"Lets see it Mom!" ... I say similar things to my wife! This is such a great video! Please continue making more with your wife, it's so informative and will help so many more folks.
Dad, I agree, your tip has definitely helped. As a result, she is starting her turn more with the lower body and less with swinging the shoulders. I would work on her posture with equal flex in ankles, knees and hips, arms carried more firmly forward and out, tighten the core just a little, and a feeling of stacked over the outside ski through the turn. But, she is your wife, not mine, I as well have to be careful or I am cleaning up more dishes.
I was out this morning and ripping Nabob, Wizard, Birdseye and of course Steins and Perseverance…. Your tip to move my inside shoulder forward was MONEY!!!!! Thanks
The focus was pressure from fall line to finish. Consider new ski pressure at top of turn to middle v middle to finish. Challenge, how light on the ski can we be at the bottom. An indicator as to how effectively we were able to pressure the majority from top to fall line.
Hey Dad, love your videos. Question. What would you recommend for a good generic style of cleaner for the base of my skis? Something that's economical and that I might have hanging around the house? Thanks. JR
@@sicretservice I’m not trying to teach her anything. This was the only tip iv given her all year. She watches me ski and enjoys time with the family on the hill. I’m quite proud of her turns
I think that pushing your outside shoulder closer to the outside tip has some effect, but this is not at all that important. The priority order must be 1. most important is what you do with your ankles and lower legs. These body parts are closest to the skis.. 2. Second important must be what you do with your balance, how do you use your whole torso over your skis and in the direction of the fall-line. Only next may come your shoulders, hands, head and so on. This skier makes skidded parallel turns, she does not cross over her skis, she just turn them on the snow surface (pivoting the skis). These turns are not advanced turns. For advanced turns you need to cross over your skis, so that your torso moves from the hillside of the skis to the valley-side and also you need to edge your skis with your ankles before the skis start to turn around your torso. There is no quick fix for that, moving the shoulder is not able to fix the issues of this skier.
@@skidadTV Yes, understood, but the whole idea of downhill skiing is to let the edges of the skis to work, and for this you need edge angles that are high enough in order to avoid skidding of the skis in the direction of the fall-line. Shoulder movements can increase the edge angle a little. So she can feel happier, but this is just a very little step of improvement. Ask her if she is afraid of steep slopes and ice, she has all reasons to be...
Let me see if I am catching what you are laying down here. When you initiate a turn to the left you generate pressure (or drive) from your right ski though core engagement that is consistent with the right shoulder driving into the turn (to the left) and into the fallline (downhill). This is what I teach but I'm not sure if this is what you are saying or not. There was some ambiguity for me in your explanation between right and left when explaining the shoulder motion. Thank you.
Left shoulder flexes toward right ski tip in a right footed turn (a turn that goes to the left) Right shoulder flexes towards left ski tip in a left footed turn (turn to the right) Flex is controlled through the core
@@skidadTV Hmmm, that's what I thought you were saying and it is opposite of what I teach. I'm going to have to experiment with this. Thinking about it from my computer right now I think that it may not matter so much left or right as long as the motion is in the core directed "down the hill". I'll let you know what I think after I play with this. Thanks for giving my something new to play with.
@@skidadTV I played with this yesterday on the mountain and it was interesting how similar and yet different what you are teaching here is to what I 'usually' do and teach. Your approach of driving the shoulder opposite of the ski that you are driving engages the core in a similar way but feels more like a contra body movement position (CBMP) that I feel when I dance tango. This feels good and natural to me. My approach of driving the same shoulder and the ski feels more like I am driving into the turn like a racer. Both engage the core. Thanks again for giving me something new to think about and experiment with.
@frankacri1649 I have heard the “Z” vs. “C” thing quite a bit in PSIA. I believe it’s a misguided concept and has limited the development of high level skiers. I believe that the “coma” shape turn is the most accurate representation and will lead to a better final product
@@skidadTV I'm CSIA certified and have skied with many PSIA. This was my assessment. I kept it very general for the average skier to understand the concept of a true ski turn.
"Lets see it Mom!" ... I say similar things to my wife! This is such a great video! Please continue making more with your wife, it's so informative and will help so many more folks.
I love this format. If it’s easier so much the better.
Dad,
I agree, your tip has definitely helped. As a result, she is starting her turn more with the lower body and less with swinging the shoulders. I would work on her posture with equal flex in ankles, knees and hips, arms carried more firmly forward and out, tighten the core just a little, and a feeling of stacked over the outside ski through the turn. But, she is your wife, not mine, I as well have to be careful or I am cleaning up more dishes.
I was out this morning and ripping Nabob, Wizard, Birdseye and of course Steins and Perseverance…. Your tip to move my inside shoulder forward was MONEY!!!!! Thanks
Great to hear Jay!
Cool format 🙏😊
Her shoulders don’t appear to have moved -
I do however love your thoughts ref to increasing the tip pressure
Great vid.
The focus was pressure from fall line to finish. Consider new ski pressure at top of turn to middle v middle to finish. Challenge, how light on the ski can we be at the bottom. An indicator as to how effectively we were able to pressure the majority from top to fall line.
Not trying to give her any more tips and I’m definitely not showing her the TH-cam comments
Nice one. Love it ❤❤❤
Dude this is genious.
Hey Dad, love your videos. Question. What would you recommend for a good generic style of cleaner for the base of my skis? Something that's economical and that I might have hanging around the house? Thanks. JR
Do a “hot scrape”
@@skidadTV ✅
Научи свою жену нормально кататься, она понятия не имеет как поставить лыжы на кант одновременно и нормально загрузить внешнюю лыжу.
@@sicretservice I’m not trying to teach her anything. This was the only tip iv given her all year. She watches me ski and enjoys time with the family on the hill.
I’m quite proud of her turns
I think that pushing your outside shoulder closer to the outside tip has some effect, but this is not at all that important. The priority order must be 1. most important is what you do with your ankles and lower legs. These body parts are closest to the skis.. 2. Second important must be what you do with your balance, how do you use your whole torso over your skis and in the direction of the fall-line.
Only next may come your shoulders, hands, head and so on.
This skier makes skidded parallel turns, she does not cross over her skis, she just turn them on the snow surface (pivoting the skis).
These turns are not advanced turns.
For advanced turns you need to cross over your skis, so that your torso moves from the hillside of the skis to the valley-side and also you need to edge your skis with your ankles before the skis start to turn around your torso.
There is no quick fix for that, moving the shoulder is not able to fix the issues of this skier.
But she is skiing better and happy with her turns 🤷
@@skidadTV Yes, understood, but the whole idea of downhill skiing is to let the edges of the skis to work, and for this you need edge angles that are high enough in order to avoid skidding of the skis in the direction of the fall-line.
Shoulder movements can increase the edge angle a little. So she can feel happier, but this is just a very little step of improvement. Ask her if she is afraid of steep slopes and ice, she has all reasons to be...
where can we send you our videos and how much is it coach? thanks a lot
dunn83@gmail.com
I work on the value for value model
Let me see if I am catching what you are laying down here. When you initiate a turn to the left you generate pressure (or drive) from your right ski though core engagement that is consistent with the right shoulder driving into the turn (to the left) and into the fallline (downhill). This is what I teach but I'm not sure if this is what you are saying or not. There was some ambiguity for me in your explanation between right and left when explaining the shoulder motion. Thank you.
Also, I love this green screen format! It has a lot of potential. Keep it up.
Left shoulder flexes toward right ski tip in a right footed turn (a turn that goes to the left)
Right shoulder flexes towards left ski tip in a left footed turn (turn to the right)
Flex is controlled through the core
@@skidadTV Hmmm, that's what I thought you were saying and it is opposite of what I teach. I'm going to have to experiment with this. Thinking about it from my computer right now I think that it may not matter so much left or right as long as the motion is in the core directed "down the hill". I'll let you know what I think after I play with this. Thanks for giving my something new to play with.
@@philliptoone what you “usually” say, doesn’t matter. What matters is what she needs and what can make meaningful change within her skiing.
@@skidadTV I played with this yesterday on the mountain and it was interesting how similar and yet different what you are teaching here is to what I 'usually' do and teach. Your approach of driving the shoulder opposite of the ski that you are driving engages the core in a similar way but feels more like a contra body movement position (CBMP) that I feel when I dance tango. This feels good and natural to me. My approach of driving the same shoulder and the ski feels more like I am driving into the turn like a racer. Both engage the core. Thanks again for giving me something new to think about and experiment with.
We call them "Z" turns compared to rounded 'C' turns. Seperate the upper and lower body with some agulation.
@frankacri1649 I have heard the “Z” vs. “C” thing quite a bit in PSIA. I believe it’s a misguided concept and has limited the development of high level skiers.
I believe that the “coma” shape turn is the most accurate representation and will lead to a better final product
@@skidadTV I'm CSIA certified and have skied with many PSIA. This was my assessment. I kept it very general for the average skier to understand the concept of a true ski turn.