Montana Outdoor Podcast

Skijoring’s Evolution: From Ancient Winter Travel to High-Speed Western Sport

Skijoring’s Evolution: From Ancient Winter Travel to High-Speed Western Sport

Skijoring didn’t start as a crowd-pleasing spectacle—it started as winter survival with style.

As Loren Zhimanskova notes, thousands of years ago in Central Asia, people were already being pulled across snow on skis by dogs and reindeer. The idea was later refined by Scandinavian Laplanders who needed a reliable way to travel frozen landscapes.

Over time, what was once necessity became novelty. “Ski driving” showed up at early Nordic Games and even made brief Olympic-era appearances in Europe, where skiers were towed behind riderless horses on frozen lakes—orderly, controlled, and a far cry from what the sport would become.

Then America got hold of it and, as Cowboys & Indians reports, turned the throttle all the way up. Returning WWII ski troops, ranchers, and mountain-town locals transformed skijoring into the fast, technical, heart-pounding sport now synonymous with the West—complete with jumps, gates, rings, and horses breaking 40 mph down snow-packed streets.

Today, Montana sits squarely in the middle of that evolution. The most recent Montana Outdoor Podcast episode pulls back the curtain on what modern skijoring looks like now—from the speed and skill to the culture and energy driving its resurgence.

The history is impressive, but if you want to know where the sport is headed, that’s where the real excitement is. Be sure to check out the podcast below if you haven’t seen it. Even if you have watched it, it’s worth watching again.

Topics Montana Outdoor Podcastskijoring