August 8, 2003
A new Iqaluit sport
- snowmoboating
Who says you need ice
and snow to snowmobile?
JANE
GEORGE
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Tim
MacLeod of Iqaluit races his snowmobile across Zippermouth Pond. (PHOTO COURTESY
OF TIM MacLEOD)
|
The sun is shining, it's
a hot day, the water is slick and you're racing along in your snowmobile, kicking
up a plume of water in your wake.
If that sounds like a dream,
just take a walk along Iqaluit's Road to Nowhere or past Iqaluit's airport some
evening, and you'll hear the sounds of enthusiastic snowmobilers practising
"watercross" - snowmobile racing on the water.
There's nothing to it,
said Tim MacLeod of Iqaluit, an avid motorcyclist and snowmobiler.
MacLeod tried out riding
his snowmobile on water for the first time this week on Zippermouth Pond.
"I'm sure you can
go as far as you can go," he said. "But if you stop, you'll sink."
At one point, MacLeod said,
he revved his motor and found his snowmobile doing a kind of "wheelie"
into the air on the water.
When a snowmobile is out
on the water, its tracks work a bit like paddles, while the skis help the machine
slide across the water.
Although Iqaluit snowmobilers
are new to this extreme sport, there are already watercross associations and
races in the South.
One New York State watercross
enthusiast constructed a pond for racers and spectators to come and enjoy watercross.
Watercross race events include drag races, oval races (consisting of four-lap
circuits for heats and six-lap circuits for finals), ramp-jumping, timed figure-eights,
and even couples oval racing.
Snowmobiles used for watercross
should be able to maintain a water speed at 80-90 km/h.
Drivers should remove their
seats, tape up the hood to keep water off the clutch and belt, and yank the
tether if it becomes obvious they are going into the drink. As long as the engine
isn't running when it goes under, it won't be damaged.
The snowmobile can survive
- as long as it doesn't sink in salt water and you can find it.
So far this summer, seven
snowmobiles are reported to have been lost in the pond near the new development
on the Road to Nowhere and 24 year old had to be rescued last week when his
machine sank.
|