Skierg/Skike

Talk about the ski ergometer and training tool from Concept2
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winniewinser
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Location: England

Skierg/Skike

Post by winniewinser » April 11th, 2023, 6:01 am

This is probably a bit niche but just wondering if anyone have used the Skierg and Skike/Roller Ski outside?

I just picked up some Skikes on Ebay and am looking forward to putting some of the Skierg technique into practice in the Spring/Summer sunshine (if the UK ever gets any :wink: )

http://www.rollerski.co.uk/skike_v8_tour.html

Another exercise to keep me fit an something where the dog can also come along for some exercise as long as he doesn't trip me up!
6'2" 52yo
Alex
Recent 2k - 7:19
All time 2k - 6:50.2 (LW)

gvcormac
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Joined: April 20th, 2022, 10:27 am

Re: Skierg/Skike

Post by gvcormac » April 11th, 2023, 6:17 am

No, but you can find YouTube videos. If you get the stand, it is easy enough to roll about, though on soft grass/ground you probably need bigger wheels like on a hand cart.

DghSpanishWelsh
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Joined: June 27th, 2024, 6:26 pm

Re: Skierg/Skike

Post by DghSpanishWelsh » July 12th, 2024, 5:16 am

Not skikes - have tried them and didn't like them - but have some SRB rollerskis, have raced them in the past (not very well). I find the skierg more physically taxing than double-poling on rollerskis.

Re rollerskis, a few observations:

First thing to do is, double-pole. When I first had rollerski lessons, they had us trying to stride (more on striding below). 5 hours later, I had learned nothing. Only progressed when I concentrated on double-poling. Do that, and the confidence to skate will come. Sorry if that's too basic, if you're beyond that stage;

I find the models with pneumatic tyres much more comfortable (even on tarmac) than the solid-tyres/wheels;

I don't do diagonal stride on rollerskis. I either skate, or double-pole. Some in the UK XC-skiing scene seem to want to be more Norwegian than the Norwegians, and have a thing about having to do diagonal stride. But there's a school of thought that says diagonal stride on rollerskis is a bad idea, for technical reasons;

Brakes on rollerskis are your friend. Skis on snow don't have breaks, but on snow you're not falling onto hard tarmac;

I've always gone for ratcheted wheels. Purists will say I should have unratcheted wheels for when I want to skate, but who wants to risk an unwanted roll-back?

I prefer skis with proper ski boots (SRB XSR01 are my faves) but have a pair that are used with normal shoes, like skikes. Heavier, more restrictive (esp re heel lift) but better than nothing and have their uses.

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