a snow covered slope

FIRST TRACKS FABRICATION Improving trail grooming for all snow conditions

Introducing the

Innovative Design

What is a Ski Dolly and how does it improve winter trail grooming?

Product Testing Opportunities

Join us as a product tester and provide valuable feedback on our innovative equipment.

Products & Custom Builds

Redefining winter trail grooming with our innovative Ski Dolly (patent pending), designed to enhance the efficiency and quality of your snow grooming operations.

Place an order on our Product Page. Do you need a ski dolly to be customized? Reach out to us using the product request form.

Product Review

"We use snowmobiles for grooming, where hitch-pull and gooseneck attachment points require the operator to constantly raise and lower groomer knives to adjust for suspension loading. This can result in variable grooming quality and even getting stuck in certain conditions.
The ski dolly does exactly what it’s designed to do- eliminate the rise and fall of the groomer due to suspension sag, resulting in a better product out the back, with less work from the operator.
Using the ski dolly with an 84” YTS Ginzugroomer, we also found grooming to be superior on tight turns, wiping out (snowmobile) ski tracks better and more cleanly than gooseneck and hitch attachments."

Dan Cantrell, Trails Program Director - Bridger Ski Foundation

"The Hitch Draggin’ Ski Dolly is a very valuable piece of grooming equipment in our fleet. We groom with snowmobiles on undulating mountain terrain with significant snowfall in Teton Valley, Idaho. The addition of the Ski Dolly allows groomers to produce a much better product without getting equipment buried or stuck. The articulation created doesn’t “dig” Ginzugroomer blades into the dirt in shallow snowpack and doesn’t “lift” the blades out of the snow on undulating terrain. Having groomed hundreds of hours and thousands of kilometers of Nordic trails with the Hitch Draggin' Ski Dolly in tow, I am very pleased to have this piece of equipment on every one of our setups."

Kevin Emery, Winter Trails Manager - Teton Valley Trails and Pathways