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‘Feeling really special’: Ski to Sea marks 50th anniversary, prepares to usher in summer

National kayak champion Jonas Ecker competed in the 2022 Ski to Sea race for the Beavers Tree Service team.
National kayak champion Jonas Ecker competed in the 2022 Ski to Sea race for the Beavers Tree Service team. Courtesy to The Bellingham Herald

Ski to Sea is marking its 50th anniversary this weekend with nearly 500 teams and participants from across North America and the world.

Bellingham’s signature race is a seven-leg relay that starts with cross-country skiing at the Mt. Baker Ski Area and ends with sea kayakers pulling out of the water at Marine Park in Fairhaven to ring the finishing bell.

In between, there’s downhill skiing and snowboarding, running, bicycling, canoeing, and cyclocross.

“There’s been people who have been participating for 40 years or more,” race director Anna Rankin told The Bellingham Herald. “This year is feeling really special to me.”

Start time is 7:30 a..m. Sunday, May 28, and the first teams begin to arrive at Marine Park usually about 1:30 p.m.

Birch Equipment’s team kayaker is first to ring the bell at Marine Park in Fairhaven during the Ski to Sea race on Sunday, May 29, 2022, in Whatcom County, Wash.
Birch Equipment’s team kayaker is first to ring the bell at Marine Park in Fairhaven during the Ski to Sea race on Sunday, May 29, 2022, in Whatcom County, Wash. Denver Pratt The Bellingham Herald

Some 478 teams are registered in several divisions to tackle the 93-mile course that goes from 4,300 feet to sea level, Rankin said.

Competitors are from 40 U.S. states and several foreign countries, including Italy and Pakistan, she said.

The annual event attracts thousands of participants and spectators alike and serves to unofficially usher in summer.

Traffic considerations

Since Mount Baker Highway is used for the running and road bike legs of the race, it will be closed to traffic starting in the mountain village of Glacier at 7:15 a.m. Sunday and reopen about 1 p.m., Rankin said.

Traffic could be heavy at several transition points for racers along the route, including Riverside Park in Everson, Hovander Homestead Park in Ferndale, and Zuanich Point Park and Marine Park in Bellingham.

The orange line shows the 93-mile route of the 2023 Ski to Sea race, starting at the Mt. Baker Ski Area and ending at Marine Park in the Fairhaven shopping district of Bellingham, Wash.
The orange line shows the 93-mile route of the 2023 Ski to Sea race, starting at the Mt. Baker Ski Area and ending at Marine Park in the Fairhaven shopping district of Bellingham, Wash. Ski to Sea Courtesy to The Bellingham Herald

Party time

Several streets will be closed in the Fairhaven shopping district for an after-race party and fair that features music, a beer garden and special sales.

Traffic will be heavy and parking will be difficult, so event organizers suggest walking, biking or riding the bus.

Whatcom Transportation Authority buses will run every 15 minutes along Route 1 from the downtown station to Fairhaven.

Fairhaven can be reached on foot or by bike from the South Bay Trail, which is about 2 miles from downtown Bellingham.

Alyssa Reetz of Are We There Yet? team heads to the pre-race cyclocross meeting at Hovander Park for the Ski to Sea race in Whatcom County, Wash., on Sunday, May 29, 2022.
Alyssa Reetz of Are We There Yet? team heads to the pre-race cyclocross meeting at Hovander Park for the Ski to Sea race in Whatcom County, Wash., on Sunday, May 29, 2022. Robert Mittendorf The Bellingham Herald

This story was originally published May 25, 2023 at 12:27 PM.

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Robert Mittendorf
The Bellingham Herald
Robert Mittendorf covers civic issues, weather, traffic and how people are coping with the high cost of housing for The Bellingham Herald. A journalist since 1984, he also served 22 years as a volunteer firefighter for South Whatcom Fire Authority before retiring in 2025.
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