Great video! I wish that I have watched this video before my first ski day! I had exact the same problem and it was so painful for the knee of inside leg.
Hot chocolate! Best tip EVER! Had a lesson today first in 9 years and I did this nearly the whole lesson lol as I was scared and was trying to slow my turns down but it just made them more unstable as they were locked in lol
Hey. Yes it’s a weird sensation, not always a fun one that locked in feeling 😀 Thank you. Great to hear the hot chocolate helped. And I hope you enjoyed your lesson. ⛷🤙🏻
I am locking my skis when I turn (one ski tip gets on the other) and I cant move/relax the inside ski. And because of that I am not making efficient turns. Any tricks for that?
I’ve made a little video. I will upload it later for you. But in short, twisting both skis at the same time will help with this. Whilst both are sliding 😀
Nice, i'm going to remember this for next time. I find this trait kicking in when the conditions are icy, you just get a little paranoid and start digging in, if you're like me and still a beginner, especially when it's a challenging and steep run. I tend to find some of the training videos make things look straight forward at times, it's when you try it yourself it's alot more tricky when you add the external variables lol. All about practice and muscle memory i guess.
Just speaking as a total noob who got very bruised up on my first day, from 1:53 - 2:40, I can't even tell what it is he's doing, it just looks like he's being pulled by an invisible string
Hey. I’m keeping my skis quite flat so they are easier to turn. Hopefully this helps to explain. ruclips.net/video/WslkXYm6ino/видео.html Thank you for the comment.
hahaha oh man this is so relatable. What he's doing is: 1) He's keeping both skis tipped slightly on their inside edge but not too much, so you don't get that "locking" effect. Both skis are actually trying to turn a little bit, because of their curved shape, but in opposite directions --- the right ski is trying to turn left and the left ski is trying to turn right --- so he's going straight down but brushing the snow with those edges to avoid picking up too much speed. 2) He's shifting his weight slightly to the *outside* ski of the turn --- shift weight to the right ski to turn left. This is because the ski with more weight grips the snow more than the unweighted ski, so you turn with the curved shape of the weighted ski as the unweighted ski's edge brushes lightly against the snow. 3) He's twisting his legs (in his hip sockets) slightly in the direction of the turn, pointing the tips of the skis the direction he wants to go. You can't really see the weight shift or the leg twist, so it looks like he's just turning by magic.
Your chest should point towards where you want to go , down the fall line. Newbies chase their ski tips rather than facing down the fall line. Free the heels, Telemark style and your mind will follow.
I initially imagined you frantically typing in that question as your barreling down the mountain 😂 I'm a beginner and currently watching this from the lodge before I head out!
Balancing more on top of the ski versus against it. I'm going to shamelessly steal that one. So once you started skidding the skis your feet closed a little. So a smaller wedge means to less edge angle which promotes skidding. Well done.
God dammit I hate the stupid imagery that ski instructors use! "if I had a boot full of hot cocoa....." "squish the marsh mellow" "flashlights on your knees!" Not one fucking person could be able to imagine a boot full of liquid WHILE doing this drill. That being said, this was really informative on why you can't turn the ski when you have too much edge angle
Steve, interesting that you contrast balancing on vs balancing against a ski. My experience is instructors describing this in terms of “pressuring” the ski. I’ve not gone through all of your videos yet, but if you’ve not covered the subject, please add one on anticipation and explain how to judge if enough separation (counter action) is dialed in. I hope my request makes sense as I’ve not elaborated on it.
Thank you. Great request. I will make a video on this anticipation/separation that you talk about, and what it feels like for me, and how it works for people I have skied with.
This helped a lot. Thank you. Had my first few lessons today and it felt I was doing something wrong all day couldn’t stay fully controlled. I think I was leaning forward over my toes and having to lean a lot.
@@skicoachingonline I’m just learning at an indoor place at the moment planning at trip back end of this year early next year. I’ve got a few more lessons coming up! My Mrs is very good and I’ve never been so don’t want to be left behind! 😂
@Veryverydrunk haha I feel you. Keep going you’ll catch her up. 😀 Well please let me know if you need any help or any other videos you want to see. Thanks and have fun in your lessons 😀
More beginner tips in this playlist.
ruclips.net/p/PLo5cUVz-nX7IlREu02LwpRTlGpexniTPi
Thanks
Great video! I wish that I have watched this video before my first ski day! I had exact the same problem and it was so painful for the knee of inside leg.
Yes it can be frustrating and painful. Thanks for watching 😀
Hot chocolate! Best tip EVER! Had a lesson today first in 9 years and I did this nearly the whole lesson lol as I was scared and was trying to slow my turns down but it just made them more unstable as they were locked in lol
Hey. Yes it’s a weird sensation, not always a fun one that locked in feeling 😀
Thank you. Great to hear the hot chocolate helped. And I hope you enjoyed your lesson. ⛷🤙🏻
Same thing happened to me today. This video made so much sense as I was definitely over doing it. Great tip
Can wait to try this tip ! I will reply when I go back for my second time !!! Thanks bud !
I am locking my skis when I turn (one ski tip gets on the other) and I cant move/relax the inside ski. And because of that I am not making efficient turns. Any tricks for that?
I’ve made a little video. I will upload it later for you. But in short, twisting both skis at the same time will help with this. Whilst both are sliding 😀
Nice, i'm going to remember this for next time. I find this trait kicking in when the conditions are icy, you just get a little paranoid and start digging in, if you're like me and still a beginner, especially when it's a challenging and steep run. I tend to find some of the training videos make things look straight forward at times, it's when you try it yourself it's alot more tricky when you add the external variables lol. All about practice and muscle memory i guess.
Absolutely. Terrain choice is important when practicing 👍🏻 always feels better going faster on easier terrain, than slower on steeper terrain. 😀
Just speaking as a total noob who got very bruised up on my first day, from 1:53 - 2:40, I can't even tell what it is he's doing, it just looks like he's being pulled by an invisible string
Hey. I’m keeping my skis quite flat so they are easier to turn.
Hopefully this helps to explain.
ruclips.net/video/WslkXYm6ino/видео.html
Thank you for the comment.
hahaha oh man this is so relatable.
What he's doing is:
1) He's keeping both skis tipped slightly on their inside edge but not too much, so you don't get that "locking" effect. Both skis are actually trying to turn a little bit, because of their curved shape, but in opposite directions --- the right ski is trying to turn left and the left ski is trying to turn right --- so he's going straight down but brushing the snow with those edges to avoid picking up too much speed.
2) He's shifting his weight slightly to the *outside* ski of the turn --- shift weight to the right ski to turn left. This is because the ski with more weight grips the snow more than the unweighted ski, so you turn with the curved shape of the weighted ski as the unweighted ski's edge brushes lightly against the snow.
3) He's twisting his legs (in his hip sockets) slightly in the direction of the turn, pointing the tips of the skis the direction he wants to go.
You can't really see the weight shift or the leg twist, so it looks like he's just turning by magic.
@KennethDuda hey thanks again for a very well structured and explained comment. I really appreciate it 👍🏻😀
I loved this problem solving video and with the help of the visual ( hot chocolate) ty
Thank you
You've hit the nail on the head with this one! Thank you!!
Thank you.
Great advice. This was exactly my problem. Thank you..
No worries. Thank you 😊 glad it helped.
Your chest should point towards where you want to go , down the fall line. Newbies chase their ski tips rather than facing down the fall line. Free the heels, Telemark style and your mind will follow.
This was my exact problem! Thanks!
No problem. Thank you
when i am in high speed how do i stop it?
You fall if you’re a beginner.
ruclips.net/video/YJlKbXoTjm0/видео.htmlsi=3vEofvfvyzTyD-qd
Here is a video on how to stop.
I initially imagined you frantically typing in that question as your barreling down the mountain 😂 I'm a beginner and currently watching this from the lodge before I head out!
Balancing more on top of the ski versus against it. I'm going to shamelessly steal that one. So once you started skidding the skis your feet closed a little. So a smaller wedge means to less edge angle which promotes skidding. Well done.
Thanks for the comment 😊
Very helpful thank you !
Great, I’m glad it helped.
Thank you for your comment 😀
People should learn to Telemark turn from day one !!
God dammit I hate the stupid imagery that ski instructors use! "if I had a boot full of hot cocoa....." "squish the marsh mellow" "flashlights on your knees!" Not one fucking person could be able to imagine a boot full of liquid WHILE doing this drill.
That being said, this was really informative on why you can't turn the ski when you have too much edge angle
Thank you.
❤
Another great video
Thank you Tom
Thanks
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Wonderful hint
Thank you. Glad it helped. 😀
very helpful! thank you!
Thank you
Steve, interesting that you contrast balancing on vs balancing against a ski. My experience is instructors describing this in terms of “pressuring” the ski. I’ve not gone through all of your videos yet, but if you’ve not covered the subject, please add one on anticipation and explain how to judge if enough separation (counter action) is dialed in. I hope my request makes sense as I’ve not elaborated on it.
Thank you. Great request. I will make a video on this anticipation/separation that you talk about, and what it feels like for me, and how it works for people I have skied with.
@@skicoachingonline Thank you. // Marshall
This helped a lot. Thank you. Had my first few lessons today and it felt I was doing something wrong all day couldn’t stay fully controlled. I think I was leaning forward over my toes and having to lean a lot.
That’s great it helped. I hope you enjoyed your day skiing. Are you doing some more?
Thank you for your comment. 😀
@@skicoachingonline I’m just learning at an indoor place at the moment planning at trip back end of this year early next year. I’ve got a few more lessons coming up!
My Mrs is very good and I’ve never been so don’t want to be left behind! 😂
@Veryverydrunk haha I feel you. Keep going you’ll catch her up. 😀
Well please let me know if you need any help or any other videos you want to see.
Thanks and have fun in your lessons 😀
@@skicoachingonlineI will do definitely. Thanks a lot for your time!