance and technique
details and registration: www.hoigaards.com

Plymouth Park and Rec
www.ci.plymouth.mn.us
Nordic Walk for Life
Saturday Aug 7 & 14
Plymouth Creek Center

Hoigaard's Outdoors at the MN Landscape Arboretum
come out and Nordic Walk with us!
September 28 1:30 and 6pm

InverGrove Park and Rec

Nordic Walking Demo
Sunday Sept 26 1pm

Chaska Community Ed
www.district112.org
Nordic Walking
Sept 14,21 Oct 5 6-7pm

Minnetonka Community Ed
www.minnetonkacommunityed.org
Nordic Walking Intro
Thurs Sept 23 6pm

St Paul Harding Community Ed
651-293-8733
Introduction to Nordic Walking
Monday Sept 27 at Como Park

SAVE THE DATE!
Walk for Wolves
a fun 5K Nordic Walk for the International Wolf Center
Tuesday October 19 5pm