I'm thinking about getting a skiboard. I've never skied before but I have snowboarded. Anyway, I'm getting older and all i wanna do is have fun with my son going down a hill the easiest less injury prone way possible. Ive got a few questions: 1. Is this easy to learn? 2. Should I go with shorter (88) or longer (110cm) and 3. Should I go with ski boots or snowboard boots? I already have snowboard boots. Thanks for your help.
Most people find it easier to learn than skiing and snowboarding. If you've ever skated (ice or inline) you'll get that skate-like feel on skiboards. Which boards depend a lot on preference and the type of terrain you typically ride. Check out the Skiboard Connection group on Facebook or the Skiboards Online Forum for specific board recommendations. Ski boots will give you a more controlled feeling and provide the option to go with a releasable binding for safety and convenience. The Spruce riser lets you use releasable ski bindings and swap them from board to board with 4 screws (just like a snowboard binding).
Pretty harsh on the "Snow Jam" Vissere ax-1 bindings....They're really not that bad!!....Also, a new set of RVL8 Receptor bindings will set you back nearly 3 hundo....versus a set of the ax-1 attached to a pair of snowjam boards on ebay for less than a hundo. I get what you're saying, but for sure these bindings are a good starting point.
Not sure I can wait a whole year to learn about mounting screws
Keep em coming!! These are great!!
I'm thinking about getting a skiboard. I've never skied before but I have snowboarded. Anyway, I'm getting older and all i wanna do is have fun with my son going down a hill the easiest less injury prone way possible. Ive got a few questions:
1. Is this easy to learn?
2. Should I go with shorter (88) or longer (110cm) and
3. Should I go with ski boots or snowboard boots? I already have snowboard boots.
Thanks for your help.
Most people find it easier to learn than skiing and snowboarding. If you've ever skated (ice or inline) you'll get that skate-like feel on skiboards.
Which boards depend a lot on preference and the type of terrain you typically ride. Check out the Skiboard Connection group on Facebook or the Skiboards Online Forum for specific board recommendations.
Ski boots will give you a more controlled feeling and provide the option to go with a releasable binding for safety and convenience. The Spruce riser lets you use releasable ski bindings and swap them from board to board with 4 screws (just like a snowboard binding).
The fact that he never skipped a beat in 7 minutes still gets me
The same cannot be said for the rest of us who were there lol
@@CourtneyCelley I was standing in the bathroom thru whole thing trying my best not to laugh :)
I have original bigfoots since last week 😅
Pretty harsh on the "Snow Jam" Vissere ax-1 bindings....They're really not that bad!!....Also, a new set of RVL8 Receptor bindings will set you back nearly 3 hundo....versus a set of the ax-1 attached to a pair of snowjam boards on ebay for less than a hundo. I get what you're saying, but for sure these bindings are a good starting point.
Formal skiboarding, fucking awesome man.👌🏻
talked about a whole lot of nothing lol