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The nonprofit Skiku is introducing a growing number of Alaskan youth to cross-country skiing.
The nonprofit Skiku is introducing a growing number of Alaskan youth to cross-country skiing. (Photo: Skiku)

How to Get an Entire State Hooked on Skiing

The nonprofit Skiku has brought nordic skiing to thousands of Native kids in Alaska, where access to the sport has historically been limited

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The nonprofit Skiku is introducing a growing number of Alaskan youth to cross-country skiing.
(Photo: Skiku)

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Late winter in Alaska can be a magical time. Days are getting longer, frozen rivers are still blanketed with snow, and in many places, conditions are聽near-perfect聽for cross-country skiing. Yet while sports like basketball and volleyball have long been popular in rural Alaska, skiing simply wasn鈥檛 a thing until recently in many remote villages, where everyone and everything must be flown in on tiny planes.

is on a mission to change that. Founded in 2012 by I帽upiaq skier Robin Kornfield and , Skiku is introducing a growing number of Alaskans to cross-country skiing and biathlon, a sport that combines skiing and shooting rifles. Along with its sister organization, NANANordic, Skiku has delivered planeloads of ski gear鈥攁long with Olympians and other world-class athletes鈥攖o 55 Alaskan villages and counting. The athletes stay for a week each year, coaching local students and their families, but the donated skis, boots, and poles remain in the communities after they fly away.

鈥淭he majority of families in Alaska aren鈥檛 going out and buying their kids ski gear,鈥 says Calisa Kastning, executive director of Skiku, whose name combines the I帽upiaq word for ice, siku, with ski. 鈥淏ut if the gear is available, skiing can be so valuable to these remote communities.鈥

Roger Franklin, principal of the in Shungnak, Alaska, says the program helps students build confidence, improves their physical and emotional well-being, and has helped increase school attendance. It also offers kids a healthy activity and positive role models in places with some of the nation鈥檚 highest rates of substance abuse and suicide. And it does so while allowing Alaska Native kids to stay on their homelands鈥攁nd connect to them in new ways.

So far, Skiku has gotten skis onto the feet of 8,000 kids and 500 adults, 98 percent of whom are Alaska Native. From the banks of the Yukon to the Arctic coast, students ski not just for fun and exercise, but also to go ice fishing, hunting, or traveling from village to village.


One of the few parts of rural Alaska that had a vibrant ski tradition before Skiku is the Bering Strait region, an 80,000-square-mile school district in northwest Alaska. In the 1970s, a teacher from New Hampshire arrived there with eight pairs of cross-country skis stashed in his luggage. Over the next few decades, he introduced hundreds of students to the sport.

Paul Lincoln, who grew up in White Mountain鈥攁n I帽upiaq village of about 200 people on a peninsula jutting into the Bering Sea鈥攚as one of Miles鈥檚 students. After Lincoln clicked into his first pair of skis at seven years old, 鈥渟kiing pretty much consumed me,鈥 he says. Most villages didn鈥檛 have television at the time, and at first聽skiing just seemed like a fun thing to do in the winter. But Lincoln soon realized that it could offer him more. He eventually got a skiing scholarship to Dartmouth College, became a member of the U.S. Biathlon Team, and competed in Finland, Bulgaria, and across the United States. As he recalled in , skiing 鈥渂rought us into the possibility of expanding our world, while still having tremendous value for the one we came from.鈥

But skiing wasn鈥檛 just Lincoln鈥檚 ticket out of rural Alaska鈥攊t was also a way for him to return. Although he now lives in Anchorage, Lincoln is and has served as a volunteer coach in White Mountain and other villages, sharing the sport with younger generations. 鈥淔or a kid in a village to see [that] I鈥檝e been all over the world because of skiing and I came from a village just like you did鈥 can be incredibly meaningful, Lincoln says.

Kids in rural Alaska seem to have an almost preternatural predisposition for skiing, their coaches say, even though it hasn鈥檛 traditionally been聽part of Alaska Native cultures.

Thanks to Skiku, NANANordic, and John Miles, skiing has become woven into the culture of rural Alaska. The stories of聽how it鈥檚 changed people鈥檚 lives are both uplifting and heart wrenching. One woman credits skiing with helping her survive foster care and relocation. A boy who drowned was buried with his most meaningful possession, a ski-meet participation ribbon. And numerous kids have gone on to compete at national and international levels, including in the Olympics. Kids in rural Alaska seem to have an almost preternatural predisposition for skiing, their coaches say, even though it hasn鈥檛 traditionally been part of Alaska Native cultures.

Beyond the terrain and climate, skiing fits into village life for other reasons. 鈥淚n some really small communities, the schools don鈥檛 have enough students to field a basketball team or a wrestling team,鈥 says Tyler Henegan, who lives near Anchorage and works as a field biologist in the summer and a ski coach in the winter. 鈥淏ut skiing is accessible to everybody. The third-graders can go out with the ninth-graders and kids can go with their parents and everyone can just have a good time together.鈥

As Skiku demonstrates, getting kids into outdoor sports doesn鈥檛 have to be complicated. (If you don鈥檛 have to fly gear and coaches around 663,000 square miles of mostly roadless wildlands, it鈥檚 probably even less complicated.) And once communities have the equipment and know-how, the momentum can be self-sustaining. As Paul Lincoln says, 鈥淚t really doesn鈥檛 take much. If it鈥檚 winter and there鈥檚 snow on the ground, you just put on a pair of skis and go.鈥

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