After returning home to Colorado from Naturopathic medical school in Seattle, I felt a bit of ambivalence. One the one hand, I was home! On the other, I could no longer enjoy year-round forest running as part of my daily exercise. However, there was sun! But on the other hand, there was snow and ice that could really put you in the hurt locker if you tried to run or bike on that stuff. What’s a young man to do? I had learned many years ago that a daily dose of morning exercise was more than good practice, it was a necessity to keep myself happy. So, while it was great to have sun again, the snowy winters were really cramping my style. As a kid I never minded winter because I liked skiing, but mired in debt from school and struggling to find new patients, the rather expensive habit of skiing wasn’t terribly practical at this time in my life.
I don’t have any Norwegian blood in me that I know of, but perhaps there was some spiritual connection with the country that ignited in me around this time. Somehow I got the idea to try Nordic skiing. This would have been the last thing I wanted to try during high school, but somehow I was drawn to it. Doing a little sleuthing, I saw that 2017 was also the year that Karston Warholm first won the 400M Hurdles at the World Athletics championship. Perhaps the inner Viking was awakening the world over and I was somehow caught up in it. 
There are several places in Colorado where you can get started with Nordic skiing, and to my glee, the day pass is usually about 30$ as is the equipment rental. Compare that to a near 300$ ticket at other resorts and there wasn’t much arm twisting that needed to happen to get some Nordic skis on my feet. Even better, the tremendous amount of work the sport requires guarantees that you won’t see too many people on the trails like you would at your typical downhill resort. Now that I am a few seasons into the sport, I find myself once again sad when winter goes away, rather than depressed that it has come. So I’m remembering my kindergarten wisdom, snow is a blessing. Surely the wisdom of nature must agree with this great discovery I made, and who would know better than the elders of naturopathic medicine?
As usual, Henry Lindhlar never fails to enlighten us in his timeless epic, Nature Cure. He instructs us on page 75 of his opus, in most colorful language, “To me it seems a very foolish custom to run away from the invigorating northern winters to the enervating sameness of southern climates. One of the reasons I abandoned, with considerable financial sacrifice, a well-established home in a Texas city which is the Mecca of Health-seekers, was that I did not want to rear my children under the enervating influence of that beautiful climate. I for my part, I want some cold winter weather every year to stir up the lazy blood corpuscles, to set the blood bounding throughout the system and to freeze out the microbes.” In order to unpack that a little, we need to first define “enervating,” and that means to “deprive or drain of vitality” according to Oxford Languages. So next time you are tempted to move away for the Winter, now you know that Henry Lindhlar would be very disappointed.
To help you avoid incuring the displeasure of the chief apostle of the healing power of nature, I recommend that you take up Cross Country skiing, striving to make it up to the mountains at least once a month.
To make my case, I don’t think I need to say anything more than Jessie Diggins, first time American Gold medalist in any cross country ski event, but if you require more persuasion to get yourself to a nordic track, the sport has been described by two prominent exercise physiologists Grefory Haff and Travis Triplett, “the best cardiovascular exercise known. ” In their book, Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning, the authors put cross country skiing ahead of all others including distance running, snowshoeing, cyling or rowing. I personally knew I was onto something good when on my first trip up to the mountain to try cross-country skiing, I was shedding layers like a snake, despite it being a a very cold day. I have also learned that with a good 5 min warm up before braving the cold, my tendency to get white frigid fingers does just fine, even on the coldest of days. 
You might notice on your first day that you spend quite a bit of effort trying to get up from a fallen position. My first day was no differt, and even now just when I think I’m getting it, I find myself in full yard sale on the trail. No matter though, there aren’t too many consequences for falling into a pillow of white snow- in contrast to the less forgiving surfaces you skateboarders know all to well. The benefits of this struggle to stay upright while gliding forward far outweight the negatives as you develp and strengthen those muscle of the posterior chain. In terms of mental health, there is confidence that comes with getting out there, looking on all the white snow, breathing in the fresh mountain air, and best of all, not even realizing cold after the first 5 min of your day.