FAIRLEE, Vt. -- Tick. Tock. Tick. Tock. That's not a sound usually associated with ice-skating, but when you've got two oversized Nordic-skating blades attached to your feet, a little cadence goes a long way toward remaining upright and experiencing what some say is the next best thing to flying.
Nordic blades are similar to what speedskaters use to become blurs of movement, and what Europeans and Canadians use to propel themselves across miles of ice.
A scattering of neophytes wobble around on what is reputedly the longest groomed ice track in the country at the Lake Morey WinterFest here, where a glorious, 2-mile collection of loops and straightaways frees skaters from the usual tight oval of rinks. This four-day event (stretched over three weekends) on enormous Lake Morey, surrounded by hills draped in thick bolts of forest, celebrates various human-powered (and dog-powered) means of goofing off in the snow and on the ice. The festival ends Saturday with a skate-a-thon where you can clip into a dashing set of Nordic blades and fulfill your Hans Brinker-Bonnie Blair-Eric Heiden fantasies.