T Whisper would say 'I'm looking at the top of your ski when I should be looking at the bottom,...meaning change edges earlier resulting in not finishing the turn so far down course. Absolutely killer skier here. She is making the passes despite finishing the turn down course because she is not giving up the angle she generates! Once she starts to backside the turns she will nail that 39 pass!
@@boarding5946 Good question. I asked some professional water skiers whom i know for input on any studies they may be aware of. If I turn up anything I'll get back to you. In the meantime I'll offer some anecdotal information. First off, obviously the beginner water skier is just going to have fun and swerve back and forth awhile without inducing a lot of stress on the body. However, when water skiers are more advanced at the tournament level the physical demands are much higher. I snow ski over 100 days each season. I can put on my boots and ski at a high performance level four to six hours. When I water ski, it's typical to ski two to four sets. Each set may take three to five minutes. At the conclusion pulse rate will be in Zone 5 or 6, and the muscles of the lower back, legs, shoulders, arms etc. will close to or at failure. Recovery is usually about 10 to 20 minutes before another set. Water skiing at a high level is really only possible four or five days per week, requiring two or more days days a week off for muscle recovery and adaptation. A slalom run in a course takes about 16 seconds and involves six turns. At many professional tournaments bonus prize money is offered for the skier who exerts the most load on the rope (determined with a kind of strain gauge attached to the line). Male winners at the last three professional tournaments of 2020 were all registering over 900 pounds at peak loading in the turns. The women were at over 500 to 700 pounds. Each load is followed with a "relaxation" phase through the pre turn before the next load. The intensity of the loading is the reason why maintaining the "stack" or body alignment through the turn. Any break in good skeletal alignment will cause the skier to collapse at the waist and go over the handlebars. Take a look at this video of pro skier Corey Vaughn and note how he maintains awesome body alignment so he can take such huge compression on his body. ruclips.net/video/1wFDPg8gTZA/видео.html
T Whisper would say 'I'm looking at the top of your ski when I should be looking at the bottom,...meaning change edges earlier resulting in not finishing the turn so far down course. Absolutely killer skier here. She is making the passes despite finishing the turn down course because she is not giving up the angle she generates! Once she starts to backside the turns she will nail that 39 pass!
That was insane
Great form on stance 2:22
What the hell is that funny looking thing she is wearing on her feet!
how do you breath when you crossing wake? stop or expiration
is the water ski aerobic exercise or anaerobic exercise?
It's a power sport, highly anaerobic.
@@georgert thank you for your answer
and is there any evidence?
can i get the source ? book or website about watersking
@@boarding5946 Good question. I asked some professional water skiers whom i know for input on any studies they may be aware of. If I turn up anything I'll get back to you. In the meantime I'll offer some anecdotal information. First off, obviously the beginner water skier is just going to have fun and swerve back and forth awhile without inducing a lot of stress on the body. However, when water skiers are more advanced at the tournament level the physical demands are much higher. I snow ski over 100 days each season. I can put on my boots and ski at a high performance level four to six hours. When I water ski, it's typical to ski two to four sets. Each set may take three to five minutes. At the conclusion pulse rate will be in Zone 5 or 6, and the muscles of the lower back, legs, shoulders, arms etc. will close to or at failure. Recovery is usually about 10 to 20 minutes before another set. Water skiing at a high level is really only possible four or five days per week, requiring two or more days days a week off for muscle recovery and adaptation. A slalom run in a course takes about 16 seconds and involves six turns. At many professional tournaments bonus prize money is offered for the skier who exerts the most load on the rope (determined with a kind of strain gauge attached to the line). Male winners at the last three professional tournaments of 2020 were all registering over 900 pounds at peak loading in the turns. The women were at over 500 to 700 pounds. Each load is followed with a "relaxation" phase through the pre turn before the next load. The intensity of the loading is the reason why maintaining the "stack" or body alignment through the turn. Any break in good skeletal alignment will cause the skier to collapse at the waist and go over the handlebars. Take a look at this video of pro skier Corey Vaughn and note how he maintains awesome body alignment so he can take such huge compression on his body. ruclips.net/video/1wFDPg8gTZA/видео.html
@@georgert thank you so much and I will wait answer.
Would you recomend me some books about wartersking if you know?