| What it is | Human-powered skiing across terrain |
| Bindings | Free heel (toe fixed) |
| Styles | Classic (striding) & skate |
| Focus | Endurance, efficient snow travel |
Cross-country skiing (Nordic skiing) is human-powered skiing across flat and rolling snow-covered terrain using lightweight skis and free-heel bindings that fix only the toe. Its two main styles are classic (striding in parallel tracks) and skate skiing (a skating motion on firm snow). It’s a major endurance sport and an efficient way to travel over snow.
Going across, not down
The free-heel, human-powered counterpart to alpine skiing; its downhill free-heel cousin is telemark skiing.
Frequently asked questions
What is cross-country skiing?
Cross-country, or Nordic, skiing is skiing under your own power across flat and rolling terrain using light skis and free-heel bindings. Rather than riding lifts downhill, you propel yourself, making it a cardiovascular endurance activity as much as a way to travel and enjoy snowy landscapes.
What's the difference between classic and skate skiing?
Classic skiing uses a straight-ahead striding (kick-and-glide) motion, often in set parallel tracks; skate skiing uses a side-to-side skating motion on firm, groomed snow and is generally faster and more aerobic. They use different skis, boots, and technique despite both being cross-country.
Cross-country vs alpine skiing?
Cross-country skiing is human-powered travel across terrain with free heels and light gear, emphasizing endurance; alpine skiing is lift-served downhill skiing with fixed heels and heavier gear, emphasizing descents. They're quite different sports sharing only the word 'skiing.'
Sources
- Cross-country skiing — PSIA-AASI
- Nordic skiing — The Mountaineers