A skijoring team competes in Leadville, Colo., on Saturday, March 2, 2024. Skijoring draws its name from the Norwegian word skikjoring, meaning โski driving.โ It started as a practical mode of transportation in Scandinavia and became popular in the Alps around 1900. Todayโs sport features horses at full gallop towing skiers by rope over jumps and around obstacles as they try to lance suspended hoops with a baton, typically a ski pole thatโs cut in half. (AP Photo/Thomas Peipert)
Nick Burri clicks into his ski bindings, squats to stretch his knees and scans the snowy race course. Moments later, heโs zipping past a series of gates at high speed and hurtling off jumps. But itโs not gravity pulling him toward the finish line: Itโs the brute force of a quarter horse named Sirius.
Welcome to skijoring: An extreme โ and quirky โ winter sport that celebrates the unlikely melding of rodeo and ski culture in the U.S. Mountain West.
Itโs a heart-pumping, white-knuckle competition in which horses โ and sometimes dogs, snowmobiles and even cars โ tow skiers by rope at speeds that can top 40 mph (64 kph) over jumps as high as 8 feet (2.4 meters) and around obstacles as they try to lance suspended hoops with a baton, typically a ski pole thatโs cut in half.
Every winter, thousands of people converge on the old mining town of Leadville, Colorado, high in the Rocky Mountains โ elevation 10,158 feet (3,096 meters) โ lining downtownโs main street and packing the saloons to witness one of the most popular skijoring races in the country. The spectacle, billed as โThe Granddaddy of โem All,โ has been a tradition here since 1949.
โItโs just the pure adrenaline that gets me to do it. โฆ And then getting these two different groups of people together with the riders and the skiers. Usually they donโt hang out, and getting them together, we mesh pretty well,โ said Burri, who wears fringed leather pants with his ski…
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