BRAINERD -- I have a passion for hunting predators during winter, and I love to cross-country ski, so it's only natural for me to mix the two sports.
I first cross-country skied in the early '70s. Back then there were no groomed ski trails. That was fine with my friends and me, since we skied not to follow someone's path, nor for exercise, but to access remote locations during winters when the snow was deep. Usually we had a rifle slung over one shoulder and wore white clothing, the better to ambush a fox or coyote.
My first pair of skis was made of wood -- heavy and wide. That was OK since the broad boards allowed additional floatation on the untracked snow upon which I traveled. But at the time most cross-country skis were outfitted with three-pin bindings, into which low-topped, often skimpy ski boots were attached. The boots were neither warm nor durable -- not the type of footwear needed for long treks into the boondocks.
Then one day while walking the aisles of a sporting goods store I came across a display of snowshoes. They were fancy webs, the frames were constructed of lightweight metal, not wood, and the webbing was neoprene instead of the traditional leather.
But most interesting to me were the bindings; they were attached to the snowshoes via a metal plate that pivoted on a rod.
"That should work on cross-country skis," I thought. So I bought a pair of the bindings.
Off to the hardware store I went, where I purchased a set of metal door hinges. When I returned home I gathered an old pair of skis, removed the three-pin bindings and retrofitted the snowshoe bindings to the skis using the door hinges as a pivot instead of the metal rods. This would allow me to wear whatever boots were appropriate for the day, instead of those odd-looking plastic-bottomed, nonfunctional ski boots.
With my modified skis in hand I headed out to give them a try. The system worked great. I felt like Red Green, proud of my accomplishment, and I didn't use any duct tape. "If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy."