Nice Greg. I love drills that force you into correct body position (incl moving your center across the skis and down the hill) without knowing it. My favorite for this was the javelin turn, lifting the downhill/outside tip and placing it across the uphill/inside tip, which magically forces your hip into the new turn, and your new outside ski on edge..
Fantastic, I love how you parody all the dreadful ski instructors out there. Port demos, clichéd techniques, demoing something different than the description. Brilliant, love it 😂😂😂🤣🤣
I have "a friend" who can make good c shaped turns but slips into z shaped turns because he is able to control speed better. What should I tell "my friend?"
I'm assuming your comment "is able to control speed" was "unable to". The move you want is when you are in transition (between turns) and ready to start the new turn is to extend you "uphill" leg, that removes weight or pressure from the downhill (ouside) leg and puts it on the new ski to begin the turn. Try it, slow round turns that finish going across the hill.
Not sure what that means - copied. I develop all my own content. I’m not the first to invent this. It’s a PSIA standard approach. I just hope it can help someone with their skiing.
Nice Greg. I love drills that force you into correct body position (incl moving your center across the skis and down the hill) without knowing it. My favorite for this was the javelin turn, lifting the downhill/outside tip and placing it across the uphill/inside tip, which magically forces your hip into the new turn, and your new outside ski on edge..
Fantastic, I love how you parody all the dreadful ski instructors out there. Port demos, clichéd techniques, demoing something different than the description. Brilliant, love it 😂😂😂🤣🤣
Ouch!!
interesting point of view Greg.
I have "a friend" who can make good c shaped turns but slips into z shaped turns because he is able to control speed better. What should I tell "my friend?"
I'm assuming your comment "is able to control speed" was "unable to". The move you want is when you are in transition (between turns) and ready to start the new turn is to extend you "uphill" leg, that removes weight or pressure from the downhill (ouside) leg and puts it on the new ski to begin the turn. Try it, slow round turns that finish going across the hill.
Greg. You a frame
not it!!!
copied from beginner's lesson, PMTS.
Not sure what that means - copied. I develop all my own content. I’m not the first to invent this. It’s a PSIA standard approach. I just hope it can help someone with their skiing.