how I learned to carve a snowboard + 3 BONUS DRILLS
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- Опубликовано: 5 мар 2024
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/ @tommiebennett - Спорт
Great info! Can't wait to try this today. Thank you Tommie!
Always good info on getting better. Love it!
Oh wow, I love your style!!
Love the way you explain how to carve 👍🤟
Good stuff Tommie! Let’s go!
I took a lesson recently to work on my carving and my instructor told me to not go flat at all when changes edges. He wanted an immediate edge change.
Great video as always!! What app/program do you use for editing/post production..thanx bro!!!
What about loading up the tail and snapping it for jump turns?
whats your stance angle and distance ?
He rocks the moncler stance, -55, +81
Pretty sure he is 15,-15. Don’t know the width though.
Asking someone’s width is irrelevant bc you don’t have his legs. Yours won’t be the same. Ride +12, -9 with 15-18 degree of highback angle. Your width depends on your own leg length, not his.
I dont know why but I am allways imagining myself runing on a snowboard from a Bear. Could you make a video on the best technique to use in my mind to avoid beeing caught up by the Bear while also minimizing the risk of falling which would lead to an imminent death ?
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Carving's an important skill, but in terms of rider improvement and being better at riding the whole mountain, as an instructor I think most people would benefit more from learning how to execute higher performance short and medium radius sliding/skidded turns. Carved turns often aren't practical on steep slopes at resorts because of crowds and the wide turning radius they require if you're actually competing your turns (as opposed to just hopping from edge to edge and accelerating down the mountain).
The turns you mention are called gripped turns. The most useful tool to have.
@@maness2112 - there are many names for them, CASI calls them sliding turns, I've also heard them called skidded turns. Malcom Moore calls the gripped turns which must be a BASI thing. Agreed that they are far more important that carved turns, just in terms of skills development and their usefulness for riding the mountain.
This is an absolutely nonsensical and insane reply especially coming from a supposed snowboarding instructors.
@@snowboardguru6794- can you explain why?
@@maness2112There is no sich thing as a gripped turn. It’s called skidding and a skidded turn. Making up a term like gripped to make skidding seem better is exactly the same as doing a bad overturned heelside and calling it “slashing pow”. Those are both lower level movements.