The neural pathway point is very important. Adjacent techniques flow together. It is why I teach inline technique to my ice skaters in the summer. The technique is just about different enough that the body understands it as something different. It lays down sufficiently different neural pathways that both techniques can exist alongside each other. I find that ice skaters try to emulate the technique too closely in summer, when they don't have the same grip and glide as on the ice. I see a lot of slooow movement and straddling in Norwegians over the summer, trying to do old-school dryland on their inlines.
Thanks for this interesting insight Emil, that they can coexist - the 2 similar techniques! As long as the skater can differentiate when to use what. Thank you!
I think a lot of his big jumps landing on one leg are very good. You want to move as a unit and land "loaded and ready". A lot of it is very good! Thanks Vigo!
It can be. If you know what yo are doing and can incorporate other skaters' better technique and timing into your own skating when you are either alone or in the lead. But you don't want to do the bulk of training behind someone. Thank you again!
Hello from Ekaterinburg! Thank you very much for your videos, thanks to this i learned a comfortable one-legged ice skating technique in a few months from the beginning level, i also use the same technique on inline skates. Only from your recent videos i understand that on straight sections i can also use one-legged skating technique and not only on turns, from your early videos, i could not understand this.
The neural pathway point is very important.
Adjacent techniques flow together. It is why I teach inline technique to my ice skaters in the summer. The technique is just about different enough that the body understands it as something different. It lays down sufficiently different neural pathways that both techniques can exist alongside each other. I find that ice skaters try to emulate the technique too closely in summer, when they don't have the same grip and glide as on the ice. I see a lot of slooow movement and straddling in Norwegians over the summer, trying to do old-school dryland on their inlines.
Thanks for this interesting insight Emil, that they can coexist - the 2 similar techniques! As long as the skater can differentiate when to use what. Thank you!
You have the flow back with youre video’s! What move from the bible do you recomend? Thanks
I think a lot of his big jumps landing on one leg are very good. You want to move as a unit and land "loaded and ready". A lot of it is very good! Thanks Vigo!
I'sn't it beneficial to get in a pace line and mimic the skaters doing it right and mimic their technique?
It can be. If you know what yo are doing and can incorporate other skaters' better technique and timing into your own skating when you are either alone or in the lead. But you don't want to do the bulk of training behind someone. Thank you again!
Important - match the cadence in dryland to what it is on the ice. Everything has to have a purpose.
Thanks again! Where are you in the planet?
@@speedskatingdeconstructed5435 Still in New England - CT and Mass.
LOVE your content - always.
Thank you so much. I appreciate that!
Hello from Ekaterinburg! Thank you very much for your videos, thanks to this i learned a comfortable one-legged ice skating technique in a few months from the beginning level, i also use the same technique on inline skates. Only from your recent videos i understand that on straight sections i can also use one-legged skating technique and not only on turns, from your early videos, i could not understand this.
So happy you're making progress and learning and having some fun Dimitri! Thank you for letting me know!